THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XX. NUMBER 16. K. U. LEADS KANSAS IN NEW "WHO'S WHO" Forty-Four University Men and Women Mentioned in the 1922 Volume TOPEKA A CLOSE SECOND Forty-four members of the faculty of the University of Kansas, three of them women, have their biographies included in the 24,278 listed in the 1922-23 "Who's Who in America" which has just been issued. Many Honored Are Members o Phi Beta Kappa and of Sigma Xi Kansas has 209 distinguished persons, according to the book, with Lawrence having forty-four, the largest number from any Kansas town, and Topeka following a close second with forty-three. Gives Brief Sketches "Who's Who in America" has as its aim "the giving of brief, crisp sketches of the notable living Americans in all parts of the world—the men and women whose positions of importance make them of general interest." Many of those at present connected with the University are Phi Beta Kappa, and several are members of the Society. Also are the authors of books or other works. the professors whose names appear are: Edgar Henry Summerfield Bailey, chemistry; Frank W. Blackam, sociology; Anna B. Blite, Dean Chancellor; Anne L. Collins, Chancellor; Samuel Perkins Cady, chemistry; Samuel Jay Crumbine, medicine; (Topeka); Frank Burnett Dains, chemistry; Charles Graham Dunlap, English Literature; William Lewis Eikenberry, biological sciences; Charles Marvin Fassler, municipal history; James Jurismal; Goldwin Goldsmith, architecture; Arthur E. Hertzler, surgery, (Kansas City); Frank Hewerdow Holland, history; Edmund Howard Hills, philosophy; Edwin Mortner Hopkins, English; Samuel John Hunter, psychology; Heidra Herntaire Hyde, psychology; Frederick J. Kelley, Dean of Administration. Professors Named Carlton V. Kent, physics; Frederick Edward Kester, physics; Ernst H Lindley, Chancellor; Margaret Lynn, English; James Naismith, physical education; Carl Fernand Nelson, physiological chemistry; Arvin Solomon Olin, education; Carl A. Preyer, piano; Lucius E. Sayre, Dean of the School of Pharmacy; George Carl Shadd, electrical engineering; Charles Sanford Skilton, organ; Walter Robinson Smith, education; William Chase Stevens, botany; Frank Strong, constitutional law; Mervin T. Sudler, Dean of the Bier of Maurice Oulin Temple, Maurice T. Urschel; Perley F. Walker, engineering; Solden L. Whitcomb, comparative literature; Alexander M. Wilcox, Greek; Clement C. Williams, engineering Parsons who were formerly on the faculty listed are: William A. M. Keever and Erasmus Haworth. Other citizens of Lawrence are; Juntin D. Bowersock, ex-congressman; Edward C. Finney, warmer; Wilder S. Metcalf, army officer, and W. R. Stubbs, governor. Exhibit of Clay Modelling Moved to Haworth Hal The art work executed by last year's class in clay modeling, which has been on exhibit in the east wing of the Administration Building, was removed this morning to the modeling room in Haworth Hall. The models will be left there until called for by their owners. Visitors to the present classes in clay modeling are welcomed, though few students have been able to their way to the modeling room, which offers a variety of laboratory addition on the south side of Waurich Hall. The route lies through the laboratory between mixers, rock crushers and other machinery, and up and down eight or nine flights of stairs. This is known as the "Cripelle Creek line." To Have Hot Water at Gym To Have Hot Water at Gym Students use the showers and pool at the gymnasium will have hot water in the future, according to Supt. John Shea. The reason for having to use cold water has been the change in heating plants, but the piping has finally been arranged so that there will be plenty of hot water in the future. Clothing to be Shipped Clothing to be Shipped For Near East Relief The American Friend's Service Committee of Philadelphia, an organization allied with the American Relief Administration, has sent to Miss Mary Byrd of Lawrence an "S. O. S." clothing for the Near East Erie. Two shipments will be made from this city, and the Daughters of the American Revolution will assist in packing the first box, which will leave Saturday, September 30. This will be an important shipment because it will reach the Near East in time for the first cold weather. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, MONDAY, OCT. 2, 1922. If those who have clothing to send on this first shipment will call Mrs T. E. Griesa, phone 381, she will call for it Saturday morning. K. U. ALUMNI STAND FIRMLY BEHIND TEAM Pledge Support Towards Making K. U. Athletic History in East The Jayhawkers who have flow an be counted upon as an enthusiic part of the power behind the cam. C. H. Voorbees, who was studious in law and a practicing law in New Havon, Conn., writes the following letter, evidence $f$ the loyalty and faith of the alumni $f$ the University of Kansas. Cant refrain from reminding you, Potsy, the team and all other loyal Jayhawkers that we "strangers in a foreign land" are going to West Point to see Kanaas win. In fact, it would be amazing to question what a glorious opportunity has made to nikhite history for old K. U. here in the east. Nebraska has started it and if K. U.—or when K. U., I should say, whips those guys around on their boots. Here's out that won't stop to speak to an ordinary Y man here. But I'm rambling—what I wished to ask was whether or not there is anything we at this end can do to help? Any information to be desired from Yale men who played against them here last year, or from coaches? Of course you've heard of that wonderful half-back they have—Greene, I think his name is. He made Yale look foolish last year and that in spite of one leg which he fairly dragged as if the knee were stiff. Fast as lightning and as elusive as these long Island Sound mackeder. Incidently he boots and musses, the latter with dangerous ability. And what support from the cadet student body! Never saw anything to equal our performance here last year. But I repeat, in spite of wizard halfbacks, inspiring cheering, handicap of long trip, etc., the school which played that memorable game against Nebraska in 1920 can beat West Point. And a small but mighty gang is going up to help do it. Let us know up what we are doing. What anything we can do in the meantime. Naturally we haven't heard anything of K. U. this fall. Here's hoping prospects are bright and that Potty turns out a winner. One who has been playing in the youth of Kansas, which he did while there, has it coming to him. How proud you must be of your stadium. Those of us who were privileged to do our bit were very fortunate. Though unable to see Kansas fight and win in it, we are not affected by this. We are not and some of creative interest in it. But I mustn't take too much of your time. Tell all the squad we're with, 106,000 strong in spirit. Vicoriously yours," C.-C. H. Voorkees. K. U. Engineer May Head National Organization John Lyle Harrison, fa'25, has been nominated by the official nominating committee of the American Society of mechanical Engineers, for president if that organization. It is the largest engineering society in the world; formal election will be held later this all. Mr. Harrison is located in Kansas where he is the consulting engineer of the firm of Harrington, toward and Asha. Never before in the history of that organization has the official candidate been a nwestern man. The 17,000 members of the society are nearly all外terners. Sachems will report to Cheerloader Miller at the Gymnasium, 8 o'clock tonight (Monday). Bring paddles. Loud, H. Rungephal. Sick, Chief. Lloyd H. Ruppenthal, Chief Sachem CONTINUE SALE OF ENTERPRISE TICKETS Books Are Now in Hands of 110 Student Cam-paigners 2000 TO BE SOLD IS GOAL Salesmen Are Asked to Check in on Tuesday Evening. Sale of Student Enterprise tickets is rapidly going forward in the hands of the 110 student campaigners who have been delegated for the job. Each has received ten tickets for disposal and many have already returned them, both stock and have returned for more. The goal sought is 2,000 tickets sold. All Student Activity Ticket salesmen have been asked by Dean Dyer to check in the number of tickets sold and the money received for them by 5 o'clock Tuesday evening at the office of the Dean of Men. "Most salesmen to whom books were delivered yesterday said that at least half of their tickets were sold in advance and there is every indication that they are being sold in the week," said Waldo Bowman, chairman of the executive committee. Books Delivered Yesterday Books 'Delivered' Wednesday The books were delivered to the membership committee yesterday by Dean Dyer and members of the executive committee. "Virg" Miller, cheerleader, received ten tickets at 10 o'clock and returned at 13:00 o'clock for ten more saying that they were easy to sell. Chancellor Lindley gave a member of the committee his check for $24 and received three books. Chancellor Buys Three There will be no complimentary tickets this year except to “k” men, said Dr. Allen as he purchased four of the Activity Tickets. Students who were not seen by members of the committee may buy tickets at the D. M. C, A., the W. Y. C, A., office of the Dean of Men. or the Office of the Dean of the School of Law, or office of the Dean of Women. The athletic office has a record of all the books of tickets which are sold and will use this record in making reservations. On the outside of the book is a number and this number should be written on the ticket of the game for which a reserved seat is desired along with the applicant's signature. Only the one ticket need be sent to the athletic office and not the entire book, as many have been led to believe. OTIS TESTS ARE SIGNIFICANT Indicates Students Capability for Classwork However, no conclusions should be drawn as to the character of the course, teaching or grading, except that the latter was severe. However, it does seem that severe grading eliminates the unfit. Of the thirty lowest in intelligence only two "got by." Correlation between the Otia Psychoological tests and one of the more difficult courses on the hill has been found very close. Of a group of two we have found a fifth, the course and the test, grades were outpared from a group of ninety-seven of them, and it was found that out of the lowest twenty-three in intelligence there was not a single student passed. While out of the highest eight was only one only failure, but there were two A5, five B5 and seven C's. It is not intended that these tests shall be regarded as absolutely accurate in each case, but more than they are correct and indicative of what the student will do in his university work and in life. Comparisons similar to these are being made at the present, and the investigators intend before long to exhibit further facts which will make comparisons possible. The easier courses may show different results from these. Students of average intelligence who made low grades in this course may make excellent grades in a course of a different level. In other cases factors as temperament, time spent on outside activities, and such must be considered. Some students of low or average intelligence may make high grades by hard work and application, while those of greater mental power may much less than they are capable of. Tryouts For MacDowell to be Held October 16 Tryout for MacDowell Fraternity will be held October 16, it was decided by the organization at its first meeting yesterday afternoon. Application blanks may be obtained from the Fine Art business office or from Jack Dickson, president. Dickson said that everyone desiring to try out should do so at this time because the only opportunity offered this year. Plans were made to bring several prominent artists here for concerts during the year. Future meetings of the club will be held in Fraser Hall. PLANS ARE READY FOR BIG SEND-OFF RALLY Yell-Fest Will Include Speeches by Chancellor, Davis and Coaches All plans are in readiness for the biggest rally ever, according to an announcement this afternoon by "Virg" Miller, cheerleader. Fraternity members and about 100 people their meetings so that about anyone may come to the fest on time. The cry will resound far and near through the streets of Lawrence this evening when the gang begins to gather for the big sendoff rally at Robinson Gymnasium. The speeches will start at 8 o'clock. "Rally! Ral-l-l-lly! Everybody out." Miller also requests that all men attending the rally bring a large well-fed box to help spur the conflagration on North College to greater heights. The boxes may be added to the pile either before or after the speeches, but should be there in time so that all may be in readiness when the marching thousands arrive from the hill. Chancellor Lindley and W. W. Davis have given their consent to be placed on the program in Robinson. Potay Clark and Phog Allen will have something to say also. In addition the band will play and there will be many and various yells, led by 'the three new cheerleaders. Everyone is asked to be on hand promptly at eight, so that the rally will start off with a bang. ART STUDENT DESIGNS SEAI Work Now on Exhibit at Brazilian Exposition The painting was done in a monochrome of brown with lettering of gold, on a piece of white satin 30 by 36 inches. The diameter of the seal itself is 24 inches. It was painted at the request of the United States Government, made through Governor Henry Allen. The Kansas State Seal drawn by Leonard Sebra, fringed, and painted by Miss Rosemary Ketcham, professor of the department of design, was sent to Brazil this summer where it hung with the seals of the other states in the home of the American Embassy there. It is now being exhibited at the Brazil Centennial Exposition which began in Sentember. Because there was no reproduction of the seal, it was protographed this summer at Squire's studio and the pictures are being kept in this country—one in Chancellor Lindley's office at the Capitol Building at Topeka. Besides the exhibition sent from here, will be displays from the other states. With the seal was sent a 16 inch pennant of blue silk with "Kansas" lettered in red silk. Organize Psychology Fraternity Beta Chi Sigma, honorary Psychological fraternity, was organized Friday, September 29. The following of officers were elected: president, John Linggert; vice president, Dorothy Mosly; secretary, Myra Lingenfelter treasurer, Margaret Brown. Besides the above mentioned members, older deans and old female staff and Gerald Deline Pitt. Meetings will be held the first and third Wednesdays in each month. The object of the fraternity is to extend interest in psychological and physiological literature. The home of the American Embassy at Brazil which is to retain the seal sent from the University is a new $275,000 building and is being used as a permanent home for the Embassy. Sachem will meet at 9 o'clock Wed noon evening, Oct. 4, Acacia House Important. Lloyd Ruppenthal, Chie Sachem. Director Kurtz Gives Out Names of Fifty-Seven Members ANNOUNCE PERSONNEL OF K. U. ORCHESTRA REHEARSAL IS THURSDAY Prof. Waldo Geltch Is a Strong Addition to Violin The personnel of the K. U. orchestra has been chosen and the fire rehearsal will be held Thursday ever at 7:30 o'clock in Fraser Chapel according to Director Edward I Kurtz. At present the orchestra number fifty-seven, but Professor Kurtz says that it is possible a few more changes will be made within the next few days. "We have the promise of one of the best orchestras K. U. ever had," said Professor Kurtz this morning. "Several sections, such as the violas, basses, and much others, are much stronger than before and have hardened some exceptionally good material this year." Rehearsal Is Important Prof. Waldo Gelch, of the School of Fine Arts, will be chorus manager this year, and will also assist Director Kurtz in violin solo parts. Some special numbers are being arranged which they believe will please K. U. audiences. At least two concerts will be given, besides the annual all-Uni concert, and Professor Kurtz hoses a trip or two can be arranged for later. "I would like to emphasize the importance of every member being present at the first rehearsal Thursday night," said Professor Kurtz. "Those whose names appear below will take this as proper notice to pre- port for rehearsal." Following the personnel as now selected: First violins: Prof. Waldo Gelch, Reba White, Harry J. Dueneces, Frances Robinson, Foxe Fake Mountain, Miriam Tregemba, Elizabeth Cain, Charles Smolt, Genevieve Young, Alfred Bloeagart, *elma Christonher* Violin Section Second violin: Conrad Mecrew. Mary Hanna, Meford Borserman, Mabel McNary, Enola Snoodgrass, McNary, Glenn Davis, Burk Stugard. Other Instruments Violas: Marion Thompson, Edna Hopkins, Lea Miller, Marian Blye, Cleo Sneed, Mary Kirkpatrick. Cellos: Phil Readio, Fay Stevens, Catherine Crissman, Frank Martifte, James Sinden, Marjorie Fitzgerald. Basses: Ira Hogg, Mendel Drake, Lloyd Barran, C. E. Johnson. Lloyd Barran, Owen Johnson. Verda Meyer, Obrien Howard. McKenzie. Clarinetists: Paul A. Smith, Stuart Queen. Bassoon: Prof. J. D. Havenhill. French horn: Prof. Thomas Laremore, Frank Bittline, Prof. Frank Jones. Trumpets: Ray Lawrence, Graham Overgard. Bromsones: Clyde Lucas, Oliva Hobbs, Merlin Shrove. Tbli: Lloyd Barron. Tympani: Zona Roberts. Drums: Richard Mathews, Lorane Carne. Harp: Louise Frienburg. Organ: Prof. Gustav Soderland. Snow Hall is Getting Its Annual Haircu Every summer the ivy which clings to the historic walls of Snow Hall, gets an overwhelming curiosity as to what is proceeding inside, and it obstructs the windows until the dungeon on the appearance of dungeons. Those who object to the semi-monthly haircut should appreciate the valor of the barber who attacks him with a stiletto. The toy boxes, eager to gain admission to die an inglorious death on the platform of a microscope, entangle themselves about the windows until it is impossible to see without them. Howard Supple, c'22, an economics major and assistant instructor in the department of economics last year, left Wednesday for the University of Chicago. Mr. Supple holds a fellowship in that institution. Hereafter it will be possible for those busily engaged in carving a frog, to have an unobstructed view of the outside world. Frechen may want to see the warty beetle without missing a glimpse at the passing students. Sigma Tau Will Award Medal For Scholarship Matters which are to come up at the National Conclave of the Sigma Tau fraternity were discussed Tuesday night at a meeting at the Pi Kappa Alpha house with Bransford Creshaw, e23, the delegate of the local chapter of the organization. The Conclave will be held at the University of Colorado at Boulder, Colo., Oct. 1. While there the delegates will be the guests of the Iota Chapter of Sigma Tau. It is particularly hoped that the matter of competition which has arisen through misunderstanding of the field of Sigma Tau between this honorary fraternity and other fraternities may be amicably straightened. CHAMLEE UNABLE TO FULFILL ENGAGEMENT Owing to Illness Tenor Will Not Appear Here Tuesday Examine Dean H. L, Butter of the School of Fine Arts and manager of the University Concert Course issued the folio to students in attendance for postponement of the Changhe concert. Mario Chamles, who was to have appeared in the first number of the University Concert Course Tuesday at the UCLA Chapel, filled his engagement, due to illness. "Mr. Chamblee's illness has made it necessary for him to cancel all concerts in the middle west for the concerts of the season, and no assurance that he would be able "After writing several managers of noted artists, I was fortunate to secure Cyrena Van Gordon, the principal contralto of the Chicago Opera Company. The patrona of the concert course will find that Miss Van Gordon has a phenomenal voice in power, quality and range. During the past year she sang such contralto roles as 'Delle' in 'Samson et Dèse' and 'Ordal' in 'Lahore'. She has also sung the dramatic soprano role of 'Brunhilde' in the 'Valkyrie.' She is an experienced recital singer, as she toured this country in concert repeatedly before going into opera. "For her recital here miss Van Goron will receive $250 more than Mr Chamlee would have received. An exact substitution of dates was impossible, so Miss Van Gordon will give the opening number of the concert course Monday evening, October 9, in Robinson Gymnasium. The Chamlee tickets may be used for admission to this concert." KANSANS HAVE STADIUM BUG Pittsburg and Washburn Plan Campaigns Soon That interest in college athletics throughout the state is growing is evidenced by the new athletic fields being planned and built in Kansas. At Manhattan, the forms have been removed from the upper part of the first section of the new K. S. A. C. stadium and Athletic Director Mike Hennessey to allow more sections compleed in time for the homecoming game. Each section has thirty seats of seats and is 18 yards wide, with a seating capacity of about 800; so there will be seats for 36 players and bleachers and the old grandstand. Alpha Chi Sigma, honorary chori fraternity, announces the pledging of Howard Morgan, e24. Pittsburgh Training Normal, with a much larger enrollment this year, has also started a campaign for a stadium. The normal has 20 teams, but its are being worked out by the erection of a concrete stadium. Washburn College has been agitating a similar plan for some years, and although no definite steps have yet been taken, Washburn followers are boosting for a stadium drive next year. Miss Elizabeth Howard of Leen Summit, Mp., spent Sunday with Margaret Hughes, e23, at the Alpha Dpli Plu house. BEAT THE ARMY! PLANS ARE MATURING FOR BIG CAMPUS DAY Will Organize Different Schools for Work Next Saturday Morning H. A. RICE IS IN CHARGE Finance Committee Makes Arrangements for Noon Meal at Commons This morning Prof. H. A. Rice, of the School of Engineering, visited the offices of the deans of the schools and laid before them the plan evolved for the work on Campus Day at the first meeting of the committee on September 28. So far organization of the schools into groups and all Organization of the schools of the University in preparation for K. U.'s first Campus Day, October 7, the date of the Kansas-Army game at West Point, is the biggest factor in program of the Campus Day Community College. Organizations of the faculty and employees and representatives of the student body. f the schools into squads and allotment of work to them for four hours next Saturday morning has held the interest of the committee. Will Donate Money The finance committee, a sub-committee to the general one for Campus Day, consisting of Professors U. G. Mitchell and W. J. Haugmenter, matricled their work with Professors K. V. and sororites on the Hill Last Saturday and drew up plans for their closing for the noon meal on S day. The Greek letter organizations have agreed to donate the money he made in this way to the general fund for the college. Professors and deans on Saturday in recognition for the work during the morning. The general committee has been working out a longer and better list of jobs about the campus at which the students can be set to work. This is in recognition of the fact that the committee on Stadium Day two years ago estimated the old McCook bleachers would be torn down by the middle of the afternoon, and all the objects of the committee to provide plenty of work for industrious students. Will Provide Tools One of the biggest obstacles faced so far has been that of providing the proper tools to work with. The University does not own enough to lend to the individual students or even to the individual working squads, though John Shea, superintendent of grounds and buildings, has ordered more tools and will loan out to re-available students all he has available. It is planned to make the individual student responsible for each tool loaned by the University this year, as two years ago it stood a considerable loss for failing to make anyone in particular responsible. "We want every student who has a shovel, spade, pick or other land-scape-gardening instrument," said Professor Rice this morning, "to bring it on the campus next Saturday morning. He himself will be responsible for the tool and it is not likely to get lost." COSMOPOLITAN CLUB ELECTS Chooses New Members and Plans Improvements The first regular meeting of the Cosmopolitan Club was held yesterday at the new Cosmopolitan House, 1653 Indiana street. The following men were unanimously elected to membership in the society; American, Walter Morrison; Filipino, T. Cauley; Japanese, Y. Otsuka and D. S. Tiapon; Japanese, T. Matsuake; Chinese, E. Lee; Hindu, G. S. Warich and G. S. Ghous. Many ways to improve the club were suggested at the meeting and two were definitely approved. It was unanimously decided to four a Lawrence, two to D. J. Lawrence people have signified their desire to contribute books. The club also decided to authorize Dean John R. Dyer to investigate the piano market and select a good instrument for the club's money taken in at the "International Revue" presented last year. A revue will also be given this year. Other business attended to was the election of Jonathan Goodman as vice-president to succeed M. J. Jaffe, who is not in school this year. Ruth Adair, LL. B, "21, is very ill at her home in Lawrence with the influenza. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kappaa Subscription price $3.60 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.90 for one semester; 50 cents a month; 15 cents a week. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1810, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the gct of March 3, 1879. Published in the afternoon five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Georgia as the basis of the Department of Journalism. Address all communication TO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSA Lawrence, Kansas Phones. K. U. 35 and 68 Editorial Staff The Daily, Kansan aims to plea for the University of Kansas; to go forward by standing for the deals the faculty on the plan made; to write oprites to be clean; to be cheerful; to teach more serious problems to students; to learn more ability of the students to the University. Editor-in-chief Ben Hibben Glassman Raymond Dyer News Editor Raymond Dyer Short Editor Glick Schultz Editorial Director Rachel Cohen Alumni Editor Rachel Cohen Rust Carter Educator Business Staff Business Manager Lloyd Ruppenthal Asst, Bus. Mgr. John Montgomery, Jr. Asst, Bus. Mgr. Clydo Burdine Board Members Chester Shaw Deshawn White Dean John Bogs Perry Johns Maryl Hirsch Carl Prudder DeVaughn Francis Carlton Lottie Lane Ted Hudson Dan Bane MONDAY, OCT. 2, 1922 A king abdicates; a worker gets fired. HENRY QTTO KRUSE In the passing of such a man as Prof. Henry Otto Krushe. there is something infinitely sublim; in the quiet dignity of a life spent in the service of a great educational institution there is something impiring—something which lifts us out of the rut of the daily grind, and, for a moment, gives us a glimpse of idealism, of devotion to work, of all that is fine and beautiful in life. Professor Kruse gave the twenty best year of his life to the University of Kansas; for two decades he worked that the youth of Kansas might be able to hold its own in the hectic rush of a specialized modern age. He was an indispensable cog in the machine that gave the very Life and soul to the University—the machine that built upon the meger beginnings of 1800, the influential institution that the University of Kansas is today. A man whose long life has been spent as a splendidly idealistic public official once remarked to a group of young college men that there is a joy in serving the public that is in no way equalled by the pleasure that comes from any other work. And surely it is true! Surely the satisfaction of a life devoted to the service of others far surpasses the doubtful pleasure of gathering together untold wealth. But Professor Krusse was much more than a mechanical cog of the machine, turning because the other wheels turned; he was human and warm-hearted; he commanded the respect and devotion of his students. The influence of Professor Kruse will remain always with the University of Kansas, for his was a life of service-service rewarded by the satisfaction that comes from years well spent and by the reverence with which a great institution regards his memory. The "Sick Man of Europe" seems to be a pretty obstreperous patient. CHEAP ENOUGH From time to time during past years there has been some complaint among the students that the K. U. Athletic Association has charged too much for admittance to the University athletic contests. Whether this discontent was well grounded or not, is not for the Kanan to say, but one thing is certain; there is no excuse for such grumbling this year. Each student at the University has the opportunity to attend every contest here this year, at the rate of 20 cents per game. The student activity tickets, which have been on sale since the fall term opened, and for which a special drive is being made this week, sell for $8--forty activities at the rate of 20 cents for each affair. These are student objects that he Then some student objects that he does not care to attend everything included in the activity coupon book, football, baseball, and possibly a few basketball games, he says, are all that he wishes to see. But does that student forget that if he paid single admissions for every event and entertainment listed in the activity ticket he would spend a total of $25? Does he forget that if he attended only one-half of affairs included he would still be $6 ahead of the game? But that is not all; we cannot look at this matter purely from a monetary point of view. The student who attends only a few of the football games is not supporting his University as he should. Basketball, baseball and track demand student attendance if they are to perform the true service of athletics. The Athletic Association has certainly placed a low enough price on the events for 1922-23. The activity tickets are cheap enough. Buy one! The sale of fire-arms ought to be stopped. The other day at Eureka Springs, Ark., citizens got reckless and shot five bank robbers who were attending strictly to their own business. There's no use being as pessimistic about the Russian situation when we remember that Europe looked at America in the eighteenth century with a great deal more of foreboding than do we at Russia today with all of its experimentation. THOSE LAW STEPS If his sense of civil pride is lacking, and if no school spirit pervades his system, should there not be at least an innate desire for cleanliness in the heart of every K. U. student? On the University campus are several spots which are kept in a littered, dirty condition by the students who frequent those places; the parking adjacent to the steps of Green Hall is perhaps the worst appearing and the most conscious of these places. From the appearance of the steps and the ground in the immediate vicinity—spattered with tobacco juice, littered with cigar stubs and papered with emptied cigarette packages—a chance visitor from Mars might conclude that an army of occupation had just been withdrawn from the campus, leaving in its wake confusion and disorder. The age-old wall, "Would you so destroy your own property?" it seems, must be mustered out again and dinned in the ears of that noisy mob gathered on the steps of the lawyers' domicile. Certainly, our campus is ours while we are here upon it; it is our property, and we should take care of it as we would of that which is legally ours. So snap out of it, you of the School if Law—and all the rest of the paper catering crew; your pockets are the place for those weekly flattened cigarette packages! Plain Tales From The Hill (With apologies to the shades of F. A. B.) The Bells Hear the tinkling of that bell, Brassy bell. O how many angered hearts its melodies foretell! flow it tinkles, kinkles, wrinkles In the heavy air of night. Loathingly they hear the horrifying clean-defying bell. to try to keep from uttering with everlasting sputtering While the dates on every porch chain Shuffe, cap in hand and fight To the everlasting nuisance of a bell bell,bell. An oath against such heartless chap attack of a ball, ball, ball low the victims of its calling loss in bed to keep from falling What a writhing pang of agony it buzzing buzz betells. Hear the echoes, yes the echoes of the bells O the joy it would be living without bell! Hear the frightful long duration of the bell, O to have to rise for breakfast to a bell, bell, bell. What a thrill on week-end nights To have a lease on infringed rights And never need to heed the ringing To the harassassination of a bell! bells! What a thill on week end nights. Official Daily University Bulletin SENATE MEETING: Copy received by Florence E. Bliss, Editor, Chancellor's Office The regular meeting of the University Senate will be held at 4:30 Tuesday afternoon in Blake Hall lecture room. Vol. II. FOR RENT—2 rooms for girls. 1116 Mississippi. .. S31 Oct. 2, 1922. WANT ADS Anne Benson, A. B. '10, is a member of the faculty in the department of English at Bethany College, Topeka, Kans., this year. Varsity basketball tryouts will be held at 7:30 Tuesday night in Robinson Gymnasium, Endacott, Wolf, Bowman, Frederick, and other Varsity men will act as coaches. The only requirement for candidates is that they shall have 27 hours in the College or 30 hours in the School of Engineering. A student must live a five year residence in this university. Any man meeting this requirement is eligible for the tryout. Cone with suits and shoes prepared for work. SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire to earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Pleasant work, the right school hours. Visit http://laurel.cyrda.org/344 Ways Ave, Kansas City, Mo. S72 Lucy Geiber, A. B. '22, is teaching biological science in the high school at Winfield. 1918 FORDS—$75 up. Butter-Sand- derson Motor Co. 1005-07 Mass. St. ANNOUNCEMENTS ROOOM for two girls. Strictly modern house, only two blocks from Campus. Call 2509. The Y. W. C. A. announces that Thursday is the time set for the tryouts for their play at 2:30 in the Little Theatre. The committee in charge wishes to have a large number tryout. Alice Geiger, A. B.'22, is teaching mathematics in the high school at Elorado. BASKETBALL TRYOUTS: The Doings of a Dollar, a pangent, will be given at the regular meeting of Y. W. C. A. Tuesday, 4:30 at Fraser chapel. Lillie Strand, A. B. '21, is now head of the mathematics department in the high school at Howard. She returned there just a short time ago, after having spent the summer at Boise, Ida. Jayhawks Flown Ruth, Greider, A. B. 22, is assistant instructor in physiology at Wellesley. Miss Greider is a member of Pit BetA honorary scientific fraternity. Xi honorary scientific fraternity. Jaquetta Downing, A. M. '23, has been appointed head of the department of French at Fairmont College, Wichita. Miss Downing will also give part of her time to teaching in the department of piano. home. One-half block from campus. 1222 Miss. Phone 1841. S30. E. H. LINDLEY, President FOR RENT-Boy's room at 1019 Alabama street. LOST-An Alpha Phi Alpha pin. Finder please call 1144. Reward. S.20 ROOOMS for men-Two double, one single. $7.50, $8.00, $9.00. 1336 Tennessee. WANTED—Piano students by senior. Luther Carlton. Phone 2439. O1. WANTED—Piano students by a senior in piano. Luther Carlton. Phone 2439 Blue. O-2 ROOM FOR RENT at 1345 Tennessee. see. Convenient location — two blocks from campus. Call 990. S29. FOR SALE-Ford Touring, 1918. Motor just over-maided. $175. Call 812 Miss. after 7 p. m. —02 FOR RENT—Good room for two boys, $7.50 each per month. Call 1620 Red. S30. ROOMS for 2 boys,917 Louisiana. O-2 DALE PRINT SHOP "Meet me at the Crossroads of New York."—Adv. Drop in at THE SHOP OF SERVICE STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1033 Mass. St. Drop in at 1027 Mass. LOST—A pendant ear-ring with sets, somewhere between Oread and Ohio on 13th. Call 1747. O-2 LOST-Billfold containing $18 in bills. Name Harry B. Niely. Finder call at 1235 R. I. Reward. O-2 Phone 228 F. C. ALLEN, Director. TWO large rooms for girls 1116 Mississippi, strictly modern. For information call 295. O-3 FOR SALE - Complete two-step wire- less receiving set. Excellent results guaranteed. Bill Garland. Phone 429. O-5 THEMES typeswritten without delay. Five cents per hundred words. 1706 Vermont St. Phone 2186, O-3 PROFESSIONAL CARD WANTED—Piano students by senior. Luther Carlton. Phone 2439 Blue. DOL J. W, O'BRYAN. (Denist) Special attention to prevention and treatment of pyrobrha. 304 Perkins Building. Tel. 507. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive Optometrist). Eyes examined; glasses made. Office 1025 Mass. "SuitingYou" THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULTZ 917 Mass. St. E.Z. TRADE MARK REG. U.S. PAT OFF. SPORT GARTER This gartner is ideal for men's and women' s hong- and - just right for kneakers - because the webbing is soft and wrist - top by name and size. The gartner fits a Taper, T-ayer Co., Bridebridge, Com. Featured by Leading Merchants After Every Meal WRIGLEY'S P.K. CHEWING SWEET The Flavor Lasts The Flavor Lasts Special Inducement By ordering your copy of the 1723 Jayhawker before October 12, you can get your name stamped in gold on the cover Free. Simply mail the card which was sent you or come to Jayhawker office. Anticipation The 1923 Jayhawker will be a delightful record of your K. U. days, preserved for all time in a beautifully-bound volume. Every page breathes college atmosphere, a panorama so complete that the 1923 Jayhawker will stand as an Aristocrat among College Annuals. 惊讶 Realization You probably know that in K. U., as in all other large universities, it is as much of a matter of course for the student to buy his Annual as it is for him to find a good boarding place. Today, even when plans are made to increase the number of pages in the Jayhawkman, add an expensive binding, to use three hundred more illustrations than were used last year, the Jayhawkman managers, Bill and Ted, offer you the Jayhawkman at the old price of $5.00 cash or $5.50 by installments. And to make the purchase even more inviting, your name will be stamped on the cover in gold leaf without extra charge, providing you subscribe before October 12. Mail the postcard and take advantage of this special offer. Because we must make this book the most intensely interesting ever published for you, we are filling its pages checkfull with your interests, your activities, and your life at the University. Pages of humor, wholesome and genuine; chronicles and illustrations are an essential life—a more fascinating assortment of interests than you can find anywhere else in the library. Never before have you been offered so much for the same money. Here are some of the new features that will make the 1923 Jayhawker differ widely from any previous volume: BINDING The 1923 Jayhawkwer will be beautifully bound in a Kraft-Built Spanish Moorish Levant grain, embossed and illuminated with colors and gold, which will make a book that you will be proud to show to your friends or to compare with yearbooks from other schools. Our printer tells us that this binding, stamped with steel dies, will withstand the roughest handling and survive for years. PAPER Besides adding one hundred more pages to the Jayhawker, the managers will have the book printed on an ivory-tinted paper, far more expensive than that used in any previous Jayhawker. The paper will be manufactured just especially for the 1923 Jayhawker. The division pages worked out in soft focus photography will be exquisite and will add to the individuality of this volume. The 1923 managers promise to change the old order of things and to produce a distinctive book. A TREASURE - HOUSE If you could only see, in advance, the muggets that are going into the book! Why? The Jayhawker is going to be a veritable treasure-house for memories of your college days, containing hour after hour of genuine pleasure! No matter how often the book is open before you, there will always be something to lead you far away from the humdum routine of everyday life to a pleasant recollection of college days. NOT A LUXURY The Jayhawker is not a luxury of today, but an investment in which interest will be compounded. PHOTOGRAPHY As a special feature, forty-eight interior views of the interesting spots in the various buildings will be included, printed in two colors. Pictures of beauty spots, campus scenes, pictures of distinguished visitors, of instructors and students, will be forever preserved in the 1923 Jayhawker. MARKETS EDITING Every one of the six hundred pages will be complete and distinct and will be prepared by the best talent possible. Dramatics will be handled in a new way. There will be a reorganized Athletic section, a Fine Arts section and a Hall of Fame for prominent members of the Faculty. These are all new features. "The Jayhawker of Twenty-Three Composed by Bill and Ted, Reflects our Campus history,' This mirror salesman said. Five dollars is the price you pay— PERMANENCY The completeness, written which the 1923 Jayhawk will depict this school year, give it a permanent value; and it will be as fascinating years from now as it will be next May when you turn its pages for the first time. A bargain, too, I'm here to say.'' MAIL THE CARD THE CARD Remember, if you order before October 12, we will stamp your name in gold leaf on the cover, FREE, a service for which many Annual managers charge 50 cents. By mailing the order card, you get the Jayhawker for $5.00 cash or $5.50 by installments. Just write in your name and address, and mail it so it will reach us by October 12, and we will reserve a Jayhawker for you. But the important thing is to send your order TODAY. We know you will never regret it. The 1923 JAYHAWKER Wm. W. Brehm, "An Aristocrat of College Annuals" Business-Manager Bill & Ted E. F. (Ted) Hudson, The Jayhawker office is in the Alumni office, room 110 Fraser Editor Cyrena Van Gordon, Contralto CHICAGO OPERA COMPANY will give the first recital of the University Concert Course MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 9th. She will replace Mario Chamlee, tenor, who was unable to sing owing to illness. She will be paid $250.00 more than Mr. Chamlee would have been paid. She is one of the finest singers in the country. Season tickets are now on sale at the Business Office and the Round Corner Drug Store; $4, $5, and $6. 1300 season Tickets already sold. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MUSEUM EXPEDITION SECURES SPECIMENS --- Rare Fossils Collected For The University Are Unique and Varied MARTIN HEADS THE PARTY Northwestern Kansas and Ne braska Were Explored for Interesting Relics Remains of an early pre-historic three-trood horse, the skull of an early camel about the size of a small deer, and the head and part of the body of a land lizard were among the rare fossils discovered and secured for the University by the scientific party sent into Northwestern, Kansas and formerly formerly by the department of paleontology of the department, who headed the party, reported it as the most successful of his thirty-two trips. The material brought back includes: the fossil remains of the pre-historic, dairy mastodon; bones of the three-toed horse, anchorse of the present horse; skins and parts of the skeleton of bloodless larger than any extant today; the bones of diceratherium, a form of land rhinoceros; remains of the dinoxyn, a monstrous hog as big as an elephant; several bones of an extremely rare fossil, the moropus, an animal resembling the giraffe in build with elongated neck; ancient bones and skull of a resembled a big wart wolf with eyes on the top of its head; vestiges of the poehrotherium, an early form of camel about the size of a deer; petrified turtles three feet across; and the minutely preserved head of a land lizard known as a specimen are known to exist, neither of which is as complete as one found. Accompanying Mr. Martin on this six-week trip were E. Raymond Hall, c24, and Neil Thornburg, c24. Hall a major in the department of zoology collected a large number of bird and animal skins for Dyche Museum. The trip was made in a Ford truck which made it possible to visit a great many more bone beds than has heretofore been possible. Phillips, Norton, Decator, Rawlings, and Cheyenne counties were visited. Bone beds hitherto unvisited by scientists were disclosed here. Northwest of Atwood, Kansas, in the Pleistocene formation, the party spent two weeks working on a big bone deposit of the bison occidentalis a form of buffalo, which draws the present animal. Mr. Murris be fifty or sixty of the skeletons in the bed. The bones are at the foot of a bluff. In ages past the herd must have sought refuge from storm in the shelter of the bluff, been snowed under and perished. The bodies were covered over with the pliushman and the bones preserved, and deepplowed the bed, but several hundred pounds of skulls, lower jaw, and other bones were secured. From Northwestern Kansas the party went to the famous Agate Springs fossil quarry in Sioux County, near Wichita onbeka about 25 miles north of Harrison. The Agate Springs quarry is probably due to a lake or river deposit formed by an eddy in the current. Thousands of bones of odd and freakish animals of the past sink into the bottom of the whirlpool and were covered over. It was here that the party secured bones of rhinoceros and of the dinohus, a hog as big as an elephant. This big fellow inhabited mangroves, consuming vegetable matter exclusively. A few bones were also found here of the moropus, a big animal with high sloping winters, sloping back like a coffe, short stout neck, and a big 4. In this deposit the party secured a slab of material fourteen inches thick and about four feet square containing three or four of the rhinoceros skulls and a number of other bones. It weighed 1450 pounds and Oread High Enrolls Fifty-five Fifty-five students have enrolled in the Oread Training School, and, in contrast to last year, when a large per cent of the pupils were specials from the University, only six are specials this year. According to Prof. W. H. Johnson, director of the school, new classes have been started in dramatic art and music, and a debate team has been organized. They are taking up dramatics this year because the school is located in In athletics, they are beginning to use basketball and later on they in to try other sports. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Rice of Emperin, visited Sunday with Howard Morgan, e24. is made up entirely of fossil bones. The slab is now at dcy Museum and is to be set up on edge. One side is to be folded, while the other is only to be partly cleared. It will make one of the finest exhibits in the Museum. On War Bonnet Creek, over twenty skulls and various parts of the oreodant and related forms were unearthed. The oreodant is a very rare fossil. There is nothing like it today. It has the teeth both of the herbivorous and the carnivorous animals and was about the size of a sheep. A fine skull was secured of what was probably a lover of the water, for its eyes are nearly on the top of its head. By The Way Professor Ulysses Grant Mitchell, of the department of mathematics, has accepted the invitation of the Kansas State Teachers Association to attend a regional Round Table which will be held at Hutchinson October 19, 20, 21. Daphne Stodghill, c25, a student at he university last year, is enrolled t Washburn this semester. Achoth announces the pledging of Ethel Vernson, c24. Delta Tau Delta announces the pledging Monday evening of Paul Jones of Pratt, Kan. Monday evening the following men were pledged Delta Upsition: Leroy Sadler of Oklahoma City, Dan Myrke of Kentucky, George Richardson of Lawrence, Ken. Phi Mu Alpha announces the pledging of George Rach, of Hutchinson. Alemannia announces the pledging of Marjorie Day, c25, of Lawrence. Pt Upsilon announces the plodging of Herbert Bradley of Belleville, and Eugene Cayat of Kansas City, Mo. William Carey, of Hutchinson, who won the Rhodes scholarship to Oxford from Kansas, last left week for New York. He will sail October 3 for England, and will be gone for three years. Mt. and Mrs. G.C. Shaad announce the birth of a boy at Rosedale Hospital, Thursday morning, September ↓ your gaberdine to clean Now that the rain is over, you'd better send us NEW YORK CLEANERS and press. Telephone Seven-Five 28. Mr. Shaad is head of the department of electrical engineering. Everett Bradley, A. B.'22, is located in Garnett where he is doing geological work. George P. Bunn, e21 assistant engineer of the Phillips Petroleum Company of Bartleville, Okla., was visiing in Lawrence yesterday. Ortha Miller, a former K. U. student, is visiting Marie Speck, c24. Homer Abercrombie, c25, is out of school on account of sickness. Acomas announces the pledging of Luther Bouska, ed.'24, of Agenda. Lucien Terrill, 'f22, returned to his home in Topeima yesterday after spending a few days at the Pi Kappa meeting, from an operation for appendicitis which he underwent a month ago in Kansas City. After spending a few Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. PHONE 442 Kirby Cleaners and Dyers 1109 Mass. St. Student Enterprise Tickets on sale at six places:- Athletic Office Gymnasium Law School Office Green Hall Office, Dean of Men Fraser Office, Dean of Women Fraser Y. W. C. A. Henley Hall Y. M. C. A. Myers Hall A word to the wise is sufficient WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods United Army Stores Co 706 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Visit the weeks at his home he expects to be able to return to his former position with the Prescott and Snyder Bond Company in Kansas City, Mo. Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise 4my Goods Army Goods Distributors of Prof. and Mrs. R. J. Mahieu sailed on the "Paris" this summer, and are now visiting at Le Mant, France. Later on they plan to take up work in the city of Paris, and until the session opens they will travel over France. Prof. and Mme. Andre are visiting their daughters, Mrs. James Saunders, in Lawrence. M. Andre was professor of history at the College of Libereau in France for eighteen years. Miss Ruth Litchen, A. B., 15 of Leavenworth, and Mrs. Alma Southernier of Tulsa, Oka. are guests at the Sigma Kappa house. C. W. POMER & CO. OVERCOATS Tailored to Measure $25, $30, $35, $40 And Up Delivery to Suit S. G. Clarke 1033 Mass. Keeping the Watch in Order Attention to the requirements of a watch—the cleaning, oiling and regulating-is essential to absolute accuracy. NOT UNTIL DUE B. PARKER INVENED THE FEEL WAS IT NOBODY MOTIVE TO GUVERNORE THE SAWING OF OPENS. "Lucky Curve" plows cannily attire, therefore to make a smooth, tinkproof feed. Remove neat screw-cup, presure hatch, tension and the Paperclip no longer or other projection on the ink catch on catch on cloth and spill ink. Your watch in the hands of our expert watchmakers will Your watch in the hands of our expert watchmakers will receive the necessary repairing and renewing at a very nominal cost. "WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING." BARKER KEY CHOICE FINE 12 Ye Shop of Fine Quality. Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER. Luther Gustafson Repair Dept City Drug Store Hess Drug Store All Parker Points Are Genuine 14K Rolled Gold . Not affected by ink or acids; can't rust, corrode or tarnish YOU can come here and get a handsome, smooth- writing Parker Fountain Pen for as little as $2.50, including a 14K rolled gold point and all vital Parker support pens. The only accessory is Press-Button Fill器 and leakless "Lucky Curve" feed. Remove oatmeal from the pot and press the bathtub. Pour P饮水器 its fill. Put the water in a projection on an egg carton or catch on a cotton rag and splash ink. Prices range from $2.50 upward according to style and mounting. To avoid thin-plated gold points or imitation gold be sure your pen is a Parker. Then it will never rust, corrode or tarnish -it will write super-smoothly on any kind of paper. These handsome jet black fountain pens, plain and gold mounted, are all made with the same jeweler's precision as the celebrated Parker Duofold at $7. That is the lacquer-red pen with jet black tips and 25-year point. Please feel free to come and try all the Parker Pens you like—you'll find one among them that suits your style by taking it to a T. You'll meet many faces from college or military, and meet many Parker Pens in the classrooms there this year. PARKER PENS $2.50 up Made by The Parker Pen Co., Jonesville, WI. Lander's Barber's Drug Store F. I. Carter McCulloch Drug Store Ivan S. Allen, LL.B. 17,' is assistant cashier of the Interstate Trust Company and secretary of the Denver Ice and Cold Storage Company, the Denver, Colo. James Woodford, vice president of the Title Guarantee Trust company, Tulsa, Oklah., has written the athletic department that he will be at the Army game. Camel's Hair Reefers. Very Stylish 1st Floor The Saunterer Super-Quality $ 2 TOM SINCLAIR Green is faintly shouetted against the horizon of fashion. The Saunterer Soft Hat for fall, exclusively offered by Ober's, introduces this new and prepossessing hue, as well as every shade of brown and gray. Latest Sports Returns by "Radio" 2nd Floor Ober's HEADYTOEFOOTOUTFITTERS Suits $40 Protch, the College Tailor Bells Flower Shop Phone 139 825% Mass. Delicious Ye Tanerne Next to the Standpipe Salads and Sandwiches So tasty and filling Bring Her Here Bowersock Theatre Monday--Tuesday --Wednesday Shows 3:00—7:00—9:00 Where Does the Jazz Trail Lead? JEFFER L. LAWY PRESENTS Cecil B. DeMille's PRODUCTION "Manslaughter" Thomas Meighan Lester Jigg / L. Winton A General Feature Cast also includes: John Miltern George Fawcett Julia Faye and others Are the sons and daughters of the rich leading the kind of life that made Rome fall? De Mille shows you in this picture—the greatest he ever made. With Leatrice Joy the society beauty who set the fastest pace and Tom Meighan the man who loves her. A Ham Hamilton Comedy Adults 40 Adults 40c Children 20c Varsity Theatre Monday and Tuesday Shows 2:30 4:00 7:30 9:00 p.m. "Free Air" From the Saturday Evening Post story by Sinclair Lewis The story of a girl and her father's experiences on auto trip from St. Paul to coast. A Christie Comedy Adults 28c Children 10c THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN JAYHAWKERS HAVE EVEN CHANCE -SPRONG Varsity Scout Is Optimistic After Seeing Army Play Two Games Squad Will Be Instructed This Afternoon in Last Real Workout COACH ON ARMY TACTICS "Had Kansas been playing the Army last Saturday, I believe we would have won, and unless the West Pointers show considerable improvement by next Saturday, the Jayhawkers have an even chance to beat the Army," said Coach Russell Sprong, varsity scout, upon arriving in Lawrence at 12:30 o'clock this noon after a trip to Garrison, N. Y., to scout the two games which the Army played there Saturday. Coach Sprong and Coach Clark conferred on the information which Sprong gathered on the trip, immediately upon Sprong's arrival, and the varsity squad will be instructed in Army tactics this afternoon in the last real work-out before the Army game. Army Won Games The two games which Sprong wore were with the Springfield, Mass., Y. M. C. A. Training School and with Lebanon Valley. The Army defeated Lebanon Valley 12 to 0 and the Training School 35 to 0. Army Has Heavy Team "The two things which impressed me the most," Sprong continued, "were the condition of the Army players and the apparent strength which they did not use. The West Pupiers are in excellent shape, the opposing teams pressed them to a display of their real strength." Couch Sprung said that the Army team used a short pass frequently and to great advantage. They also used a shift on every play. He reported that the West Point line was fairly heavy, the back field heavier than the Kansas backfield, but not having as good material. McElvain, line coach at West Point, is confident of victory, he said. The squand is scheduled to leave Lawrence at 3:35 o'clock tomorrow afternoon over the Santa Fa. If this will be too late, she will leave on the 2 o'clock Santa Fa. The practice this afternoon will be the last real work-ont for the Jayhawkers, as the squad leaves tomorrow for New York. While the squad will have signal practice and dammy training there will be no regular serigraphy. CROSS COUNTRY UNDER WAY Year. Only One "K" Man to Run This Coach Schlademann started the cross-country candidates on their first trial run Friday afternoon. The weeding-out process has not begun yet and the trip over the two and a half mile course was merely to give the men a chance to see what they have to do. Wilson is the only man left from last year's varsity team. Merrill, Prentt, Lewis and Grabby are members of the women's team making a good show this fall. The order of finish and the time for the first seven men was: Wilson, 12:53; Schauce, 13:22; Merriall, 13:25; Wanche, 14:05; and Grady, 14:38. The final try-out will be held the day of the Washburn game. The schedule of meets will be decided Saturday at the meeting of the Missouri Valley coaches. In all productions, cross-country contest four teams meet the Missouri Valley meet. These are with K. S. A, C. Oklahoma, Missouri, and Nebraska. Prof. Becker Author of History. Prof. Carl Becker, formerly an instructor of history in University of Kansas has had published a book on the Declaration of Independence. Prof. Becker is now professor of history in Cornell University. It书 deals with the development and passing of the document and how it was received. The book contains a comment on the ideas and philosophy which it embodied and which have lasted through our years of independence. Dr. Coghill Returns From Illinois Dr. George E. Coghill, professor of anatomy, has returned from Monmouth, lth, who had been a teacher, who died there September 21, Mrs. Coghill is at present in California. Paul Potter suffered a badly sprained ankle Saturday when he slipped and fell on the steps in front of the Phil Mu Alpha house. Gridiron Gossip By. Glick Schultz The first-string varsity took one of the hardest work-outs of the season Saturday. The first team scrimmaged for more than an hour with the yearlings after which the freshmen were sent to the sheds and the first varsity and the second-student men mixed for a while. Some of the men could hardly drag themselves to the sheds after practice. The alert Edwin Sandefur watched the variety squads practicing the ther evening. Coach Russell Sprong, varsity scout returned today noon from Garrison, New York, where he watched the Army play a double-header. The varsity squad is to be coached this afternoon in the Army style of play. "Son" Anderson won his trip to West Point with a play the other evening. The second team was scribbling with the freshman. The second-string men then tried for the extra point with a placement kick. The yearlings blocked the kick but "son" scoped up the ball and carried it "Who did that?" Potsy cried. "Anderson," someone answered. "He goes to West Point," was Potsy's reply. Under the new rules, when, in trying for a goal from touchdown, the kick is blocked, the ball is free and may still be carried over for the While Coach Sprong was sequestering the army game a varsity player took charge of the yearlings. "We don't like him," a freshman said in speaking of the varsity man, "but he does have some good suggestions." McAdams has been making some good punts lately. In the regular punting practice, however, the freshman had to stop before diligently and burry him on his kicks. Two tickets for the Kansas-West Point game were lost in the mails and When you think of Ice Cream you think of WIEDEMANN'S Quality Service Price 'found in the Lawrence post office, the tickets had evidently been sent here in a letter, the envelope having been mailed to her office, he be- claimed at the athletic office. Phone 182 Dr. F. C. Allen, director of athletics, has received more than two hundred letters asking for reservations for the West Point game. Few know that all Kansans are to be admitted to the game free. Y. W. C. A. Will Present Original Farce Tuesday "The Doings of the Dollar," a clever farse written by Ruth Terrey c'24, will be given at the W. Y. C. A. meeting at 4:30 o'clock Tuesday Afternoon in Praser Hall, instead of where these meetings are usually held. A super for the hundred solicitors in the Financial Campaign will be held in Myers Hall immediately following this meeting. This force has a cast of thirty-five University women, most of whom are freshmen. Its purpose is to hold the University in position given to the Y. W. C. A. in the Financial Campaign, which is to begin Wednesday, will do. The people of Lawrence as well as every woman in the university come to this meeting. Kappa Phi held a Tea Saturday, Sept. 30, at the home of Mrs. S. S. Klyne, 937 New Hampshire street. Those Letters Home will be longer and more frequent, if you write them on the Mrs. G. H. Langford of Nickerson enroute to Missouri, spent Sunday with her son Harvey, c26. Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday Cecil B. DeMille's PRODUCTION Manslaughter Thomas Meighan Leatrice Joy, Lois Wilson Cecil B. DeMille's PRODUCTION Manslaughter This is the student's ever-ready friend, helper and time-saver-for his letters, themes, papers—for all his writing. B0WERSOCK Remington Portable The Lawrence Typewriter Exch. 737 Mass. Lawrence, Kas. Remington Typewriter Co., Inc. 107 W. 7th St, Topeka, Kas Remington Typewriter Co., Inc. 1021-234 Grand Ave, K. C., Moe Paragon Engines for Remington Portable Typewriters W --charlie Sample Bob Stewart SAMPLE - STEWART BARBER SHOP Ladies and children hair bobbing Across from Wiedemann's 838 Mass. St. The complete Portable—has Standard Keyboard and other "big machine" features. The compact Portable—fits in a case only four inches high. Price, complete with case. $60. complete with Delegate to Convention of Tau Beta Pi Selected George Hawley, e'23, was selected at a meeting Tuesday night as the delegate of Kansas Alpha, Tau Beta Pi to the national convention of Tau Beta Pi to be held at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, Oct. 3 to 6. The delegates will be the guests on an inspection trip of the automobile industries of the nearby city of Detroit. Delta Tau Delta fraternity will entertain with an Annual Freshman Paddle Party Friday, October 6, at Ecke's Hall. This party is given by the upperclassmen in honor of the freshmen. The hall will be decorated with paddles, each freshman donating his paddles, with his name on them. The second fraternity member is a member of origin of the Paddle Party. Furmer, K. U., Men in Lumber Camp Col. P. F. Walker discussed the possibility of the local chapter's bringing more forly before the freshmen of the School of Engineering the need for a high scholarship standard, and suggested the possibility of the chapter members addressing freshmen meetings. Paul White, 123, is in the hospital having his tonsils removed. Crysus Swear, Jerry Penney, Nate Wynkoop and Harry Kane, former K. U. students, are in Rainer, Oregon, working for the Long-Bell Lumber Company. They have had some interesting experiences, especially with their new apprentice this summer. They all expect to be back in school here next semester. Freshman Caps Mr. and Mrs. Frank Miller of Sabetha spent the week end visiting their son Virgil, e26. Delta Tau to Entertain Freshmen The Delta Tau Delta fraternity will entertain with its Annual Freshman 75c SKOFSTADS We Press the Suit But Not the Purse ASK ABOUT IT OUR WORK IN FIRST CLASS in every particular, and our $3 ticket (providing for 11 suit presses) saves you money. W. E. Wilson 712 Mass. Phone 505 Edison Mazda Lamps EVERYBODY HAVE A SUPPLEMENT TO EQUIPMENT FOR THEIR WORKS. I will do it myself. More Light for Less Money Kansas Electric Power Company Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Ward spent Sunday with their daughter, Geraldine, c'25, at the Alpha Delta Pi house. Mr. Fred Goodrich of Arkansas City spent the week end with his daughter, Miss Catherine Goodrich, c'26. K. U. ARMY GAME— N. Y.-N. Y. World Series— Big Rallies— Big Bonfires— —and Carls Good Clothes Selling— Yes Sir! sure looks like a Big Week in Lawrence— And we're glad to show you anytime Freshman Caps Selling CARLS GOOD CLOTHES WATKINS NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. D. C. Ashar, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. DIRECTORS C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Ashker, L. V. Miller, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishop The INGERSOLL DOLLAR. Pory London 1.00. Of hotel silver with ring for chain or ribbon. The JUNIOR 50c to $2.00. An attractive pen made in Britain with ring for chain or ribbon. The FEATHER-WRIST 50c. Of high weight, very fine lines. For early writing. With or without writer. The INGERSOLL DOLLAR. Simple seed-length $4.00 of hotel silver 14k gold. A New College A New College Helpmate Ingersoll Pencil Redipoint. An ingenious invention which meets the exacting requirements of college use. Simplified to overcome clogging at the point and tedious mechanical manipulation. Made economically by mass production methods and sold at prices that make wood pencils a luxury. In models to suit every need—at prices to suit your purse. Note these Advantages; 1 Lead guaranteed not to clog at the tip. 2 Uses leads about double ordinary length. 3 Point presses in for protection when not in use. 4 New lead inserted in twenty seconds. 5 Lead turns both in and out. 6 Holder can accommodate fifteen extra loads, equal in writing service to fifteen wood pencils. Four stationery or cooperative store can show you these and other models. INGERSOLL REDIPOINT COMPANY, Inc. "WM.H.INGERSOLL, Press. Formerly of Robt. H. Ingersoll & Bros. 401 Fourth Avenue, New York City. Branch: Chicago S. St.Paul, San Francisco 10 BD-100 - 100 Dia. x Lenght ENCYPSOL THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NUMBER 17 LARGE MOB TO ARMY GAME, WIRES CANNON New York Alumni Say They May Have to Charter Mauretania PHILADELPHIA TO GO TOO Original "Fighting 500" Promises to Develop Now Into "Fighting 5000" "Large mob of howling Jayhawks," wired Carl T. Lannon, secretary of the New York K. U. Alumni Association, to Alfred Hill this morning, "from Portland, Maine, to Wilmington, Del., going to game Saturday, West Point. May have to charter Mauretania to handle crowd. Expect to make old gray mare out of my mule." And according to letters issuing out of, *Amorica* the metropolis, more and more K. U. grades are planning to enter Kansas in the Kansas-Amur Army corps on October 7. Philadelphia To Be There Philadelphia, not to be outdone by New York or K. U. grades in the Quaker City to join the party, but is inviting al former Kansas residents to participate in the fun. The original "Fighting Five Hundred" promises to deliver into a "Fighting Five Thousand." "The whistle blows at 3:30 p. m. Won't it be a sight to make you glad—to see the football warriors of old K. U. line up against the mighty Army team?" so reads one of the many letters received by Alfred Hill at the Alumni Office of the University. Arrangements for all resident Kansans to see the Kansas-Army game are being made by the secretaries of eastern K. U. Alumni Associations and the college accommodations. Seating arrangements are also being provided for. Alumni To Entertain Squad Entertainment for the K. U. football squads has already been worked out by the enthusiast New Yorkers. A world's baseball championship game and a good show in the evening are said to be on the program for the Kansas gridroners. FROSH START WEARING CAPS Distinctive Headgear Must Appear Campus Day The University of Kansas alumni and the Kansas Society of New York City expect to hold a reception for Gov. Henry J. Allen and members of the team, as well as visiting Kansas rooters, on the night of October 7. In the afternoon Governor Allen will attend the game. The freshmen must start wearing their caps next Saturday morning, according to Andy McDonald, president of the Men's Student Council. In years before it has been the custom for the caps to come into view at the first home game, but this year the first home game will not be held until October 21, which would make the cap season too short. The caps will be worn from Saturday until after the Thanksgiving game. The caps can then be thrown away for good, providing that the yearlings are able to defeat the sophomores in the annual Olympics which will be held the morning of Novembrer 14. In any case, even if the sophomores are victorious, the freshmen will have to don their small lids again in the spring the first baseball game and wear them until after the last game of the the first baseball game and wear them until after the last game of the season. The Olympics have been held for the last three years and each time the freshmen have been victorious. The first year it was more of a free-for-all than any else, but in the last two years contests have been arranged in which an equal number of athletes have taken part. Each side has an Olympic manager who is appointed by the class president. The sophomores have made plans to have paddling squats scour the city Saturday to see if all freshmen have obeyed the ruling. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, OCT. 3, 1922 From the attendance of the first two Varsity dances of the new year it would seem that these dances are much more popular than last year. There were 212 total admissions for the first dance of this year and 102 dancers for the second. All of either of these dances exceed any record set last year. Memorial Fund Receives Contribution From China Contributions to the Memorial Fund continue to come in, according to Alfred Hill, secretary of the Alumni Association. Today's mail brought three, of which one was from Frederick E. Lee, of the class on 11, now with the American Legation at Peking, China. The Memorial Headquarters is making no special effort to secure contributions at present since it is their intention to launch a definite campaign before the end of the year. Mr. Hill announces that the fund has already passed the $850,000 mark and that he is confident that the million dollar goal will be passed before the close of school. HEATING AND POWER PLANT IS COMPLETE Professor Shaad and John Shei Designed and Engineered Entire Structure The new University heating and power plant which has been under construction for the last year is finished. The heating apparatus is ready to operate as soon as the weather is cold enough to demand it and the power turbines will be turning out light within two weeks. At present the light is being supplied by the old plant. For the past week, low fire fires have been kept burning in order to dry out the furnace walls and to allow the holier coatings to settle. If this were not done the walls would burst, so much effort was started. There are five great furnaces so constructed that they can burn either coal or crude oil. In case of a shortage of either fuel, the plant could still supply heat and power with the other. The reserve capacity for coal is 275 tons and for crude oil 40,000 gallons. The power plant can produce three times that of the old one, or 700 kilowatts and the boiler capacity is approximately 2,100 horse power. The furnaces are equipped at present to burn crude oil which is forced into the combustion chamber by a pipe from the firebox in a pipe and sprayed into the furnace. There will be three shifts of eight hours, each shift consisting of a fireman and an engineer. One of the interesting details of the new plant is the gigantic smoke stack 262 feet high. The entire plant was designed and engineered by Prof. George C. Shand, of the School of Engineering, and independent consultant of buildings and grounds. DATES FOR TESTS CHANGED Conflicts to Be Arranged with Prof. Rosenow Wednesday. Psychological examinations for freshmen have been changed from Oct. 6 and 7 to Oct. 5 and 6, in order that they may not conflict with Campus Day, according to Dean F. J Kelly. These examinations were announced by printed slips handed to students on enrollment days. The tests are required of all freshmen and sophomores who did not take the test. Conflict of classes must be arranged in advance with Professor Rosenow on Wednesday at 11:30 or 1:30 at his office on the ground floor, East Administration Building. Please do not ask for change of schedule on the grounds of out-of-school work on week-end engagements at home. Little Theater Company Goes on Extended Tour The members of the company are Cooper MacMurray; Morjorie Kidwell MacMurray, and Margaret Larkin. The K. U. Little Theater Company under the management of the University Extension Division, left yesterday for the first engagement of their season. They will play tonight in Ozakwie. The following local engagements will be at Stillwell, Lea Cygne, Wathene, Robinson, Severance, Leona, Edgerton, Louisburg, Greely, Colony, and Kansas City, Kans. The company will be on tour about seven months. Y. W. C. A. FINANCIAL DRIVE IS ANNOUNCED Campaign Quota for This Year Has Been Placed at $3600 EVERY GIRL AN INVESTOR Funds Received Will Go to As sociation Expenses Here and Abroad "Every Girl an Investor in the W. Y. C. A," will be the slogan for the financial campaign which starts Wednesday, October 4, and closes Friday afternoon. The money which will be received in this campaign will all go for expenses of the W. Y. C. A. here and abroad. The quota for this year has been placed at $3,000. This amount will be reached through several sources. $220 is expected from student and faculty pledges, $500 from sustaining membership, $500 by entertainments, $300 from the state organization and $100 through senior pledges. The combined combinés have already pledged as their qbita $112 according to Lilian Mayer, vice-president of Y. W. C. A., but before the campaign begins they expect *v* make their qbita biuer. A pre-campaign dinner will be given as Myers Hall Tuesday evening after the regular meeting in Fraser Hall at 4:30 c'clock, so that the solicitors and captains may discuss the coming drive. Miss Marie Russ, general secretary, and Dorothy Brandle, president, will speak at this time. Chairman and Captain Named Miriam Tregemba has been chosen the chairman of the campaign and she has been appointed second chairman. Chairmen and Captain Named Ten captains who have charge of the hundred solicitors are: Gladys Ferris, Robert Leibengood, Dorothy Higgins, Lucie Scott, Margaret Butch, Frances Wilson, Catherine Marey, Leland Bell, Helen-May Marvey, and Lela Belt. Every girl on the campus will be called. Pledges can be identified by blue triangles, which those who wear them are told to wear during the campaign. CONTEST IN FREE THROWS CONTEST IN FREE THROWS Gold Medal Will Be Awarded to Winner In order to develop the free throwing ability of the varsity basketball squad, Coach F. C. Allen will conduct a free throwing contest. This contest will be called the Varsity Squad, who are practicing the varsity squad, and Thursday night. This contest will be called "The One Thousand Free Throw Contest." A gold medal will be awarded the man with the highest score in free throws in 1000 trials. A silver Lyle E. Campbell, c22, of Lawrence has been awarded a $250 scholarship at Harvard by the Harvard Club of Kansas. He will enter the Harvard Administration. Scholarships are administered through competitive application. metal is to be the second prize. The following rules govern the contest: Mr. Campbell was secretary last year in the office of Dr. Forrest C. Allen. 1. All records must be turned in. 2. Mr. Montgomery of the athletic office immediately after throwing. 3. A minimum number of 50 trials at the net must be thrown, with a variety man as an opponent and one as a counter. 3. A maximum number of 100 trials at a time has been set as the limit. Former Student Given Harvard Scholarship 4. Varsity men may choose their opponents at any time, but it is suggested that some preliminary practice be made before beginning the conor the Pittsburgh Meeting: For Harper, Secretary of the Pitts Number of Commerce At the close of this contest Coach Allen hopes to have a team in which any man can be depended on to make a free throw successfully if called upon. Every variety man is expected to enter this contest. 5. In order that a contestant's score be valid, it is necessary that he have 1000 trials to his credit at the end of the contest. Pharmaceutical Society Holds Annual Election 6. The contest opens Tuesday, October 17, at 9 a. m., and closes November 25, at 5 p. m. The Pharmaceutical Society met in the Chemistry Building Thursday afternoon to make plans for the year, and to elect officers. About thirty new members were signed up by the society, immediately following the STATE TEACHER'S ASSN. MEETS OCT. 19,20,21 Officers elected are Mitton Patterson, president; Donald Critchfield vice president; Inez Murphy, secretary; Leonard Brown, treasurer; and "Swede" Warnestin, cheer-leader Harry Abramson was elected chairman of a reception committee to give a speech to students in order that they may get better acquainted with the faculty and old members. Teachers Must Pay State Dues Before Reduced Fare Is Granted Information regarding advance room reservations for those who will attend the fifty-ninth annual session of the Kansas State Teachers' meeting on October 19, 20, and 21, at Topeka, Pittsburg, Hutchinson, and Hays, has been received by Dean Kent, who is a member of the board of directors of the Association. This work is being conducted by the Chambers of Commerce of the four cities in which the meetings are being held. Information may be had by writing the following persons: For the Hays Meeting; H. Lee Jones, Secretary of the Hays Chamber of Commerce. For the Topeka Meeting: Guy C. Sickler, Secretary of the Topeka Chamber of Commerce Chamber of Commerce. For the Home Market. For the Hutchinson Meeting: E. C. Hackett, Manager, Hutchinson Chamber of Commerce. Deent Kent wishes to state that membership fees for the association must be paid here before railroad reductions can be had on tickets. The fees are $2,00, and may be paid at his office. A few days ago let me mention and a number of answers have been received with necessary fee. The $2,00 not only pays for membership in the association, but for twelve issues of the "Kansas State Teachers' Association." No program for the session has as yet been received, but the main speakers for the occasion announce are: Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, Raymond Robins, Dr. Lotus D. Coffman Pres. Franklin Nelson, Supt. J. H. Bev Pres. Frank Wilson, Supt. J. H. Bev A. E. Rao, Dr. Adam A. Devereaux S. S. Colvin, Prent. Merle Prenty, Prof. R. L. Lyman, Pres. Livingston Lord, Supt. Z. E. Scott, Patty Hill, Katherine Martin, Nabel Carney and J. C. Merman. Miss Rose Morgan, of the department of English, gave a tea at her home, Sunday afternoon, in honor of Mr. Henry T. Gillett, an English Quaker, who is touring the States with his brother, R. J. Roountree Gillett, for the purpose of furthering the good feeling between England and the United States, and to study international questions. Miss Morgan Gives Tea For English Tourists Among the guests were: Chancellor and Mrs. E. H. Lindey, Dean and Mrs. J. G. Brandt, Mrs. F. E. Bryant, Prof. and Mrs. E. D. O'Leary, Prof. and Mrs. W. C. Stevens, Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Stevens, Prof. and Mrs. Hill, Miss Sara Laired, Miss Alice Winston, Miss Josephine Burnham, and Miss Alberta Corbin. Opens Food Shop Here Miss Emily Ferris, A. B. 19, opened a food shop at 1126 Tennessee Street this week. Miss Ferris spent two years in Kansas City doing social service work, but on account of ill health was obliged to give up her work there last winter. She has come to Lawrence now and is planning an attractive tearoom where she will serve luncheon, tea, and dinner, and also furnish light refreshments for small parties. Helen Bunn, c"23, who was suddenly called to Chicago on account of the death of her father, returned to school this morning. W. S. G. A. REQUESTS HOUSES TO ORGANIZE Mildred Omera, A. B. '22, is teaching in the high school at Onaga. Delay Election of Officers So Women May Become Better Acquainted TOWN TO BE DISTRICTED Council Officers Plan Get-to- Gether Meeting for Uni- versity Women The House President's Council of the W. S. G. A. has asked that all houses, in which three or more University women are rooming, organize next week. The women in each house must own their own house president and officers. Formerly these houses have been organized earlier in the year, but it was decided by the House Presidents' council that it was better to wait until the women became acquainted, so that they would know who would be living there. The purpose of the House Presidents' Council is to bring about direct contact and close co-operation between each woman in the University and the activities of the Women's Student Government Association, through her house president, according to Leila Baumgartner, president of the Council. It is also to consider means of standardizing and improving living conditions for women and to discuss matters of concern in connection with the houses in which University women live. New plans have been made by the Council. The rooming houses are to be divided into districts, so that there will be rooms for affairs at aung the house presidents. Next week at the first meeting of the house presidents, captains will be appointed to take charge of the various districts and see if women who are there where there are too few to organize, will all go together and organize. The names of the house president and officers elected at the various houses may be in lieu of Mrs. Bryant's Room 118 in Fruall Hall, next week. JAYHAWKER SALES START Campaign to Sell Books Will Close Oct.12 The 1923 Jayhawk sales campaign begins Monday, Oct. 4, and closes Thursday, Oct. 12. Everybody who signs up for a Jayhawk will have his name stamped in gold leaf on the cover of his book free. Literature has been sent out to all students in the University concerning the many added attractions of the Jayhawker this year. It will be bound in Kraft-Built Spanish Moorish Linen, omnibased and illuminated with a design which will withstand the roughest handling and will survive for years. Forty-eight interior views of the interesting spots in the various buildings, which will be printed in two colors, will be included among the 600 pages. Pictures of beauty spots, landscapes, politics and politics, snap-shots of distinguished visitors, of instructors and students, will also have their section. Dramatics will be handled in a new way. The new features will be the paintings, theater plays and Arts section, and a Hall of Fame for prominent members of the faculty. Article By Feis Appears In September 'Survey "Minimum Wage Legislation Under Review," is the title of an article by Prof. Herbert Feis, of the department of economics, which appears in the September 15th issue of the Survey. The article deals with the history of this legislation and the problems confronting it and discusses at length the report of a committee appointed by the British Parliament to investigate it. It is chiefly a summary of some of the important problems of wage legislation. Junior College Graduates Here There are thirty-three graduates of the Junior College of Kansas City enrolled in the University of Kansas according to the transcripts that were sent here from that institution. There are twenty-nine enrolled in the University of Missouri. JAYHAWKS OFF ON FIRST LAP OF JOURNEY TO WEST POINT Blanche Eckels, c24, will go to Kansas City this afternoon to attend the Priests of Pallas parade. Twenty-two Members of Kansas Team Accompanied by Coaches, Dr. Allen, and Trainer Baiey Leave Lawrence at 3:30 O'clock STUDENTS GIVE SQUAD BIG SENDOFF Chancellor Lindley; PUBLISH FIRST ISSUE OF KANSAS ENGINEER Two Workouts Are Scheduled During the Trip, the First at the University of Detroit the Other at Niagara University Magazine Includes Articles on New Electrical Laboratory and Heating Plant The Superintendent and the U. S. Corps of Cadets extend a most cordial invitation to the President of Kansas University and such members of the Faculty and student body as may be able to attend the football game between Kansas University and the Army football team to be played at West Point on the afternoon of October 7th and to be their guests during their visit on this day to the Military Academy. Please advise as to your acceptance and to the probable time of arrival. The Kansas Engineer, the quarterly publication of the School of Engineering of the University, made its initial appearance this morning. The magazine contains thirty-two pages and has an original cover design by Vernor Smith, a student in the department of architectural engineering The lead article is by Dean R. L. Sackett, of the School of Engineering at Pennsylvania State University, on "Why Be an Engineer?" Other articles on "The Navy's" Relation to Industry and Industry," by R. R. Empress, United State Navy; and "Getting a Job when You Graduate," by William L. Fletcher, president of a large industrial concern, are included in the contents. A poem, "If," written from the engineers' viewpoint by Robert Isham Randalph, in the Michigan Technic, has the pristine position. Articles on the new electrical laboratory and the new power and heating units at University were written by Roger Hackney and William B. Anderson. A description is given of the com pass invented by George J. Hood, professor in engineering drawing. This compass is being manufactured by the Wahl Company, and is designed to be used with the compass used in higher mathematics. the staff of the Kansas Engineer is: William W. Brehm, editor-in-chief; William Anderson, advertising manager; George L. Hawley, circulation manager; Paul S. Endicett, business manager; Roger Hackey, assistant editor; Stanley S. Learned, Jr., assistant business manager; and Prof. OBRIEN GIVES LECTURES University Man Addresses Meet ing at Great Bend At the meeting of the Barton County Educational Association at Great Bend, September 29 and 30, Dr. F. B. O'Brien, of the Bureau of School Service of the University, gave four lectures. The subjects of the lectures were: "The High School Objectives" "The Responsibility To Be Intelligent", "Giving the Rural Pupil a Square Deal," and "The Human Values in Pupil Development." Josie Henderson of the Extension Department of the University gave an address, "Methods and Administration." The extensive musical program given was in charge of Ray Gafney former student and instructor in the field of Fine Arts at the University. Book Exchange Open Thursday Book Exchange Open Thursday The Book Exchange at Fraas Hall will be open Thursday from 8:30 to 12:30, and from 1:30 to 3:00. Students are urged to bring Volume "of" Political and Social History of Modern Europe," by Hayes. This history cannot be purchased at the book store at the present time and stupefy students because the course are greatly handicapped. Paul O'Leary, A. B. '22, of Lawrence, is spending a few days in Kansas City on business. Very cordially yours, H. B. LEWIS, Major, U. S. A. Adj. Twenty-two Kansas Jayhawks, the pick of the University, accompanied by-four father birds—Coaches "Potty" Chark and Karl Schladenman, F. D. C. Allen, and "Doc" Bailey—let Lawrence at 3:35 o'clock this first迎面 over the Santa Fe on the eastward to West Point where they will need the Army team in a football game Saturdays afternoon. More than 1,500 *students* were present at the Santa Fe station and they sent those twenty-six Jayhawkers east with the Crimson and the Blue and a Rock Chalk ringing in their ears while fingerling on their lips, and with a determination to "ride that Army mule" Reed steadily in their minds. The Men Chosen for Squad Twenty-two armored warriors were on that Santa Fe coach. And those men are the choice of Coach Clark to represent Kansas at the West Point game. They also are the choice of 4,600 students at the University. Their names are: Captain Sergei Higgins, Lee Weidlein, Danny Davidson, "Red Ivy, Reece Cave, Jake Johnson," Prexey, "Prexey Wilson, Carl McAdams, Max Kreuger, Tris Spruenger, Harold Wilkerson, Anderson, Verne Calvert, Alex Hodges, "Jug Boone, Melvin Griffin, Clyde Mosby, Leon Edwards, Eldan Haley, Fred Holderman, and John Lonberg. The crowd then marched to North College where a huge bonfire was already roaring. And as the flames from the fire died out the crowd dispersed thinking, "K. U. will beat the Army." Three thousand students attended the first football rally of the year, hold last night in Robinson Gymnasium and on North College. The gymnasium is packed to the roof, holding one of the players ever attended an initial rally at the University. Vigr Miller, cheerleader, led in thunderous Rock Chalks, and Chancellor Lindley put into words the faith which the University has in the Army, with the Army Saturday. Prof. H. A. Rice told of the student day plans. Rally at North College The team and coaches will leave Kansas City at 6 o'clock this evening over the Santa Fe, arriving in Chicago. They are taking in after eating breakfast in Chicago, they leave at 9:05 over the Michigan Central line, take lunch in St. Thomas, Ontario, at noon, and arriving in Detroit at 3:35, just twenty-five minutes before the game. First Workout at Detroit The two teams will take their first work-out, enroute to Detroit. They are to be the guests of the University of Detroit and will practice on the University athletic field. After a sixteen hour stay in Detroit, the squad leaves Detroit Thursday morning. The train arrives in Niagara Falls at 3:42 Thursday afternoon and the squad will take a second work-out, this time on the athletic field of Niagara University. Niagara is privileged with their presence over night and they leave the next morning at 6 o'clock, arriving in Garrison, New York, at 3:08 o'clock Friday after breakfast. The team will head to the Cadet field Friday afternoon and will stay Friday night at the Cadet barracks. The game is scheduled for 3:30 o'clock Saturday afternoon, Eastern Standard time, which means 2:30 o'clock here. Results should arrive (Continued on Page 4.) 10 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas Subscription price $2.40 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.90 for one semester; 56 cents a month; 15 cents a week. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kanaan, 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 Texas at Austin, and in the Department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phone: K. U. 35, and 66 The Daily Kassan aims to please students with the best of the University of Kansas to go furiously and by standing for the deals the students are willing to pay. The writers to be chaired; to be cheerful; to leave more curious persons; to teach more aptly the students of the University. Editor-in-chief Ben Hibben News Editor Glenn Cairns Raymond Dyer Short Editor Glick Schultz Short Editor Glick Schultz Alumni Editor Ruth Carter Alumni Editor Ruth Carter Business Staff Editorial Staff Business Manager ..Lloyd Ruppenthal Asst. Bus, Mgr. John Montgomery, Jr. Asst. Bus, Mgr. .Clyde Burnside Board Members Chester Shaw Dean Boggs Cheetah White Berry Johns Caroline Caroline Deyssuign Franca Carlton Powers Lottie Lotho Ted Hudson TUESDAY, OCT. 3, 1922 A plutocrat is one who has more money than you have. THERE IN FULL FORCE "And 4,000 enthusiasts, clad in 20,000 pairs of overalls and 2,000 gingerham aprons, beat loudly upon 4,000 tin plates with 4,000 tin spoon and shouted lustily for food; whereupon 4,000 dinners were immediately served to them." So read the Kansan account of the barbecue--that satisfying climax of Stadium Day two years ago. Everyone who participated in that day agrees that it was one of the greatest events in the history of a great school. Now that day is to be duplicated; Camping, October 7, is the time set for another demonstration of that enthusiasm and fine spirit of loyalty which have always pervaded the very air of Mount Oread. Perhaps the job to be done will be less spectacular than the tearing down of the old McCook bleachers; perhaps the policing of the University grounds seems less romantic than making ready for the erection of a new athletic arena. But it is none the less necessary. Nothing that happened on that memorable day two years ago, however, could outshine that which is to take place in Robinson Gymnasium Saturday afternoon. What could be more enthralling than to come to that place of gathering, with the sense of a morning well spent and with a satisfied feeling under the belt, to watch play by play and minute by minute as K. U. rides that Army Mule to viciety? Occasionally one hears some one of that small group of students whose loyalty seems to take the form of offering a football man a cigarette or of betting against his own team formulating plans whereby he can escape from the "work-fest" Saturday morning. Of course, there are a few University men who have legitimate reasons for being absent when the "babor gangs" are formed on Campus Day; they know who they are. But it is useless to appeal to the school spirit of the first mentioned group; they have none. Nevertheless, it would be well for those few who have not enough regard for K. U. to want to join in the activities Saturday to investigate the files of the Kanasan for May 1921, concerning what happened to men of their breed on Stadium Day. DOUBLING THE RETURNS Analogous with many other things which are valued in relative rather than in material terms is the Y. W. C. A. You women of the freshman class—what does the Y. W. mean to you? Does it mean merely a place to go on Tuesday afternoon or a real live institution which radiates com- radership and friendship association? Ask any older K. U. woman about the importance of Y. W. here on the campus, and then carefully note her Official Daily University Bulletin Oct. 3. 1922. Vol. II. HANGED PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATION SCHEDULE: Copy received by Florence E. Bliss, Editor, Cancellor's Office Following is the schedule of psychological examinations, changed to avoid conflict with Campus Day. These examinations were announced by printed slips handed to students on enrollment days. The tests are required before admission to take the psychological examination at the University of Kansas last year. Those whose last name begins with: A to G, inclusive, Thursday, October 5, at 3:30 p. m. *To 0, inclusive, Friday, October 6, at 1:30 p. m. *P to Z, inclusive, Friday, October 6, at 3:30 p. m.* First Frosh: "Say, if these Lawas get funny where's the heat place to get away from them?" Tell me tell me the safest place is in the Law library." H to O, inclusive, Friday, October 6, at 1:30 p. m. B. W. C. The examinations will be held in Fraser Chapel. Changes necessitated by conflict of classes with the above schedule must be arranged in advance with Professor Rosenow on Wednesday, at 11:30 or 1:30 at his office on the ground floor, East Administration Building. Please do not ask for change of schedule on grounds of out-of-school work or week-end engagements at home. F. J. KELLY, Dean of Administration. FIRST UNIVERSITY CONCERT POSTPONED: The Chamlee concert scheduled for this evening has been postponed because of the illness of Mr. Chamlee. I say, old man, Where's all that tan And tongued hide, —That hofthy stride— You got, you say, By pitching hay? The first concert will be given Monday evening, October 9th, by Cyrena Van Gordon, Contrairio, Chicago Opera Company. STUDENT ACTIVITY TICKETS: OSCULATORILY SPEAKING Flub: "Sure is funny about kisses, we get them at the confectionery by the pound. At the movies we get them by the reel. Ak..." Dub (interrupting): "Yeh, and we get 'em in the parlor by the ur." H. L. BUTLER, Dean. The Personal Equation Professor Shinn: "What is your criticism of the speech, Mr. Jones?" Jones (enthusiastically): "She had the very sweetest personality I ever witnessed on the stage." Prof. Shinn: "But what did she say?" In sending in tickets to the football games for reservation of seats, sense write in red ink or red pencil on each ticket the book number which is printed. The ticket to the Colorado game states basketball. This is a typographical error and is an airticket to the FOOTBALL game. It should be sent in for payment. Jones: "I-I- don't know." answer. Its tenure will depend upon the intimacy of her contact with this organization. If she has been more interested in other activities and only knows vaguely of the "Y." work, she will probably answer, "Oh, it's all right since they have been serving tea and wafers before the meeting." The materialism of her answer may be excused on the grounds of inaffi-cient knowledge of the subject. It is often expedient to judge things by our knowledge of them—if we know little of them, they mean little to us, invested even a portion of her time, but if you ask a woman who has money, and interest in the Y. W, you can count upon an enthusiastic answer full of praise and commen- dation of the institution and its work. Her investment has netted her the inestimable benefit of new friends and associations. The Y. W, means something to her because it has absorbed her interest; it has claimed her attention and has been given a place in her college life. She can truthfully answer that the Y. W. has meant to her more than she can tell you—her investment has doubled her returns. F. C. ALLEN, Director of Athletics. An eminently respectable rhetoric teacher regaled the breakfast table this morning with her dream of a cannibal feast—which brings up the old question of whether dreams are the result of unfilled desires. The Turks are driving the Greeks out of Asia. How many more restaurants will that mean in this country? Prof. F. W. Blackman has one rule which he enforces rigorily in all of his classes. All the students must not sleep at the same time. Plain Tales From The Hill There's hardly a snicker in "the tales" tonight. There should be a half dozen good laughs. When you hear someone send it and let's all smile together. ANNOUNCEMENTS The sophomore discussion group will meet tonight at 7:30 in Myers Hall. Cree Warden, Pres. The young people of the Methodist Sunday School will meet at the church at 5:30 o'clock Friday evening to go for a hike into the country, visit websites, games, and all that goes to make time. Bring your mates and come! Women's Glee Club, regular rehearsal, Wednesday evening, 7:50, Room 10, Center Administration Building. There will be a business meeting of Pi Lambda the Wedda, evening at 7:30 o'clock in Fraser Rest Room. Nellie Higgins, secretary. Campus Opinion Regular rehearsal of Men's Glee Club will be held Wednesday evening at 7:30 o'clock in Central Administra-tion building. All members must be present. To the Editor: The painful part of the expenditure for school books is that in many cases, it proves to be a waste. In too many cases, assignments are made a few times in a book, and then it is laid aside and the rest of the semester is devoted to lectures and outside reading. The students feels the necessity of buying a book, because the first assignment is made in the text, and, in the enthusiasm of the first week of school, he believes that he is going to start the year right by studying his lessons. In courses in which the text is the basis of each day's recitation, the attachment for it becomes greater because it becomes worn. The present prices of the simplest little books are beyond the means of many students. For the four or five useless books which are purchased each semester, enough money must be spent to start a good library. To be sure, some text books are good enough to grace any shelves, but the mere fact that they are text books often places them under a boycott. Would it not be fair for the instructor either to use the text enough to keep a book open while, or else to make other provisions for the few times it will be needed? TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY GARAGE FOR RENT —1138 Ky. Phone 2191 Blue. —04 COOK of exceptional competency and reliability would consider position with fraternity, sorority or club.— Seba Erdridge, phone 2570. —04 MOTOR BOAT —For rent. After. noons, Saturday's, Sundays and nights. Call George Edgar Jr., Phone 1537 Black. —08 TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY Student Enterprise Tickets on sale at six places:- Athletic Office Gymnasium Law School Office Green Hall Office, Dean of Men Fraser Office, Dean of Women Fraser Y. W. C. A. Henry Hall Y. W. C. A. Henry Hall A word to the wise is sufficient ... Copyright 1922 Hart Schaffner & Marx Better Clothes Pay You Wear them this fall Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes BETTER clothes pay you; in looks, in money saving, in wear, in personal satisfaction that's why we say "wear them;" that's why we sell only fine quality- See the new sport suits and Norfolks at $35 Top coats in all the best styles at $35 ...Peckhams... THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MONKEYS ARE BOUGHT FOR RESEARCH WORK Van Has Private Apartment Prepared for Them at Animal House Dr. H. R. Lano, the new head of the department of biology, has purchased four monkeys, which arrived last Friday, and which are to be used for research work. Dr. Lane is studing the development of special sense organs and the relation of the minds of different animals. The monkey is only one of fifteen animals which he has studied. The monkeys are of the Rhesus family, the common, old world monkey, which is seen around in circuses and with the grind organ men. They are very young, and must be kept at least a year before they will be valuable as specimens for study. They were obtained from the Horn Zoological Arena Company, in Kansas City, Mo. Dr. Lane will keep the monkeys at the animal house, where they are provided with a large cage, fifteen feet long, four and a half feet wide, and seven feet high, which has running water through it, a bed room curtained off for privacy, and perches and swings fo. amusement and exercise. The animals are fed on bread, apples, onions, oranges, oranges, and seed the meal often being topped off with demi-tasse, as the coffee is their chief delight. Van, the animal man, says he plan to charge five or ten cents admission to see the monkeys. He thinks they will be quite worth the price. Doctor Lane will have twelve as soon as he can get them. ENGINEERS ARE PRIVILEGED K. U. Students May Use Oil Field in Operation The Poorest Oil Company, which controls a large tract of land five miles southeast of Baldwin, has recorded full privileges of consulting engineers to the students of the University for oil and gas geology. Last Saturday, seventeen men in the department made a complete survey of the land, getting locations and elevations of the twelve wells that are giving oil at present. H. W. Hoots, an archaeologist in geology, conducted the trip. “This privilege of using the oil field in operation is the most ideal condition for putting into practice the things learned in the course that the students in the department have ever had,” said R. S. Knappman, associate director of sand and rock formation in reference to oil content, and then after they have offered their opinion, they will have a chance to see how near they came to being correct inside of a machine going on constantly. At present the company is sinking more wells.” The work will continue throughout the semester, and records and samples will be kept, so that each man that takes the laboratory work will usually take the same position as a consulting geologist to the company. Stafford County Club Is First To Organize The first county group pto organize at th e university this year is the Stafford County Club, which met in Room 205, Fraser Hall, Wednesday evening. The following officers were elected: Myrl Hart, c'23, Macksville, president; Arthur Gates, c'24, Seward, v-president; George Thompson, c'25, Stafford, secretary-treasurer; Evert Garvin, c'23, St. John, This club is one of the first county clubs at the University, having organized each year for several years: They plan to be a social medium for the Stafford County students at the University, and to serve as a factor in influencing Stafford County students to come to the University. There are twenty-four members in the club this year. At the meeting it was voted to have a "get-acquainted hike" once next week Lawrence High to Use Stadium Lawrence High to Use Stadium Friday, October 6, Lawrence High School High School, using the new K. U. stadium, as its grandstand. Lawrence High will use the stadium the rest of the season for their home games. Coach Davis would shape this year and they expect to win the majority of their games. Mark Shumart, c23, will go to Kansas City this afternoon to attend the Priests of Pallas parade. Engineers Receive Prizes For Summer Field Work BEAT THE ARMY! Thirteen men in the School of Engineering have received prizes for work done this summer in the field, pocket steel tape, presented by W. C. McNown, professor of highway engineering. The work was done in traversing and leveling at Camp Zimmér during the month of June. The men receiving the tapes in traversing are: Paul Heckert, R. W Evans, M. H. Stacey, A. and Peterson, while D. F. Allen, H. F. Brockett, H. H. Brown, A. W. Classson, W. Crown, R. W. Evans, M. L. McCaul, L. Miller, R. F. Slaughter, and M. H. Stacey received tapes for lavelling. Apropos Ear-chewing A feminine contributor hands us this. Please note the comment, "Delt, the bull pup mascot of the girls' gym classes has a new companion in the form of a Maltese kitten which be carried around by the ear. The kitten must have long hair, attentions, but she purrs her content every time the pup carries her. What other lady would permit this from one of the opposite sex?" Edna Marie Hilkey, B. D. "22, is working in the down-town offices of the F. A. U. WELCOME STUDENTS WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods Width United Army Stores Co 706 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Army Goods SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire to earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Plentant work, written materials, with a Vita. Jury, 344 Wayne, Ao. Kansas City, MIA. -S73 1918 FORDS—$75 up. Butler-Sanderson Motor Co. 1005-07 Mass. St. WANT ADS ROOMS for men—Two double, one single. $7.50, $8.00, $9.00. 1336 Tennessee. ROOOM for two girls. Strictly modern house, only two blocks from Campus. Call 2509. FOR RENT—Boy's room at 1019 Alabama street. TWO large rooms for girls 1116 Miss- sissippi, strictly modern. For informa- tion call 295. O-3 FOR SALE - Complete two-step wire- less receiving set. Excellent results guaranteed. Bill Garland. Phone 429. 0-5 WANTED—Piano students by senior. Luther Carlton. Phone 2439 Blue. THEMES typewritten without delay. Five cents per hundred words. 1706 Vermont St. Phone 2186, O-3 LOST-Triangular pint in pearls and emeralds, lettered Phi Theta Kappa. Reward. Call Katherine Alexander. Phone 2776 or 1303. 65 ROOM FOR RENT—One or two boys. Good location. 1145 Kentucky. Phone 2484 White. 60 FOR RENT—Room for boys near Stadium. 1001 Maine. Phone 1599 Black. 07 FOR RENT—Good garage at reasonable terms. 1138 Ky. Telephone 2191 Blue. 04 DANCE OF THE HELLENIC TAMMIES Girls-Another big bunch of Earrings! Just arrived. Come in and try them on. You're welcome. $1. to $10. Gustafson YE COLLEGE JEWELER WALK-OVER THOMAS CHAMBERS MUSIC BY JOHN L. MAYER The price of shoes CAN be too low Lots and lots of people have found that out. It's better to pay a dollar or two more and get real shoes made of real leather than to "save" a dollar or two and get imitation shoes of cheap construction. Don't buy shoes through a pane of glass. Too many people judge shoes by the outside looks. It is better to know the make and to know the store that sells them. Walk-Over stands on a 48-year record. The trade mark means something—especially in times like these. It means 100 cents in your shoe dollar. Otto Fischer's SINES THE GOOD SINES $7.50 to $10.00 FOR RENT—Room for girls. Ohio. Phone 2545. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive Optometrist), Eyes exam. glasses, glasses made, Office 1025 Masr DR. 4. W, OBYRON, (Dentist) Specia- tation to prevention and treatment of pyrrhhea. 304 Perkins Building. Tel. 507. Whitsed Laming, c24, spent the week-end at her home in Kansas City. PROFESSIONAL CARD Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 Oread Shining Parlor CHARLIE'S Best Shines in Town Best Shines in Town Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Drop in at THE SHOP OF SERVICE STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1033 Mass. St. "SuitingYou THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULTZ 917 Mass. St. The new Squad Pictures are now ready— Get yours now ↓ Squires Studio The College Photographer THE VAGABOND A light weight crusher by KNOX The ideal Hat for a change, flexible and very light in weight yet having the quality to retain its shape. FRESHMAN CAPS 75c $6.00 HOUK-GREEN The House of Kuppenheimer good clothes Chamlee Concert Postponed! Owing to Mr. Chamlee's illness Cyrena VanGordon, Contralto CHICAGO OPERA COMPANY will sing in Robinson Gymnasium MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 9th. Season tickets $4, $5, and $6, now on sale at the Business Office and Round Corner Drug Store. Single admission to the Van Gordon recital, $2, on sale at the door the evening of the recital. Over 1300 season Tickets already sold. Church Member? Your local church wants your affiliate membership, and next Sunday, October 8 is the special day for receiving affiliate members into all churches. Wear your uniform! It helps you It helps others Phone your student pastor or minister of the local church Information about them at either "Y" office THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ANNOUNCE COMPLETE BASKETBALL SCHEDULE Nine Valley Mentors Hold Meeting at Hotel Baltimore, Kansas City FIRST HOME GAME JAN. 5 Jayhawks Will Have Two Non Conference Games—Creighon and K. C. A. C. The Missouri 'Valley' basketball schedules for the 1922-23 season were drafted Saturday at a meeting of the athletic directors of the nine Valley Schools, held in the Hotel Baltimore. Dr. F. C. Lee, athletic director, said he was well satisfied with the Jay-hawker counsel and that each Valley mentor also seemed well pleased with the schedules. The round-robin system of scheduling games, which system was first used in the Valley last year, was again used for the coming basketball season. The basketball rules interpretation meeting, which the faculty representatives attend, will be held on Thursday in December, it was decided. Nebraska Here January 5 The Jahwinker schedule opens with a home game, against Nebraska, on January 5. After two home games, the team coes on a northern trip, playing three teams, Ames, Grinnell and Drake, in three days. Then three days later the Kansas squares go east, playing Missouri and Washington. Two Non-Conference Games Two Non-Conference Games Two games were scheduled with non-conference schools, one with Creighton University on February 13 and one with K. C. A. C. for January 25 or February 1. The Valley cross-country run will be held at Washington University, St. Louis, on November 11. The schedule follows; KANSBAS January 1 - Nobraska at Lawrence. January 2 - Ames at Amos. January 3 - Ames at Amos. January 4 - Drinke at Des Moines. January 5 - Drinke at Des Moines. January 6 - Washington at St. Louis. January 7 - Washington at Lawrence. February 1 - Kansas Agies at Law. January 12 - Nobraska at Lawrence. February 13 - Nobraska at Lawrence. February 14 - Kansas Agies at Man- hattan. February 15 - Grinnell at Grinell. February 16 - Kansas Agies at Man- hattan. March 1 - Oklahoma at Lawrence. NBIBIASA January 1 - Nobraska at Lawrence. January 8 - Kansas Agies at Man- hattan. January 16 - Drake at Lincoln. January 22 - Lincoln at Lincoln. January 25 - Missouri at Lincoln. January 27 - Drinke at Des Moines. January 28 - Drinke at Des Moines. January 29 - Grinnell at Grinell. February 1 - Ames at Amos. February 3 - Oklahomie at Grinnell. February 5 - Oklahomie at Lincoln. February 16 - Kansas Agies at Lin- colin. February 23—Washington at St. Louis February 24—Missouri at Columbia March 2—Washington at Lincoln. March 3—Kansas at Lincoln. January 17—Kansas at St. Louis. January 29—Agglies at Man- hattan. January 12 - Oklahoma St. Louis. January 13 - Kansas Aggies at St. January 20—Kansas Agnes at Manhattan January 23—Missouri at Columbia. January 26—Oklahoma at Columbia. February 5—Okahoma at Norman. February 9—Grinnell St. Louis. February 17—Ames at Ames. February 17—Ames at Ames. February 18—Drake at Moineau. February 20—Drake at Moineau. February 23—Drake at Moineau. March 2—Drake at St. Louis. March 1—Mirabrake at Lincoln. March 8—Mirabrake at Lincoln. January 12—Ames at Norman. January 13—Washington at St. Louis. January 13—Missouri at Columbia. January 19—Kansas at Man- hattan. January 20 — Nebraska at Lincoln. January 21 — Nebraska at Lincoln. February 1 — Mamaroneck at Norman. February 2 — Mamaroneck at Norman. February 3 — Nebraska at Norman. February 4 — Nebraska at Norman. February 5 — Grinnell at Grinnell. February 6 — Grinnell at Grinnell. February 7 — Drinke at Norman. February 8 — Drinke at Norman. February 9 — Kannas Agilles at Norman. March 3—Kansas at Lawrence. GRIENNell January 12 - Kansas at Grinnell. January 12 - Kansas at Grinnell. January 12 - Drake at Des Moines. January 12 - Drake at Des Moines. February 6 - Norwalk at Lincoln. February 6 - Drake at Grinnell. February 6 - Missouri at St. Louis. February 6 - Missouri at Columbus. February 6 - Washington at St. Louis. February 6 - Washington at St. Louis. hattan. March 23 - Kansas at Lawrence. March 23 - Oklahoma at Norman. March 23 - Kansas Agies at Grinnell. DRAKA January 6 - Kansas at Des Moines. January 6 - Kansas at Des Moines. January 6 - Kansas Agies at St. Louis. January 6 - Washington at Des Moines. January 6 - Newkora at Des Moines. January 6 - Grinell at Des Moines. January 6 - Grinell at Des Moines. January 6 - Washington at Lawrence. January 6 - Washington at Des Moines. February 19 - Washington at Des Moines. February 19 - Washington at Des Moines. AMES January 8 - Okla州 at Norman. January 8 - Kansas at Lawrence. January 8 - Kansas at Lawrence. January 8 - Missouri at Ames. January 8 - Missouri at Ames. February 19 - Drake at Des Moines. February 19 - Drake at Des Moines. February 19 - Kansas Agies at Man- fured. February 19 - Missouri at Columbia. February 19 - Oklahoma at Ames. February 19 - Oklahoma at Ames. February 17 - Grinell at Grinnell. March 2 KANSAS AGIES January 8 - Nebraska at Manhattan. January 8 - Nebraska at Manhattan. January 8 - Nebraska at Manhattan. January 8 - Washougal at Manhattan. January 8 - Washougal at Manhattan. January 8 - Washougal at Manhattan. February 19 - Kansas Agies at Man- fured. February 19 - Missouri at Columbia. February 19 - Oklahoma at Ames. February 19 - Oklahoma at Ames. February 19 - Grinell at Grinnell. March 2 February 14 - Nebraska at Lincoln. February 15 - Nebraska at Lincoln. February 16 - Grinnell at Manhattan. February 17 - Nebraska at Oaklanda at Norman. March 1 - Grinnell at Grinnell. March 2 - Grinnell at Norman. MILWAUKEE January 3 - Milwaukee at Grinnell. January 4 - Milwaukee at Grinnell. January 5 - Milwaukee at Grinnell. January 6 - Kansas at Columbia. January 7 - Kansas at Columbia. January 8 - Nebraska at Lincoln. January 9 - Nebraska at Lincoln. January 10 - Nebraska at Lincoln. January 11 - Oklahoma at Norman. January 12 - Oklahoma at Norman. January 13 - Kansas at Columbia. January 14 - Kansas at Columbia. January 15 - Kansas at Columbia. January 16 - Kansas at Aggley at Columbia. January 17 - Kansas at Aggley at Columbia. January 18 - Kansas at Aggley at Columbia. January 19 - Nebraska at Columbia. January 20 - Nebraska at Columbia. January 21 - Washington at Columbia. Gridiron Gossip Glick Schultz "Ride that Army mule." These were the instructions given to the twenty-two men who left this afternoon for West Point. And they will, for they are going to think of riding that mule when awake, and dream of riding it when asleep. The three varsity teams were on the field running signals until after 7 o'clock last night. The scrimmage earlier in the afternoon was long, but not hard, as Coach Clark was not taking any chances of having a man injured after he had made his selection. It's just as someone said on the field last night. "There aren't any individual stars on the team, but the men stick together and play football." And that's what it takes to have a football team. On paper the team doesn't look so very good. But on the field it's a fine machine. In 1919 we had a whale of a team on paper, but in action it wasn't so much. It may be vice versa this year. In anticipation of the West Point trip and of seeing the Follies in New York, "Doe" Bobau appeared on the air and greeted her suit, being greeted with many jibs. The men on the two varsity squads, which will make the West Point trip, were given new jerseys last week. They are red with black large crimson letters on the back. A press box, or the frame of one, has reared its head at the top of the west Stadium. It was dedicated by two correspondents last evening. Dr. John Outland, an all-Valkyrie half at Kassam in 1893 and an 'all-American tackle at Penn State in 1895, on the field had night, but he proved the pressure. Doctor Outland is a surgeon in Kansas City. The good old days are gone! At the rally last night scores of men walked away from the Gym with dates, and never a single cry of "meat!" The march to north college was ordered and quiet! The band played Crimson and the Blue and it wasn't followed with a Rock Chalk! It. The only thing that resisted the old days, was the fire, it was a great fire. The good old days are gone! Regnair weekly ten of the W. S. G. A. will be Wednesday afternoon, from 4 to 5 o'clock at Henley House. Hostesses will be the following freshmen women: Betty Testard, in charge, assisted by Marion Walker, Ann Dorothy Lester, Georgia Hodges, Dorothy Meryl, Mirmian King, Margaret Cochran and Constance Kinkle. The ten is for all women of the University and freshmen women are especially urged to be present. W. S. G. A. Tea Is Wednesday David Lobdell, c25, spent the week end in Kansas City visiting friends. Jayhawkers Leave For Battle With West Point (Continued from page 1) here about 2:38, if the game starts promptly. The team leaves Garrison at 7 o'clock, following the game. They arrive in New York City at 9 o'clock, in time for the Ziegfeld Follies. They stay at the Prince Hotel, and leave New York at 6 o'clock Sunday night, arriving in Lawrence at 12:15 o'clock Tuesday noon, being gone just slightly more than three hours less than a week. Owing to an error in copy, the ticket in your book for the Colorado football game, November 18, was marked basketball. The athletic office urges that it will be necessary to reserve seats in the same manner as to other football games. Make reservations as soon as possible. WIEDEMANN'S Tea Room Service The Dining Service Supreme Home Economies Club Meets the first meeting of the Home Economics club was held, Monday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock, in Room 9, Fraser Hall. Gertrude Lee, c23, Academy Hall to fill the vacant. acency. Plans were made for the initiation of new members, which is to be on Thursday evening, October, 12, at 7:30 o'clock, in Room 9 Fraser Hall. Home Economics Club Meets The injury received by Wythe Walters, c'26, in football Thursday has proved to be more serious than first thought. Walters, who has been playing quarterback on the Freshman team was taken out of the game because of a badly twisted ankle. Later under the Xray the ankle proved to be fractured. Although the fracture is not a very bad one. Walters Sustains Fracture Henry J. Gish, B. S., '18, Married On the evening of September 16, Miss Vada Pearl Colvin of Breckinridge, Mo., and Henry J. Gish, B. S., '18, were married at the home of the Rev C. L. Clinton, in St. Joseph, Mo. M. Gish is employed in the engineer a short honeymoon the couple will be at home at 471 West Fourteenth Street, Trenton, Mo. The Worlds Series by "RADIO" come up and hear the report of each play RADIO SHOP 2nd Floor Ober's HEAD TO POOR OUTFITTERS Unusual --ings. A fifty page pictorial calendar of the school year. A reorganized athletic section. An unusual view section. New style of handling organizations. Cap Values $2 and $1.50 SkofStadS ELLING SYSTEM LAWRENCE, KANS. Pander's QUALITY JEWELRY WATKINS NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00 "Just a Step from the Campus" C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. D. C. Ashar, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. DIRECTORS E. C. BRICKEN, Prop. C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Ashor, L. V. Miller, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishop Meals served at Brick's are prepared clean—in a sanitary kitchen—they are cooked with care, seasoned by a "knowing-how" touch, and the result—the nearest thing to mother's cooking. THE NEAREST THING to Mother's Cooking Of course we all have a great longing for Mother's home cooking—its wholesome, fresh flavor. We once ate Mother's cooking ourselves, so we won't argue about the goodness of that kind of food. But incidentally while we are not stepping forth as rival to Mother's art—still we do pride ourselves on the flavor and zestful deliciousness to be found in the food we serve here. THE OREAD CAFE Suits $40 Protch, the College Tailor Bowersock Theatre Tuesday -- Wednesday Shows 3:00-7:00-9:00 Where Does the Jazz Trail Lead? AFTER A. LAKES PRESENTS Cecil B. DeMille's PRODUCTION "Manslaughter" Thomas Meighan Leahter Joy, Actress CC Paramount Golden Cast also includes: John Miturn George Fauccie Julia Paye and others. Are the sons and daughters of the rich leading the kind of life that made Rome fall? De Mille shows you in this picture—the greatest be ever made. With Leatrice Joy the society beauty who set the fastest pace and Tom Meighan the man who loves her. A Ham Hamilton Comedy A Ham Hamilton Comedy Adults 40c Children 20c Varsity Theatre Tuesday Only Shows 2:30 4:00 7:30 9:00 p.m. "Free Air" From the Saturday Evening Post story by The story of a girl and her father's experiences on auto trip Sinclair Lewis A Christie Comedv Adults 28c Children 10c Wednesday and Thursday MARSHALL NEILAN'S L NEILAN'S "FOOLS FIRST" $ An Easy Way to Subscribe for Your Jayhawker Mail the card or come to the Jayhawkter Office if you want to reserve your copy of the 1923 Jayhawkter before October 12 and get your name stamped in gold leaf on the cover of your book free. And to make your investment even more inviting if you subscribe before October 12, you can get your name stamped in gold leaf on the cover of your book free. At most schools a charge of 50 cents is made for this service, but the Jayhawker editors want to give you the most possible for your money. This year the 1923 Jayhawker editors want to make it as easy as possible for you to subscribe for the Jayhawker. All you have to do is fill out the card which was sent you and mail it or you can drop in at the office, room 110 Fraser and reserve your copy. Remember, just mail the card or come in to the Jayhawker office. No confusion or bother—just the filling out of the card indicating whether you want to pay cash or by installments. Six hundred pages of K. U. life. A real Kraft-Built Spanish Moorish binding. Special Ivory-tinted paper. More than eight hundred illustrations of K. U. A Vanity Fair style dramatics section. A Fine Arts section. Pictures of all the interesting stools in the built Here is what you get— Pictures of all the interesting spots in the buildings. The Jayhawker office is in the Alumni office, room 110 Fraser The 1923 Jayhawker "An Aristocrat of College Annuals" Bill & Ted Wm. W. Brehm. E. F. (Ted) Hudson, Business-Manager Editor THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XX. MAY HAVE SCHOOL ON SATURDAVS IN FUTURE University Senate Will Debate Merits of Six-Day Week COMMITTEE FOR FLUNKS Would Make Uniform Regulations for Raising Grades of Students The question of scheduling University classes on Saturday mornings, beginning next semester, will be a special order of business at the next meeting of the University Senate the first Tuesday in November. A motion thus to use Saturday mornings was made by Dean H. W. Arant, the school of law, at yesterday's meeting and on Thursday of Professor A. T. Walker was made the special order of business. The matter of using Saturday mornings for resitiation developed out of a long discussion or University convocations, evoked when Dean Kent, chairman of the convoction committee, introduced a resolution asking the schedule committee to arrange next semester's schedules. so as to provide time, open for convolutions or for such other University meetings as might be desirable. To Deal with Dishonesty Other matters coming before the Senate included the authorization of an all-University committee to work on a program that would "incomplete," and "failures," and the raising of "D" grades. The deans of the respective schools are to nominate members for the committee, which will be named by the chancellor. The matter of uniform methods of deal with disloyalty in classrooms was referred to the joint committee or student affairs. Professors Thurman and Baumgartner were named to draft senate resolutions upon the death of Professor Kruse, and Professors OLeary and Young were named to nominate a secretary for the Senate. Urges Student Co-operation Chancellor Lindley brought before the senate the matter of Campus Day and urged members of the faculty to show the students they could operate with a cast as complicated as a wheelbarrow. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4, 1922. "For the good of the order," said Dr. F. B. Dainis, "I should like to call attention to the basketball schedule which has just been published. It does not seem to me that you students can do justice to their school work given the injuries in weeks, considering the travel involved." Dean Arant declared that the only justification for taking such hours would be the utilization of other equally good hours—the Saturdays, which he said are now wasted. Another speaker denied that Saturdays were wasted, and still another entered a plea for Saturday mornings for students and had many reports to the conversation question was finally tabled and Dean Arant offered his resolution for Saturday classes, which, upon Professor Walker's motion, went over until the next regular meeting. Discuss Convocations The question of convocation provoked spirited discussion. The committee was held in a fixed hour was based on criticism of the present system as one that caused undue interruption of classroom work. Opposition to the fixed date was based on the difficulty of making that date and the convenience of suitable speakers coincide. Opposition was also made about the setting aside of four hours a month, in the best (morning) hours, when only one student were to be used for convocations. NUMBER 18. The Senate adjourned until Thursday, when it will hear the chancellor's recommendation for the next biennial budget. Persons wishing to try out for Quill Club may leave their manuscripts in the box outside Room 120, Fraser, not later than October 16. Anything literary will be considered. Several short articles rather than one long article may be submitted. Only juniors and seniors are attached to the manuscript on a separate sheet—George Struble, President. Ardmore, Okla. Oct. 4- The 1923 conference of the twelfth district of Rotary International will be held here at Ardmore University's executive committee of that district. G. C. Shaad's Car Catches Fire West of Commons While Professor G. C, Shad of the School of Engineering, and his three children were eating breakfast at the Commons, this morning, his Cadillac car, which he had parked in the new apartment, burst into flames. Early students on the hill ran for fire extinguishers. Professor Shan was called. He rushed to the scene of the fire, and, while he was hurried, he approached the stenchings and looking for a fire extincher, someone else put out the fire The car was not badly damaged, the paint on the hood was blistered com the heat, and the wooden parts were damaged. Otherwise the ard did not suffer. OREAD MAGAZINE TO HAVE MANY FEATURES Talented Students Urged to Submit Contributions for Fall Issue "Early in the month of chrysanthemus and persimmons the fall number of Oread Magazine will make a special run. In October, Cross, editor, announced this morning. All manuscripts must be in by October 16, which date, also marks the dead line set for manuscripts intended for member ship tryouts. The staff for the Oread Magazine has been carefully chosen and they are planning to give a full and distinctive program to Oread readers. Harvey Walker and Lois Robinette have been named associate editors. She has taught in Chapel and Melia Parker, verse editors, and Charlotte Aiken, art editor. "It is hounded that newcomers on the hill will feel encouraged to submit the best of their literary work. The policy of the editors is to stimulate new talent as well as to feature writings known and liked," Miss Cross said. Verse, short essays, dramatic skits, short stories, literary criticisms, and evidences of the "paragrapher" sprightly art," are always welcome. A new department, "Ticklish Business" is being included in this issue, numerous material, either prose or poetry, as well as drawings are solicited. Contributions both for Oread Magazine and for Quill entry may be dropped in the Quill Box in the south corridor of Fraser Hall not later than October 16. The Oread Magazine is scheduled to appear November 2. NO COUNTY PARADE NOV.11 Dyer Suggests Get-Together Parties for Country Club The county clubs of the University will not hold their homecoming day parade this year, on account of the American Legion celebration and dedication of the stadium, according to Prof. R. S. Knappen, who was in charge of the parade last year. He said that many of the various counties in securing new students and exerting influence for the good of the University. The attitude of the rural and town districts must be friendly before enthusiasm can be obtained. Dean J. R. Dyer made a tour this summer, studying the conditions of the rural districts. He suggests: "If a get-together party could be given by K. U. students and one or more members of the faculty for the seniors of the high schools of every county, during the Christmas holidays it would do a great deal toward influencing the young people to come to K. U." Margaret Larkin Will Start Child's Theatre Margaret Larkin, who will travel on a leyeum circuit this winter with the Little Theatre Company sent out by the Extension Department of the University, will later establish a Child's Theatre in Las Vegas, New Mexico. She will be aided by a dancer and musician in her work with whom she expects to present classical entertainment for the city. At present Miss Larkin is writing three short plays which she will use at the theatre this spring. All the plays to be presented will be one act, varying in style, however. Miss Larkin does not expect to have more than sixteen children in the theatre until it is developed more. CAMPUS DAY PLANS ARE NOW COMPLETE Schools Organize for Work on Stadium Field and University Grounds Saturday TO "HIT THE BALL" AT Electric Scoreboard on McCook Will Flash Game Play by Play Organization of the schools of the University by members of the special committee of seventeen for University's first big Campus Day, to be held Saturday, October 7, is progressing rapidly. Arrangements for getting into the Stadium field and the erection of the score board have been made. The School of Law, under the direction of Dean Arant, has been thoroughly organized into squads, and this body will begin to "hit the ball" at 8 o'clock Saturday morning, cleaning the courts and underbrush in Marvin Grove. Tools Needed for Work "The tools needed for this work," said Prof. H. A. Rice, chairman of the Campus Day Committee, this morning, "are scythes, hand axes or hatchets, and rakes. All students have acclimatized to these tools and are expected to bring them to work Satur day morning." The School of Engineering, organized under the direction of Prof. G. A. Shaad, will grade the ground both in front of and behind Marvin Hall, in addition to moving material in the electrical engineering laboratory. Wheelbarrows and shovels are the implements needed for this work. The Schools or Alumni Aho Pearl- mance will co-operate with the Lawns in Grove, in which the College will have the privilege of sidding the sides of the stadium field. Wheelbarrows, shovels and rakes should be brought. Sod is Already Correct Yesterday afternoon workmen began cutting the sod for the field at the Butcher farm, west of the Ute National Forest. Faculty motor trucks will commence hauling it into the field. Approximately an acre of ground will be cut at the farm. Contrary to the first plans of the committee on Campus Day, it has been decided to display the huge electric scoreboard, upon which will be shown the West Point game, play by play, on the Stadium field. More students can be accommodated there than at Robinson Gymnasium. Lawrence High School has agreed to show the University in order to build one day in order that the University can have the use of the field on Saturday. No Work, No Eat Is Rule "No person who does not work on the campus in the morning will be admitted to the electric score board demonstration in the afternoon," said Professor Rice this morning. "A fee will be charged all those who are admitted otherwise." Lucile House, c29, visited at her home in Sabeth Saturday and Sunday. Committee Will Arrange funds The committee for raising funds for Campus Day has been appointed Members from fraternities are: Mark Waggoner, Charles Hall, and Gus Lauberach; from sororities; May Ireland, Leona Baumgartner, and Irene Seltmann; from the rubs: Selma Gotlib, Harry Dodd, Coffin, Bascom Fearing, and Wary Ebert. Cannons Stored Out of Way The cannons which for nearly stood in front of the Administration building have been stored in the R. O. W. building. They were moved because they were in the way of the graders and will be put back on the campus when the grading is completed. Thirty to forty men have been art bitterly chosen by the committee to act as squad leaders Saturday morning. The time, place and other details of the congrection of the squads will be announced in tomorrow's Kansan. The plans of the committee are similar to those of two years ago for Stadium Day. All fraternities and sororites and clubs will not give the noon meal, but will give the money to the committee to pay for the food which will be served upon the campus. The money will be collected by check payable to Prof. U. G. Mitchell, chairman of the finance committee. Cannons Stored Out of Way BULLETIN New York, October 4—An eight innings rally by the Giants resulting in three runs enabled the National League team to take the opening game from the Yankees, 3 to 2, in the Giants played at the Polo Grounds today. Hoyt replaced Bush in the box during the eighth innings and retired the Giants after McGraw's men had nicked Bush for four straight hits. Bush held the Giants scoreless for seven innings, and during this time the Yanks succeeded in crossing the plate twice. Hoyt prevented further scoring after replacing Bush in the eighth. Score by innings OWLS WILL CONDUCT JAYHAWKER CAMPAIGN Batteries: New York Giants, Nehf Ryan and Snyder; New York Yanks, Bush, Hoyt and Schang. Junior Honorary Society to Canvass Student Body for Annual R H 1 Yanks ...000 001 100 2 7 Giants ...000 000 100 3 11 The Owls, junior honorary society, will take exclusive charge of the 1923 Jayhawk sales campaign tomorrow and Friday, according to a decision made last night. Floyd Shields was elected sales manager and will have charge of the camp and supervision of the Jayhawk manager. To sell 1,000 annuals in addition to those already sold. The student body will be divided and teams will canvass it thoroughly. The Owls will be active in Jayhawk affairs this year as the Jayhawker is to become a junior publication. This year, by eliminating the prize contests held in October, the Jayhawk managers hope to be able to put much more into the book. "I consider it very fitting for the Owls to take charge of the sale of the University's annual," said Howard Frank, president. "While the book is issued by the senior class at present, eventually it will become a junior publication. I feel that all juniors should back it to the utmost. It is right in line with the purpose of the university's annual publication of such great value." While the campaign which the Owls will carry out will close on Friday, the Jayhawk sales campaign is to run until October 12, after which date no more books will be sold with the privilege of having the owner's name stamped on the cover, free. This innovation was made by the managers who must know immediately how many books to order. After October 12, this name service will hold for a few months; who care for this added feature, this is absolutely bona fide and will go into effect October 12. Former K. U. Students Announce Marriage Roosevelt Will Speak At Oklahoma Free Fair Mukugege, Okla, Oct. 4 — Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., assistant secretary of the Navy, will speak at the Oklahoma University here October 6, it was announced. Both Mr. and Mrs. Porter are former students of the University of Kansas, Mrs. Porter is a member of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Until her marriage, she was employed in the advertising department of the Capper Publishing Company, of Topeka. Announcement is made of the marriage of Mary Louse Brown, of Kansas City, to John McGill Porter, of Topeka, on Wednesday, September 6, at the home of the bride's parents, Richard H. Brown, of Kansas City, Mo. Mr. Porter received his A. B. degree in 1921 and was a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity while in school. For the past year he has been publicity man for the Stadium-Union Memorial Corporation. Mr. and Mrs. Porter will make their home in Boston this winter. Mr. Porter will continue his medical work at Harvard. His address will be in behalf of Miss Alice Robertson for re-election as representative to congress. Roosevelt will be the first of a number of widely known speakers to be here before the November election. BEAT THE ARMY! Y.W.C.A. GIVES FARCE; GRAPHS ALL EXPENSES "The Doings of the Dollar" was Written by Ruth Terry LARGE CROWD ATTENDS Soliciting for Pledges Begins Today and Will Last Until Friday An unusually large crowd attended the Y. W. C. A. meeting in Fraser Hall yesterday afternoon, at which a farce, "The Doings of the Dollar," the Doings by Ruth Herrer, c24, was presented by host of thirty-five University women. The purpose of this faree was to explain to the women why the Y. W. C. A. dollar is the busiest dollar or the Hill, and why every woman should subseribe to the Y. W. C. A. during the financial campaign which began this morning and will last until Friday. Cast Represents Dollar Each member of the cast represented a heart of a dollar which is to be spent by the budget. Fifty cents of every dollar subscribed goes to pay the salary of the Y. W. C. A. secretary, twelve cents for the furnishings of Henley Hall, seven cents for office expenses, fourteen cents to pay for national college students for campus speakers who talk Y. W. C. meetings, three cents is used for the conference at Estes, six cents is used by such committees as those for publicity, membership, Big Sisters, social service, and meetings of various kinds, three cents is for Haskel Holmes, two cents for Wyver Hall and the last two cents goes toward miscellaneous expenses. Cabinet Makes Out Budget The budget made by the cabinet is: General secretary ... $1800 Office Telephone ... Supplies ... Assistance ... National work Headquarters ... World Fellowship Henley Hall Committees Marys Hall Campus Speakers Miscellaneous Every woman on the campus who understands why this campaign is being carried on, should make it a point to explain to some one who does not understand or know about it. The Big Sisters especially should explain to their Little Sisters about the money and how important it is for them to give as much as they possibly can. Total LIBRARY HAS NEW BOOKS List of Worth While Volumes Posted in Spooner New books received at Spooner Library include: "John Brown, a Critique," by Hill Peebles Wilson; and interestingly written 1921 edition of "Greek Vase-Painting," by Ernest Bucher; Liaurance's "Songs from the Yellowstone," and "Old Italian Masters" in 12 mries; and *Atmines and the Streams of Life*, by Ethel Smith, author of "Impressions that Remained"; and a large number of German and scientific books. $3600 Also, posted on the bulletin board in the library, is a list of 100 books, selected by a committee of ninety-eight educated men and women, all of whose names are listed in "America." The books are arranged in order of their popularity with the committee. The bulletin adds that these books are worth while and they are books "that every American learns" of twenty and forty-five ought to read." At the top of the list is this sentence, "Better read the best books first, else who may not have time to read them at all," and below, "These books satisfy like things to eat." Word has been received of the marriage of Mary Louise Brown, A. B. 22 of Lawrence, and John M. Porter, A. B. 21 of Topela, on Sept. 6, M. Prater, A. B. 19 of Topela, on Sept. 6, Alpha Theta and M. Prorter of Phi Gamma Delta and Phi Beta Pi. Muriel Corrigan, c25, visited at her home in Effingham Saturday and Sunday. K. S. N. Requires New Course of All Freshner H. G. Wells, "Outline of History" has been introduced as a textbook in the Kanaas State Normal school at Emporia this fall. It is being studied by 175 freshmen in a new course, "Introduction to College Life," which all beginning students are required to take. The course is intended primarily to acquaint students with all the phases of college life, and to give a brief insight into the different branches of knowledge. It is a new development in college subjects and has been introduced into only a few institutions, according to officials of the school at Emporia. Half of the freshmen of K. S. N. are required to take it this fall, the other half to enroll in the course the second semester. SMOKER IS PLANNED FOR SCHOOL OF LAW Faculty and Students Will Have Informal "Get Together" Thursday Night According to Dean H. W. Arant the smoker will be a very informal affair. Its purpose is to bring the faculty and students in the school together so that they may better know another. Meetings of sort will help smokers go good for ship among the students and faculty," said Dean Arant. Members of the faculty and students of the School of Law will hold a smoker and "get together" at 8:30 a Thursday evening, in the Law Building. After introductions are dispensed with, short talks will be given by Dr. W. L. Burdick, Dean Arant, W. C. Simons, editor of the Lawrence Journal World, and a few representative scholars of the School of Law, The School of Law expects to hold one and possibly two smokers a year in the future. K.U. REUNION FOLLOWS GAME Reserve Dining Room for Jay hawkers on Return Trip Two hundred fifty K. U. alumni from New York and surrounding states, will see the game at West Point Saturday, according to a tele- from received by Scopol Hill this morning from Carl L. Cannon, secretary of the New York Alumni Association, made up to have the team return to after the game with the alumni on the Hudson River day boat, and take over the entire dining room for a reunion dinner with Gov. Henry J. Allen presiding. The telegram has been forwarded to Doctor Allen at the Wolterine Hotel, Detroit, where the team will spend the night. "This will be the largest K. U gathering ever held outside of Lawroce, Kansas City, or Topka," said Jeff in commenting on the telegram. The boat carrying the alumni leaves New York at 9 o'clock Saturday morning, arriving at West Point at noon. The game starts at 3 o'clock and the boat leaves for New York at 6:10 p. m., arriving in New York at 9:30 p. m. More than a thousand Jayhawk birds have been sent to the alumni for use during the trip and at the game. Virgil Miller, cheerleader, left yesterday to lead the cheering Saturday. Professor Skilton Gives Compositions at Topeka Prof. C. F. Skilton, of the School of Fine Arts went to Teopka yesterday day where he gave a program before the Minerva Club in the chapel at Washburn College. The musical parts composed by Professor Skilton for "Electra of Sophocles," a Greek play given by the Dramatic Club about four years ago, were repeated there. Miss Florence Butler, the original Electra of the play and Cranston Craig, the original Orestes, were the leading characters. Two members of the original chorus, Mrs. Henry Shim Kwon, a former professor of Skilton. A male chorus of Washburn students assisted in the program. Open meeting of the Zoology Club Wednesday evening, October 4, at 7:30 o'clock in the Rest Dpm, Fraser Hall. Old members are especially urged to be present—Wesley T. Pommerenke, President. 'JAYHAWK SPECIAL' IS DETERMINED TO WIN DETROIT Hilarity of Departure Has Waned—Men Are Quiet and Thinking Victory TODAY Two Varsity Teams Will Run Signal Practice This Afternoon The hilarity of departure has waned and in its stead, grim set jaws and fewer light-hearted remarks are indicators of the Jayhawk resolve to win. The men are quiet, but they are thinking victory. Chicago, Oct. 4. "Aboard the Jayhawk Special!" Coach Potty Candy and his twenty-two Jayhawker football men arrived here this morning, breakfast in the city, and left at 9 o'clock over the Michigan Central line for Detroit which will complete the first lap of their flying trip to West Point where they will play the Army eleven Saturday. Men Retire Promptly Last night the men were ordered to bed promptly at 10 o'clock by Coach Clark. Menus for every meal on the trip have been prepared and are wired ahead to the places where the squad stops. The men will eat luncheon today noon across the Canadian line, in St. Thomas, Ontario. The train is scheduled to arrive in Detroit at 3:35 o'clock this afternoon, just twenty-four hours since leaving Lawrence. In Detroit the squad and coaches will be the guests of the University of Detroit. The two varsity teams will run signal practice on the Detroit athletic field this afternoon. After an overnight stay in Ford's city the special leaves for Nigara Falls, the second stop-off on the trip. To Get Results at Stadium Providing weather conditions are good, K. U. students will get the results of the game at the Stadium here Saturday. The game will begin at 2 o'clock sharp, according to G. B. Patrick, who has charge of the electric radio board. This time will correspond to 3 o'clock eastern time to start the game while he begins to start the K. U.-Army clash. The conditions are unfavorable, reports of the contest will be broadcasted to Robinson Gymnasium, beginning at 2 o'clock. The radio board will be stationed in front of the east section of the stadium. Every student who works on the campus Saturday morning will be added to a free ticket to hear the results of the game in the afternoon. TO PRESENT FIRST PROGRAM Arts and Crafts to Entertain Sunday Night The Arts and Crafts Society of Lawrence will present their first program Sunday at 8 o'clock at the Unitarian Church. This society was recently organized for the purpose of studying and presenting productions from drama, music and literature. Membership is open to faculty, students, and townpeople who are seriously interested in the arts. The privilege of enterment for a member will not be extended after November. Members admitted after that time will be initiated. Prof. M. B. Jaslow, of the department of English, is the head of the executive committee. Other mem bursaries are provided by Cicely Burton, Miss Florence Bliss, Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes, Prof. Gustave Sederlund, and Prof. R. Eastwood. K. C. A. C. Women Must Wait For Dormitories K. S. A. C. women will have to wait at least two years before they will be housed in dormitories, as a result of the action taken by President Jardine. The reason for his action was that the state appropriations were insufficient, the bill allowing but five hundred thousand dollars for the five state schools for the five state schools came in for these dormitories it was found that the five dormitories would cost more than the appropriations. Rather than see the schools have inferior dormitories *Pediment Jardine voluntarily proposed that the dormitories for the agricultural college be built for students years until more appropriations could be made by the legislature. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the Universit, of Kansas Subscription price $3.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.00 for one semester; 6 cents a month; 15 cents a week. Detained an second-class mail matter September 17, 1919, at the post office at Lawrence, Kanans, under the act of March 3, 1870. Published in the afternoon five times a week by students in the Department, a journal of the University. Kaitlin press the paper to the Department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phones K. U. 32 and 66 Editorial Staff The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate students to go further than merely printing the news by standing for them and to play no faff orite; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be calm; to be gentle; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads; in all to know what they may pay the students of the University. Editor-in-chief Ben Hibbs Glass Artist Newa Editor Rhymed Dyes Sport Editor Schultz Sport Editor Ralph Schultz Alumni Editor Ralph Carter Lance Lea Business Staff Business Manager Lloyd Ruppentha, Ast. Bus, Mgr. John Montgomerery, Ast. Bus, Mgr. Clyde Burnsaid Board Members Chester Shaw Dean Boggis White White Carlin Harbarker Mylr Hart Carlin Harbarker DVaughn Francis Carlton Power Lottie Lottie Ted Hudson Roland Blaine WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4, 1922. FAR O'ER THE VALLEY A WEAPON FOR DEFENSE When books grow stale and friends see mtrying, turn your back upon them all and take yourself to the slope at the south side of the campus. Let your gaze drift over the valley from farmhouse to orchard and from Orchard to browning field until it loses itself in the blur of the rimming hills. Then ask yourself if the world is not good. Propaganda is a potent thinir. In the hands of the unscrupulous it becomes a terrible weapon; but like high explosives and powerful drugs its might can be turned into worthy channels; it can be used for the furherance of causes just and right. The liquor interests in this country are not dead. On the contrary, they are fighting now, as election time draws near, as they have never fought before, and their weapon is propaganda. But their instrument of atack has been turned against them; a few publications on the prohibition side of the fence have caught up the publicity fight with a vengeance. The propaganda of the liquor interests is of the most subtle sort—clever in the extreme. One sees it creeping into publications of questionable character and even into some of the better papers; perhaps the commonest form is the joke which attempts to point out the ineffectiveness of prohibition. Buried in a news item, one finds a word, a phrase, or a sentence which is not news, which is in no way essential to the story, but which casts an ugly light upon the institution of prohibition. Those are just a few of the methods employed by the liquor interests; there are countless others. Not long since, a religious newspaper of the East, a daily paper of great influence and nation-wide circulation, saw just what the rum manufacturers were trying to do and how they intended to accomplish their ends. That paper immediately began a publicity campaign so thorough and so dazzling that the propaganda of the "wets" is being overshadowed; hardly a move of the liquor interests escapes the merciless light of newspaper publication. Not only is this paper devoting its own news columns to the fight, but it is also purchasing advertising space in other publications throughout the country in order to tell America just what John Barley corn is trying to do. Now other papers are joining with this leader in the fight for the retention of the eighteenth amendment and for prohibition enforcement. We cannot all agree with every principle set forth in that religious newspaper of the East; we cannot all be of that denomination; but, certainly, we can join in admiration for the noble thing which that publication is doing—for the manner in which it has made propaganda a cogent force for good. Every dog has his day. At Hutchson they hauled a hound into court o identify his rightful owner. THE WORLD'S SERIOUS The mere commonplace things of this mundane sphere must step aside while Bambino Ruth steps up to the pan with the intent of butchering one if Jess Barnes' best. Just fancy pursuing the even tenes of your way when such men as Ruth and Meusel are clothing out extra base singles and snatching three-sackers out of the ozone! The very best authorities assure us that when Art Nethg gets his luchs wrapped around the apple it means some of the earnest young devotees are going to whiff". And so it goes, ad limitum. It is the most interesting argot of the diamond—an indication of a disease that grips grown men during three months o the year. It isn't supposed to be intelligible, but if you question its entertaining propenaties just watch some follower of the sport chuckle as he reads it. And there is still another element. A goodly share of the interest manifested is somewhat heightened by touches of green and silver here and there. For the world of aport a man's opinion is only respected when he, to use his own terms, "puts his money where his mouth is." Professors and seminars have their place in the order of things; of that there can be no doubt. Just where that place is or how much of the concrete whole it occupies is a matter open for some discussion. But when two of the nation's best baseball teams square away for a seven-game series surely it is high time for the youth of the land to lay aside their books for a very early morning paper, and devote their minds to matters of unquestioned import. THE MOVIE PEST We like the bird who reads the subtitles aloud and makes irrelevant comments as the story progresses on the screen. He makes the picture so much more understandable, you know, with his near-witticisms and merry "haw-aww" at the most dramatic episodes. We like him, if you will interp- "like" to mean a desire to grab him in the immediate vicinity of his egilgotis in a strangle-hold! Once in a while you will meet a per sonage who believe that his remarks are "funny," and that his spontaneous outbursts are a constant source of merriment to those people immediately about him, and often you come into close contact with him in a motion picture theatre. He is a hybrid, a cross between a snob and an ill-bred egotist. He likes attention; he covets the apilause of his fellows. And his weary attempts at humorous remarks are but an indication of the fact that he is trying to thrust himself into the limelight. His malady might well be termed "self-adoration." There is but one way to avoid such a nuisance. Change your seat! When he finds that he is playing to an empty house, he will drop the curtain on the entertainment. If you cannot restrain yourself, throttle him, with our blessing upon you! Her Master's Voice The latest thing is the vocal love letter. There was much excitement at a certain soriority house the other day when one of the sisters received instead of her daily letter, a package containing cash for the ITS IHF hardware. We'll wager the awain's words fell upon more ears than he had anticipated. Plain Tales From The Hill A certain professor, was talking to one of our recent British guests after the convoction. Referring to the "Rock Chalk" the Englishman said: "Yes, it is impressive. I could not make out the words, but I gathered it was some sort of Greek benediction, was it not?" More punch, B. W. C. Can It Be? The Army's Mule Some folks say you should not fool With any beard—much less a mule The Jawhawk bird will break this rule. It wants raw meat, so look out mule. H. D. Official Daily University Bulletin Copy received by Florence E. Bias, Editor, Chancellor's Office email: bias@ucl.edu 11 a.m. p.m. CHANGED PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATION SCHEDULE: HANGED PSYCHOLOGICAL Following is the schedule of psychological examinations, changed to avoid conflict with Campus Days. These examinations were announced by printed slips handed to students on enrollment days. The tests are required of all freshmen and sophomores who did not take the psychological examination at the University of Kansas last year. Oct. 4.1922. Vol. II. Those whose last name begins with: those whose last mask begins here. A. to G. inclusive. Thursday, October 5, at 3:30 p. m. No.18. H to O, inclusive, Friday, October 6, at 1:00 p.m. R to Z, inclusion, Friday, October 6, at 3:30 p.m. P to Z, therefore. The examinations will be held in Fraser Chapel. Changes necessitated by confession will be with the above schedule must be arranged in advance with Professor Rosenow on Wednesday, at 11:30 or 1:30 at his office on the ground floor, East Administration Building. Please do not ask for change of schedule on grounds of out-of-school work or week-end engagements at home. F. J. KELLY, Dean of Administration UNIVERSITY ASSEMBLY MEETING: A meeting of the University Assembly is called for 4:30 Thursday afternoon in Chemistry Lecture Room, third floor Chemistry Building, for a discussion of the Biennial budget of the University. E. H. LINDLEY, Chancellor The University Assembly consists of all officers of instruction of the rank of assistant instructor and above, the directors of division, those engaged in State service work, the Registrar, and such other administrative officers as shall be designated by the Chancellor. O FINE ARTS MUSIC STUDENTS RECITAL THIS WEEK NO FINE ARTS MUSICBecause of the scheduling of intelligence tests for Fraser Chapel or Thursday afternoon, there will be no private recital of Fine Arts music students this week. H. L. BUTLER, Dean. The first meeting of the University Women's Club will be held Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock in Myers Hall. CISR CORRESPONDING Secretary, UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S CLUB: day afternoon at 3 o'clock in Myers Hall. MRS. H. A. RICE, Corresponding Secretary. SEMINAR IN EDUCATIONAL ADMINISTRATION: R. A. KENT, Dean There will be a meeting of the seminar in Educational Administration, at 3:45 Thursday afternoon in Room 209 Fraser Hall. Professor Schweigel will speak. All graduate students in education are expected to attend. Any one else interested is invited. SCHOLARSHIP COMMITTEE: There will be a meeting of the Scholarship Committee at 7:30 Thursday evening in Room 114 Fraser Hall. ALBERTA L. CORBIN, Chairman. IT'S EASY to Subscribe for the Jayhawker All you have to do is to mail the card which was sent you or come in to the Jayhawker office and reserve your copy before October 12 in order to get your name stamped in gold leaf on the cover of your Jayhawker FREE. THE OWLS WILL SELL THE 1923 JAYHAWKER THURSDAY AND FRIDAY The Owls—one of the livest organizations on the Hill perfected plans at their meeting last night to sell the Jayhawker on Thursday and Friday of this week only. They expect to sell at least a thousand books in addition to the large number already sent in to the Jayhawker office. They will have tables on the campus and all you need to do is to walk up and give them your name. Don't hesitate! The first thing you know October 12 will have slipped by and then it will cost you 50 cents extra to have your name stamped on the cover of your boo- Remember all you have to do is to RESERVE your book before October 12. We would like to buy a whole page in the Kansan and unfold our plans for the 1923 Jayhawker, but we will give you a rough idea of some of the many new features which will be in the book. There will be a hot Dramatic section modeled along up-town lines. Fine Arts gets a real section. The Athletic section will embody more good action pictures than were ever put in any single Jayhawker before. And something which has never before been attempted at K. U. is a pictorial calendar of the school year. This means that the entire school year will be before you in pictures. Beginning with enrollment and rush week, the visit of the Sulgrave foundation, No matter what happens or where you will find Bob Gilbert, official photographer for the 1923 Jayhawker, or Orin Shepherd, his assistant, there to get pictures for the Jayhawker. Just to show you our intentions we secured a new three hundred dollar lens for our 5x7 Grafflex in order to get even clearer and faster pictures than the ordinary Graffex takes. student day speakers, the departure of the team for West Point, everything of importance during the school year will be shown For your own enjoyment, for the enjoyment of your family and for the pleasure such a book will give to your friends, buy a 1923 Jayhawker. When you see it you will agree with the slogan, "An Aristocrat of College Annuals." The 1923 Jayhawker Chases the University of California this year under the instruction of Stanley Jones, formerly a professional boxer. Mr. Jones believes that boxing instills courage into men. He says, however, that he would never advise a college student to take up the game as a professional and an instruction that would fit him to make a living in another way. "An Aristocrat of College Annuals" Classes in boxing are being con- TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY COOK of exceptional competency and reliability would consider position with fraternity, sorority or club—Seba Eldridge, phone 2570. —04 MOTOR BOAT—For rent. After-norms, Saturdays, Sundays and nights. Call George Edgar Jr, Phone 1357 Black. —08 "SuitingYou" THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULTZ 917 Mass. St. E Z. THE ORIGINAL WIDE GARTER You wouldn't wear a tourniquet. A person with a grater that depends on adjunctual training. No adjustments. a and ments six to 81, everywhere, in simple grip and the K. Z. briquet, and the K. Z. Sport Cutter. Made by The Tha. P. Taylor Co., Bridgeport, Conn. Featured by All Leading Merchants Suits $40 Protch, the College Tailor And Still They Come! Students are realizing more and more that they can live better and cheaper at the Oread Cafe. This week a large number of students bought coupon books, and started taking all of their meals. YOU can cut down your board bill, too, if you take advantage of the opportunity. The coziest place in town for a light umneh and a little visit. Students drop in here at all hours. * Just a Step from the Campus THE OREAD CAFE E. C. BRICKEN, Prop. Kaufman Campus Toys Chicago Restaurant & Brewery CHICAGO -Clothes Designed by Kaufman Clothes at New Prices Good looking, well fitting, smart styles for both business and out door wear Our standard of high quality has been maintained and the prices pushed lower. Dependable, pure wool fabrics that wear and give satisfaction. Style such as the new Pen-gate shoulder that is exclusive. We guarantee our clothes Kaufman CampusTogs Clothes for Young Men $30-$50 CHAS. KAUFMAN & BROS. CHICAGO NEW YORK SAN FRANCisco K. U. ENGINEERS WORK IN PITTSMONT MINES Begin as "Muckers," But Are Rapidly Advanced Because of Training A. W. Alwa, James A. Sultazberger B. Farrar and H. W. Hynn, all students in the department of mining engineering spent the summer in the Pittsburgh mines of Butte, Mont. They obtained work in the mines through the help of H. R. Dingman, who is working in the East Butte矿业。 After obtaining cards from the labor office, established by the mining interests of Butte to keep men with bad records or I. W. w. followers in line, the company started in as "nuckers" in the Pitman mine. They soon found the value of their school training, for advancement came rapidly and they were made regular miners and got experience in shaft sinking and in mining. After working there for two months Mr. Waite got the chance to take mining first aid training and helmet work. A man who has had training in helmet work is never in want of a job in this part of the country as there is a hill which is on fire in places and has been burning for years so he is to be forced constantly and is a measure to the surrounding mines. To take the helmet training Mr. Waite had to go to the East Colusa mine. While there the mine superintendent took an interest in him and offered him a job in the mine, fighting the fire and also promised to give him every chance to learn actual mining. Mr. Waite did this fishing and stayed two weeks, quitting only after he had been overcome by gas. Paris to have new "Deaths Cupboard" While at Butte the Jayhawkers met men from Colorado, Californias schools of mines and were much surprised to find these students had never heard of the department of mining engineering here. Paris, Oct. 4. (United Press)—When the new Paris Morgue is finished, the grim little building behind Notre Dame, full of tragic memories, will be pulled down. The cafe proiller on the other side of the street will have to change his sign, which has been there for more than a century and which reads: "You must see what you saw." "Whatever you do, whatever you say, 'You're better off here than across the mud.' Middle Ages each municipal division of Paris had a morgue. The princeiling or duke who ruled there had property rights over every body found in the street. The first morge serving the entire city was built in the sixteenth century at the Chatelet. Since that time the location has been changed three times, always, however, being in the district known as the Ile de la Cite, the heart of the capital. With characteristic Parisian mookery, the people refer to the morgon as "The Cold Mint Market," "Double Dealer" or "The Salon of the Rejected." Amherst Expedition Returns With Rare Specimens MIOCENE SKELETONES FOUND Amherst, Mass., Oct 4 (United Press)-Skeletons of animals which roamed the North American continent in the Miocene age, more than 2,000-000 years ago, have been discovered by an Amherst college expedition which recently returned from South Dakota and Wyoming. The collection includes many rare specimens. Two of the skeletons have set to be identified, and Professor Frederic B. Loomis, who headed the expedition, feels certain that they are the first of their type discovered. The trip, which was made entirely by automobile, was financed by the class of 1896. Two months were spent on the expedition, one half in exploration. The devotion-to-duty of a sheriff in a town near Mitchell, Nebraska, resulted in the expedition loaining a fine skeleton of a camel. After working all day in excavating the skeleton and bandaging it for shipment, members of the party retired for the night. In the morning the skeleton was found destroyed. An explanation was forthcoming from the surprised sheriff who related that he was that a party that arrived there region, supposedly from "the region," had discovered a new method of hiding its devotion. The "alert" sheriff thought THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN discoverer a new hentai wares. The "alert" sheriff thought he was hacking to pieces a cache of bitted goods. Only Two Septembers Hotter Than This Year BEAT THE ARMY! University of Kansas weather records, going back 55 years show only two Septembes that were hotter than the one just closed, and only twice before did Septembes temperatures go above the 100 mark. The hottest September days on record at the University wein in 1923 were 105; this number went up 105; in 1882, when it reached 105; and this year, 1922, at 104. The average September temperature for 55 years is 69.31 degrees, while the average for this past month was 72.13 degrees. The normal minimum for September is 39.7 degrees. September had a 24 percent decrease in the percentage of cloudiness, compared with the normal of 37.93. The run of wind, rainfall, and relative humidity were nearly normal. Four New Volumes To Polish Set At Spooner Several Polish publications sent out by the National Polish Commission of America, have been received at Spooner Library. They comprise, "La Question Polonise pendau la Guerre Moniale"; Brief Outline of Polish History; Polish Encyclopedia, Vol. II, parts 1, 2, 3, 4; Polish Encyclopedia, Vol. III, parts 1, 2, 3, 4. The encyclopedia is in English and French. It is at the present time very difficult to get the publications in English, according to Mr. Manchester, librarian at Spooner. The editorial staff of the Commission, headed by Dr. Edward Cross, is located at Fribourg, Switzerland, and it takes from two to three weeks for the books to be transmitted. The books are distributed from the Chicago office. Ye Taverne It's Difficult to Study When you are hungry Te Taverne suggests---- Het apple pie with melted cheese Hot cake cake with home-made jam Percolated coffee Open Until 10:30 P. M. 1230 Oread SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire to earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Pleasant work after school hours. Write 12 at 2440 Wayne Ave, Kansas City, Mo. S79 GARAGE FOR RENT—1138 Ky. Phone 2191 Blue. -04 WANT ADS FOR RENT-Boy's room at 1019 Alabama street. FOR SALE-Complete two-step wire- less receiving set. Excellent results guaranteed. Bill Garland. Phone 429. O-5 FOR RENT—Room for girls. 1229 Ohio. Phone 2545. 06 LOST—Triangular pin set in pearls and emeralds, lettered Phi Theta Kappa. Reward. Call Katherine Alexander. Phone 2776 or 1308. 05 New York Cleaners Phone We strive to please you on the largest or smallest job. 75 VARSITY THEATRE Wednesday and Thursday Shows 2:30 4:00 7:30 9:00 p.m. $ L NEILAN'S "FOOLS FIRST" also Latest Sport Review Adults 33c Children 10e Bowersock Theatre TONIGHT ONLY WhereDoes the Jazz Trail Lead? JEFFREY L. LAWY PRESENTS Cecil B. DeMille's PRODUCTION "Manslaughter" Thomas Meighan Laurence Joy +陆 Wilson A Grumman Golden and A Ham Hamilton Comedy Adults 40c Children 20c THURSDAY ONLY CORINNE GRIFFITH in "A Woman's Sacrifice" two 1918 FORDS—$75 up. Butler-Sand- Ken- 06 St. 1005-07 Mass. -05 FOR RENT—Room for boys new. Stadium. 1001 Maine. Phone 1599 Black. 07 ROOM FOR RENT—One or boys. Good location. 1145 tucky. Phone 2484 White. ROOMS for men—Two double, one single. $7.50, $8.00, $9.00. 1326 Tennessee. DR. J. W. O'BURTON (Denist) Special attention to prevention and treatment of pyrrhite. 804 Perkins Building. Tel. 567. PROFESSIONAL CARD LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Ex- lusive Optometrists) eyes exam- ined; glasses made. Office 1025 Mass. CYGENA VAN GORDON Cyrena Van Gordon Contralto, Chicago Opera Co. Monday Evening, October 9 Ye Shop of Fine Quality Gustafson The College Jeweler The artists and organizations giving the eight concerts of the University Concert Course will be paid $7,000.00 Senson tickets, $4, $5 or $6 now on sale at the business office and the Round Corner Drug Store. Single admission to the Van Gordon recital, $2.00, on sale at the door the evening of the concert. WATKINS NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. DIRECTORS SURPLUS $100,000.00 D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Ashler, L. V. Miller, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishon Bowersock Theatre ROAD SHOW RESERVATIONS Mail orders are sold any time before tickets are put on sale, usually four days before date of attraction. Avoid waiting in line at the ticket window. Send check or Post Office Money order to the manager of the Bowersock Theatre, for the amount of ticket purchase, PLUS war tax, or ten per cent. Enclose self-addressed, stamped envelope. Mail orders are filled in the order received. NO PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED. NO TICKETS LAID ASIDE. COMING ATTRACTIONS Oct. 16, Monday, ABRAHAM LINCOLN Oct. 24, Tuesday, EMPEROR JONES Nov. 7, Tuesday, Algy Petrava in THE WHITE PEACOOK Nov. 21, Tuesday, THE MERRY WIDOW Jan. 10, Wednesday, ROBIN HOOD Jan. 12, Friday, SIR HARRY LAUDER Jan. 17, Wednesday, PRITZ LEUHER Jan. 20, Thursday, T HE CIRCLE Jan. 24, Wednesday, IRENE Jan. 27, Saturday, GREEN- WICH VILLAGE FOLLIES Feb. 3, Saturday, THE BAT March 1, Thursday, JUST MARCH March 7, Wednesday, Walker Whiteside in THE HINDU SEASON RESERVATIONS Patrons desiring Season Reservations are kindly requested to list their names now by mailing, 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 patrons wish to reserve a seat in any way, One Day Before Date of Show, Failure to take up reservation notifying Bowersock Theatre will automatically cancel all future reservations. DATE RULE DOES NOT APPLY TO ROAD SHOWS Your Last Chance for BASKET BALL Early reports indicate that two thousand Student Enterprise Tickets will be sold by Saturday night. That means that there will be no single admissions for Basket Ball at any price. There is still time for three or four hundred wise students to buy their tickets. See a salesman or call at any one of the following before Saturday night. Athletic Office - - - Law School Office - - Office of the Dean of Women Office of the Dean of Men Y. W. C. A. - - - Y. M. C. A. - - - Gymnasium Green Hall Fraser Hall Fraser Hall Henley House Myers Hall THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PLANS FOR BIGLEGION CONVENTION COMPLETE New Orleans Expects to Accom modate 150,000 Visitors on Oct. 16-20 New Orleans, La., Sept. 27 (United Press).—All preliminary arrangements have been completed for the trip to Mexico to be held here October 16-20. It is expected to bring approximately 150,000 visitors to this city. The only unsolved problem facing administrators is coordinating the vast number of visitors. The Legionnaires expect three thousand official delegates and alternates and thousands will attend as visitors. An elaborate program has been arranged. It will include a number of athletic features and an attempt will be made to reproduce the life of the dugbyboy on land, sea and in the water. American Legion National Olympic Games during the convention. Legion athletics from every state in the Union will compete for national championship honors in track and field events, aquatic sports amateur boxing, wrestling, golf and tennis. There will be a national marksmanship contest and a tournament of professional boxers. A reproduction of some of New Orleans' famous carnival features will be on the legionaire's program for the second night of the convention. There will be three carnival balls, with kings, queens and the customary ceremonials, similar to the city's famous Mardi Gras performers. The building will be 28,900 streets will be decorated by 28,900 bulbs and will be decorated with flags of allied powers. Street dances will be held for the overflow crowds. The legionaire will have first hand contact with the Mississippi famous levee. Convention sessions will be held on a public pier. A large covered pier, nearly one thousand and feet long and four hundred feet wide astride the levee. The arrangement will be set up to save 14,000 delegates and visitors. The stage will last fifty persons. Elaborate arrangements have been made to take care of the press which is expected to be nationally represented. The convention parade will be held on the third day. Fifty-thousand and legionnaires will march by state groups in the order of membership increase during the last twelve months. More than one hundred are expected to meet band the marches as a result of a contest which will be judged during the parade. Prizes of $1,750 will be awarded to the finest band leg and $350 will go to the best drum corps. FRESHMEN PLAY BASKETBALL Sixty-Two Teams Engaged in Elimination Tournament Much interest in basketball is being shown this year among the freshmen, according to Prof. J. B. Patrick, of the department of physical education who reports that there are sixty-two teams playing three times a week. Each team plays one game of two ten minute halves at each meeting. They are playing a round robin tournament at present, Professor Patrick is working out an elimination tournament by which he hopes to select the best basketball team some time in the future. This will not be the official freshman class team it is expected to bring out some good material. The sophomore classes are doing mass boxing. There are 180 men enrolled at present. During the last two weeks before Thanksgiving these men will be drawn up for an elimination tournament. This is to be the final examination. After Thanksgiving an inter-class tournament among the gym classes will be staged, and between Thanksgiving and Thanksgiving all three will be the annual inter-school boxing matches. Some time in the spring the wrestling tournament will be held. Everyone is working hard and much interest is shown this year in both wrestling and boxing. Yale Man Wins Prize for Play Philip Barry, of Rochester, N. Y., has been awarded the $600 price offered annually by the Belmont Theatre of New York to past and present members of Prof. George F. Baker's writing course at Harvard and Radcliffe, for prose dramatic composition of at least three acts. The winning play was entitled, "The Winged Lady," a production of Yale. Second and third awards went to Norman C. Lindon, of Baltimore, author of "Jennie," and Henry Fisk Carlton, of Cambridge, author of "Slug." Gridiron Gossip Glick Schultz With the major part of the varsity squad aboard the "Jayhawk Special" enroute to West Point, there remains for this column only a speculation as to what the "Lost Battalion" is planning for this week-end and the chances of a, Kansas victory next Saturday. As to the "Foreign Legion," at first the men complainedLocked John Wulf and all the foothills in the variably shed and taking a much needed rest. They have decided, how, to get to the camp where exercise until Friday, but no longer, For great doin's are being planned or Friday and Saturday. Lee Widdelein appears to be the battalw of defense in the Jayhawker line. He carries a good weight, can stand punishment, and above all he has football experience and knows how to play well at work center, so far, has been good and he has been breaking up passes for the opposition with regularity. Davidson and Captain Higgins speak for themselves. Higgins, while the lighter of the two, makes up for this handicap in fight, for he never knows when he's left. Davy hits a man harder, every time, than any guard which Kansas has had in the last three years. The backfield is choice. Wilson has developed a great nerve and his field generalship is wonderful. McAdams is a good open field runner and Potsy says "one of the five best punkers in the United States." Krueger has developed a strong presence on his rangy build makes him a hard man to stop. Spurgeon knows football and is, as the men say, a "horse." Kansas has two good ends in Me- Thomas Shop Electric Shoe DALE PRINT SHOP 1027 Mass. Phone 228 Oread Shining Parlor CHARLIE'S Best Shines in Town PHONE 442 Kirby Cleaners and Dyers 1109 Mass. St. Society Brand COATS For Misses and Women Pander's QUALITY JEWELRY 1920s Lean and Black. Charlie has the edge of artificial player. Jack McLean has a on McLean in that he has played one slight advantage of weight and is full year of Valley football and is a nat- of the old fight. Modish coats for women Tailored by Society Brand These coats for Women are made by the makers of Society Brand Clothes formen. Behind them is a long tradition of original style, of workmanship that only the best men tailors can give. Mannish, swagger, smart, practical for every outdoor occasion—these coats are the vogue, of course. Ober's HEAD TOFOOT OUTFITTERS Fur Trimmed Coats Fashions most tempting lines are revealed in this seasons Coats, Exquisite soft materials, handsome Furs and colors rich in tone. The coat is a luxurious garment with a fur collar and cuffs. It has a high neckline and a wide waistband, making it suitable for formal occasions. The coat is also made of a thick fabric that provides insulation and protection from the elements. Bolivia Gerona Normandi Marvella Panveline Evora Cord FABRICS COLORS FURS Beaver Kit Fox Squirrel Wolf Caricol Nuturia Tunsian Visit our Suit department and slip into these smart Coats, you will like the way they feel on, in fact you will be proud to wear a garment of such quality and style and best of all you will appreciate the reasonable prices. $47.50 up to $125.00. Innes, Bulline & Hackman Navy, Black Modart Corsets Betty Wales Dresses Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Lawrence Cider and Vinager Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 Fresh Apple Clder for Sale. Give her a Whitman's Sampler from Wiedemann's Exclusive agents Whitman's Candies in Lawrence A. G. ALRICH Engraving, Printing, Binding Rubber Stamps, Office Supplies, Stationery Printing by any process 736 Mass. St. WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods Visit the United Army Stores Co 705 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Army Goods Student Enterprise Tickets on sale at six places:- Athletic Office Gymnasium Law School Office Green Hall Office, Dean of Men Fraser Office, Dean of Women Fraser Office, Dean of Students Myers Hall Y. M. C. A. Myers Hall A word to the wiser is必須 ATTENTION FRESHMEN— —we offer the Correct Freshman Cap— —right size visor —right size cap— in all wool Blue Serge, that will not fade—with the White Button Red Button Green Button Sizes 63-4 to 75-8 $1 Headquarters for Hickey Freeman and Kirschbaum Clothes ___ CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS BELLS FLOWER SHOP phone 139 8251-2 Mass HANDSOME BIG WALKING HEEL Betty's New 'OTTER Suede $12.00 One of the smart new modes for fall wear, suited for both dress and street wear. The Betty shoe is distinguished by smart style, unusual quality, and workmanship. NEWMANS Thirty-three years ago this business was launched by Martin J. Skofstad. 1889 Our 33rd 1922 Anniversary And now we celebrate our 33rd Anniversary-with "thirty-three" as our keynote, giving special values for the next week, even greater than is possible at other times by our unusual method of merchandising, in order to acquaint you with the money saving qualities of our unique Selling System. Special Values as only our unique merchandising method can create, and the values—the advantage to you was never more pronounced. Our regular prices are based on such a close margin of profit that it is impossible to make very drastic reductions from Our Prices, but drop in and see for yourselves what truly wonderful values we are offering, since we do not quote comparative prices. Your interest is absolutely our interest. SkofStadS "Clothes of Merit" Two Trouser Suits and $28.33 One Trouser Suits $26.33 and $21.33 Worsteds, Cashmere, Cheviots, Serges, Tweeds, Young Men, Sport Models, Semi-Conservative, etc., You cannot find better values anywhere than we offer at our regular prices, so it behooves you to act now. Hats $3, $4, $4 Caps $1.50 and $2.00 Shirts Caps $1.50 and $2.00 Shirts with or without collar 67c $1.33 $1.67 $2.33 Hosiery Cheney's Silk and Wool $1.33 True Shape and Shawknit Silk, 2 pair for $1.33 Silk Plated, Silk Lisle and mercerized lisle .33c Overcoats Plaid Back Overcoats Quality Gabardines Better values you cannot find anywhere $27.33 and $22.33 Gloves Dress gloves, al Hansen Dress gloves, all colors $1.50 SkofStadS ELLING SYSTEM LAWRENCE, KANS. Trouusers Choice of the best values in the store at $7.33 $4.33 $5.33 $6.33 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XX. OCTOBER 19 DATE SET FOR CLASS ELECTIONS Election Committee for Year Named by President of Student Council NO POSTERS THIS YEAR Booths and Voting Places for Different Schools Not Decided Yet Thursday, October 19, is the date set for the class elections by the Men's Student Council at the regular meeting Wednesday night. After the time was definitely decided upon Andy McDmond, president of the Student Council appointed an election committee during the remainder of this year. Members of this committee are Hillary Mahin, representative from the School of Law who was named as chairman, Adolph Ruff, college representative, and Cay Patterson, representative from the School of Engi neering. Elect Class Officers The class officers consisting of president, vice-president, secretary, and treasurer will be chosen at this meeting by the members of the various classes. In addition to the regular class officers, the freshman class will elect a manager of Olympians; the sophomore class will choose a manager for the Soph Hop; and the junior class will elect two Prom managers. Usual Rules Prevail The usual rules regarding the filing of applications for candidates will be observed this year. No campaign posters will be placed on the Campus at any time, according to a ruling voted by the Student Council last year. START VET CLINIC BUILDING Information concerning booths and voting places for the different classes will be announced at a later date. A member, chairman of the election committee. Ground Broken for $100,00 Structure for K. S. A. C. Ground has been broken for the $100,000. K. S. A. c. veterinary clinic building, funded for which were appropriated by the last legislature. The structure will be finished by next July. Due to the fact that the original appropriation will be insufficient for the construction of the entire building as planned, an option was taken with the construction company for a number of awnings to the building, and additional appropriation for the $17,000 will be needed. The building will contain an amphitheater which will be used for the demonstration of larger animals. In one section space will be devoted to stalls for the treatment of horses and animals, while in another section devoted to the study of hoof troubles for both horses and cattle. Various surgical and hospital wards are to be of ample size to give each student complete training. On the second floor are to be the classrooms rooms classrooms and classrooms and office are also on this floor. High School Newspaper Conference to Meet Here The Fourth Annual High School conference will be held here this fall, but the exact date has not yet been determined. The conference will possibly be held some Friday and Saturday when there is a football game, in order that the weather may see the R. U. news action. A special feature for this year's program which is being arranged, is a round table for the high school and high school supervisors and high school paper supervisors. At the conference held here last fall, 170 delegates were in attendance, representing 63 high schools of the state. All women who have participated in women's athletics on the hill and who have points toward W. A. A. please turn them in to Jean Bennett at the Gymnasium. Women from other colleges in the Athletic Conference can compete in college Women who transfer athletic points, may have them transferred here. BEAT THE ARMY. High School Press Club Hears Prof. W. A. Dill Prof. W. A. Dill, of the department of journalism, spoke last night to the Lawrence High School Press Club about the work of the Associated Press and their means of gathering stories over the entire country. The Press Club was organized last year in Lawrence High School under the supervision of Mrs. Jensen, instructor of English. Any one in high school interested in journalism may become a member. DEAN BRANDT NAMES ADVISORY COMMITTEF Students May Get Grades a the End of Six Works The advisory committees appointed by J. G. Brandt, Dean of the College, are doing their work so well that students who have come here this year will be able to follow in stato, exclaim with surprise over the degree of personal attention which they receive in the University. They had been led to expect that in so many situations, they would receive little or no individual attention from the faculty. Since it is the freshmen who are most in need of helpful advice and assistance, the freshman advisory group is much larger than any of the women in the division. Miss Alice Winston, assistant professor of English, is in charge of the advisory group for the freshmen women and P. B. Lawson, associate professor of ontology, is in charge of the advisory group for the freshmen men. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, OCT. 5, 1922. Last year the freshmen women had - as their advisers teachers in whose classes they were, but this year Miss Winston says the system will be changed so that they will have as their advisers the teachers who enrolled them at the beginning of school. Each adviser will have about thirteen women for whom she is responsible. Following is a list of the chairmen of these groups: Prof. U. G. Mitchell, department of mathematics, chairman of the senior advisory group; Prof. H. C. Thurain, department of chemistry, chairman of the pre-medic group; Prof. Elie Neuse Schnewander, department of romance languages, chairman of the sophomore group; Prof. F. B. Dains, department of chemistry, chairman of pre-medic group; Prof. H. B. Chub, department of political science, chairman of pre-medic group; and ling, department of ancient languages, chairman of the group for special students. A list of advisors will be posted on the Fraser bulletin board so that freshmen may learn to whom they have been assigned. Grades will be obtainable from the end at the end of the first six weeks. Miss Alberta L. Corbin, student adviser for the College, speaking of the advisory system here at the University of Kansas, compared it with the system as it is carried out at Yale. Yale University attaches much importance to its advisory plan, and this is to be fostered. The value of the advice given by the faculty is recognized by the institution, and the advisers are paid an additional salary of $200 a year for this extra work. Missouri Alumni Banquet Feature of Homecoming Other alumany banquets have been held in Kansas City or St. Louis and other points in the state, but this will be the first time the alumni have dined together at Columbia before the Tiger-Jayhawk banquet. Governor Hydie, members of the legislature, members of the board of curators of the university and news media, will迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎迎 Columbia, Mo., Oct. 5. —A feature of the annual homecoming celebration by alumni and former students of the University, which will be held here the weeks of the Missouri-Kansas football game, will be the alumni banquet—which is the first in the history of the institution. More than 1,000 former students are expected to attend. Black Helmets will meet the Phi at 7:30 oclock at the Phi Gamma Delta house. This is the second members are requested to be present. JAYHAWKS PRACTICE ON DETROIT GRIDIRON Coaches Put Kansas Teams Through Stiff Hour's Workout Yesterday Afternoon RIP IS HARD ON MEN Players Get More Hard Practice at Niagara Falls Today Conches Clark and Schlademan put two Kansas teams through a tiff hour's workout. The first part f the practice was spent in running signals, passing the ball, blocking nd in the fundamentals of the game. Detroit, Mich., Oct. 5—"Aboard the Jayhawk Special." When the K. U. football squad stepped from the special here at 4:30 o'clock yesterday afternoon, enroute to West Point, no time was lost getting the men in practice on the gridiron at Detroit last fall, during minutes after their arrival, the men were dressing in the gymnasium of the University. The last part of the practice was sken up with scrimmage between he first and second teams. The men are kept keeping at top speed through Two Teams Scrimmage NUMBER 19 Orders from Potsy required the men to retire at 10 o'clock last night. While in Detroit the Jayhawkers are training at the Woltersman Hotel Men Retire Early "It did them good," was Coach Clark's comment following the practice. The trip is proving hard on the men and the enforced inactivity may prove costly. The players will get more hard work at Niagara Falls The special left at 8 o'clock this morning for Ningara Falls, New York. A practice will be held this week on the griddle at Ningara University. STUDENT ACCOUNTS IMPROVE Withdrawals Not As Common As Formerly Student bank accounts show a decided improvement over last year, according to W. F. March, secretary of the local clearing house. Although the fees that were charged the first of this year have been withdrawn, they seem to have accomplished their purpose, he said. According to Mr. March no student accounts have had to be canceled. The students were not the only people who were charged a fee for accounts that ran below $25 every month since any account that became a liability to the bank was canceled. However, the students were hit hard during the war. At Berkley, where the University of California is located, students are Lawrence High School will play their first game of the season tomorrow against Roosevelt High School of Emporia. The game will be called at 3 o'clock on the Stadium field. The game was originally planned for Saturday but on account of Campus the date was changed to Friday. Vcl Trusler, coach of the Rosewell team, is bringing sixteen men with him for the contest. The average weight of the two teams is about the same and Lawrence expects a hard fight from the visitors. not allowed to open an account unless they pay an initial fee of one dollar. When the local banks rescinded their action on student accounts, it indicated their willingness to co-operate with the University students. Editors to Have Football Party The second annual Kansas Aggie newspaperman's football party is announced. Complimentary tickets to the party are available. 22, will be mailed to all Kansas editors within the next few days. The Memorial stadium contractor has promised to have 4,000 seats ready in time for the game between the Aggies and KC. About that many ad campaigns will be arranged, an availabe, Mike Ahearn, athletic director, has announced. First High School Football Game on Stadium Field LAWRENCE TO PLA/ EMPORJA This will be the first time that a high school team has used the Stadium. New York, Oct. 5.—The second game of the World Series being played at 'the Polo grounds here was called on account of darkness at night. The score tied, 3 to 3. After the Giants had scored three runs in the first inning Shockey held McGraw's men scoreless for nine innings. The Giants scored in the eight inning, scoring one run the first, fourth and eight innings. World Series The Giants scored three runs in the initial frame, when with one down, Groh and Frisch both singled, and E. Meusel scored both men ahead of him with a circuit clout into the field bleachers. The Giants were then retired, Young and Kelly fived out. The Yanks tied the score in the last of the eighth when with one man down Ruth hit for two bases, Pipp advanced him to third with a long run. He scored Ruth with another two baggers. Ward then filed out, ending the innning. The game was scoreless then unti- the last half of the fourth frame when Ward, Yank second baseman, in a home run over the right field fence. The Yanks made a hard try for the game in the last half of the ninth. Both Scott and Witt got on bases down but the two next two fled out. The Yanks, in their half of t first, sent one runner across t home plate with three hits. The score by innings: Glants ...300 000 000 0 Yanks ...100 100 010 0 Batteries: Giants, Barnes and Snyder; Yankees, Shockey and Schang. BULLETIN The Kansas will run a sport extra Saturday afternoon giving complete returns of the Kansas-Army game, and the World Series game. JAYHAWKER WILL GET ARMY GAME PHOTOS New York Photographers Are to Snap Teams in Action Action The White Studios of New York and Underwood & Underwood, photographers, also of New York, will photograph the K. U-West Pom game exclusively for the 1923 Jayhawk firms are the two largest commercial studios. The pictures will be incorporated in the pictorial calendar of the Jayhawk, a new feature introduced by the 1923 editors. The calendar will consist of fifty pages, devoted to every activity during the school year, Bob Gilbert, official photographer, and his assistant, Orin Sheperd, will have a Graffix camera, equipped with a special lens for fast photography. Plates have already been obtained of the pictures, which are events of last spring, Views of enrollment day, of the Sulgave visitors, and of the departure of the team for West Point have been taken. Two muras will work all day. "Approximately twelve hundred pics tures will be taken," said "Ted Hudson, of which more than eight hundred will be used." The Owls will have charge of the sales campaign Thursday and Friday under supervision of the Jayhawk editors. The editors plan to interest clients in sales work, and eliminate the sales contents which have been held formerly. BEAT THE ARMY! DATE SET FOR "DAD'S DAY" Memorial Subscribers Given Special Reservations to Games "Dad's Day" is to be November 4, set the date for the Oblong game. Every dad is most cordially invited to come and be with his son or daughter at the game. Mothers will be welcome if they care to come. Slips have been sent to the 9,000 alumni memorial subscribers telling them about "Dad's Day," and urging them to come. Also blank cards giving them first choice reservations for four forthcoming games—Oklahoma, Colorado, Nebraska, and Washburn Purchasers of tickets for the New Yorkers are limited to two cards. "How would you like a father, son and daughter banquet on Friday night?" is a question asked on the slip. Goal of 2,000 Will Be Reached by That Time Is Expectation ACTIVITY TICKETS WILL BE CHECKED IN FRIDAY ABELLA BEST SALESMAN Doctor Allen Requests That Football Reservations Be Made at Once The sales campaign for student activity tickets closes at 5 o'clock Friday afternoon. After that time the tickets will be on sale at the athletic office and Dean John R. Dyer's office. The tickets will have been sold by 2,000 tickets will have been sold when the campaign ends. Basketball admissions will be removed from the tickets when that goal is reached, and the remainder of the tickets will still be released. the remainder of the tickets will sell for the regular price. $8.00. Ticket mailem will check in un- sold tickets, names of purchasers, and a record of money collected to Waldo Bowman, chairman of the There will be no season football tickets for students. They will be sold, however, to down-town and out-of-town people for $5.50. The student activity tickets were sold tq students only. Care for Townspeople Dr. F. C. Allen requests that the four football admissions in the book be detached and mailed immediately to the athletic office for reservations. On each ticket must be written the owner's name and number of the game played in a reading Colorado basketball should be changed to Colorado football. Abella Sells 35 Narciso Abella, champion light-weight boxer of the University, is also champion salesman on the student activity campaign. To date he has sold twenty-five tickets and has checked out ten' more. Waldo Bowman is greatly pleased at the workbeing done by salesmen, which has made the student activity campaign the success it is. DR. C. S. PARMENTER DEAD Vice President of Baker University Succumbs to Long Illness Dr. C, S. Parmenter, vice-president of Baker University, died yesterday afternoon at a hospital in St. Joseph, Mo., after a severe illness of several weeks. His death was caused by peri-operative heart failure, was unable to enter school this fall. Dr. Parmenter was born in Charlton, Iowa, October 15, 1860. He was a student in the Ottawa High School and attended Ottawa University for four years. He earned a degree from Illinois Wesleyan University in 1883, and his A. M. from that university in 1886. He obtained the Ph. D. degree from Alleghegh College in 1885. Professor Parmenter was a distinguished political science in Baker since 1883. In 1891 he took over the head of the Biology Department. He became vice-president in 1899 and held that position until his death. He has been president of the Kansas Educational Association since 1897, and has been prominent in conference athletics for many years as well. He is survived by four children, Mrs. Clyde Rosenberry, and Mrs. John Hoeffinglin, of Arkansas City; and Mrs. Allie Gall, and Mrs. Qauyle, who are at home. His widow, Mrs. Mabel Parmeter, and Mrs. W. A. Qauyle wore at his bedside at the time of his death. Historical Association Will Meet in Okla. City Norman, Okla, Oct. 5—The Mississippi Historical Association will hold its 1923 meeting at Oklahoma City, according to advises from Mrs. Emil R. Kraettli, secretary to President Stratton Brooks. No definite date was given, but Mrs. Krautilli predicted it would be held in the spring. The meetings will be held under the auspices of the Oklahoma Historical Society of Oklahoma City. Owls Initiate Last Night Y. M. C. A. Inner Circle Has Completed Plans The Owls held initiation last night for five pledges. Those initiate were “Doe” Cullam, Acacia; Harron son, Phi Gammam Dale; Audta; McKenna Auluckea; mamia; and Willard Hawkson, Sigma phi Sigma. The sophomore inner circle group of the University. Y. M. C. A. m.t Tuesday night at Myers Hall and completed plans for the year, particularly as to the course of study it will pursue at its meetings this winter. It was decided to select a student from either within or without the group and a committee was appointed to make more definite arrangements. The freshman inner circle will meet this evening at 7:30 o'clock i The freshman inner circle will meet this evening at 7:30 o'clock in Myers Hall. Mezzo Contralto of Chicago Opera Company Is Experienced in Recital Roles CYRENA VAN GORDON TO SING IN CONCERT "Patrons of this course need not feel any disappointment that Cyrenean Van Gordon is to replace Mario Chamlee of the Metropolitan Opera Company, who was forced to cancel this engagement here on account of his death." Cyrena Van Gordon, mezzo con- tratto of the Chicago Opera Com- pany, will give the first number of this year's University Concert Course on Monday evening, October 9, in Robinson Gymnasium. Miss Van Gordon's crowning success was attained in Chicago when she sang the dramatic soprano role of "Brunhilde" in Wagner's "Valkyrie," The Herald-Examiner said of her: "Miss Van Gordon proved to be fully ready for a vocal ordeal that tests the ability of the greatest singers. She met the test easily and triumphantly. She was dramatically powerful and vocally superb. She is fulling Campinelli's prediction: 'You will one day be one of the greatest dramatic soprans of the age'." Miss Van Gordon is even more experienced in recital than in opera, as she has travelled this country every year for the last nine years. In addition, Miss Van Gordon is considered one of the most beautiful women on the stage today. The program for her recital next week is as follows: Aria—L'Abborrita Rivale (Aida) Histoire (Anna Loreale) Verbi The Loreale Liszt Caecille Strauss Coucher de Soile Lenormand Tes Yeux Rabey Lheure Expiise Padowaków Le Treffe Quatre Feuilles Lenormand Piano Solos: Bourree ... Bach The Lark ... Glinka Balakeriw The Old Road ... John Prindle Scott Doushka ... Henry Hadley My Laddie ... W. A. Thayer As a Bird ... Herbert Hyde Lorraine Lorneine Loraine Chamberlain Glbert Sparvria -The Cry of the Valkwrie (By Request) MANY GRADUATE STUDENTS Four Foreigners Hold Scholarships for Work Enrollment in the Graduate School for this term has reached 137 with prospects for an increase next semester. Twenty-five of the students enrolled in the school are holding fellowships for their work here and of these four are foreign—two Canadians, one Filipino and one Hindu. At the last summer session there was an increase of over100 students above the enrollment of previous years. Degrees for summer school work will be granted next week, after the end of spring semester. Miss Zisskow, of the Graduate School, She estimated the number of degrees to be given at twelve. The number of students taking courses during the entire year in the Graduate School totals 381. Of this number the majority were teachers who returned to secure more adequate training for their work. Professor Studies Fashions Professor Queen, of the department of sociology, has made some very interesting collections, which he believes will make the study of sociology more real and tangible for his students. One of the most interesting of these, which he calls in "Fashion and Fads" collection, consists entirely of newspaper clippings that show the fashion and fads are inclined to take. PLANS ARE COMPLETE TO BEAUTIFY CAMPUS Success of Occasion to Rival Stadium Day Two Years Ago Is Assured SERVE LUNCH AT 12:30 K Men and Sachems Will Act As Monitors for the Occasion With fresh sod being cut and rushed to the Stadium field, the plants virtually completed for feeding 4,000 hungry laborers, a laberate on made on all men who will start wielding their tools at 8 o'clock a sharp Saturday morning, and the electric score board is set up—promise of a Campus Day, a rival Stadium Day held two years ago, in success, is virtually assured. Organization of the schools of the University and the picking of working squads to properly beautify the K. U. campus is not the biggest problem which the general conference on Campus Day has been facing. It To Form Thirty Lines was the feeding of the workers. Twelve sub-c Committees have been applied now to carry out the plans for them. The staff must also varied menu has been prepared. Cheeks Are Coming In Ford Thirty Lines At 12:30 clock sharp the bugle will show for knocking off work. Dozens of cars will be placed in an enclosed space, on the east section of the Stadium, and thirty avenue lines will be formed, under the direction of the K men and Nachems, in front of the west section. The committees which have been appointed to help dispense the foodstuffs will assist in caring for every detail of the meal. Checks Are Incoming In Checks Are Incoming in the boarding schools and from students coming in to pay for the noon meal Saturday. The School of Law announces that virtually all of its members will turn out Saturday morning to clean up the university grounds as soon as possible as good a turn-out in the other schools of the University. R. O. T. C. UNIT INCREASES Probably Due to Showing Made in Summer Camps Captain Casey says that the growing interest is proacency due to the excellent showing made by the unit at the summer camp. At Camp Causse, students were awarded highest honors, and the basic students were awarded second place. At Fortress Monroe, Va., in the coast artillery competition, the University representation received a handsome cup for the best battery at the fort. The growth of the University R. O. T. C. unit is easily shown by statistics recently compiled by Capt. H. J. Casey, who is now in charge of the unit. His statement shows that there has been a steady growth from an enrol- ment of 97 in May, 1920, to 224 at the present time. The men enrolled in the basic course are showing splendid interest in the work. They will be issued riffes next Wednesday. Captain Casey desires to correct the somewhat prevalent impression that enrollment in R. O. T. C. correspondence in the unit is the same as an enrollment in any other course in the College, and although it is understood that a student enrolling in the basic course, our course, no oath is taken to that effect. Men who have taken the physical examination and have been measured for uniforms will have them in about three weeks. Those who have not taken the examination and have not been measured for uniforms will not get them until three weeks after they have done so. Ozark Press Association Will Hold Convention Joplin, Mo., Oct. 5—Plans are moving rapidly for the fall convention of the Ozark Press association to be held here October 27-28, according to John W. Howell, chairman of the Chamber of Commerce. The association is comprised of editors, publishers and news writers of forty counties of southwest Missouri and border counties of Kansas, Oklahoma and Arkansas. From forty to sixty members are expected to attend, according to Charles W. Fear. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas Subscription price $8.00 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.00 for one amateur; $6.25 a month; 15 cents a week. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kanaan, under the act of March 3, 1879. Lawrence, Kansas Phones, K. U. 25 and 66 Published in the afternoon five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism at the University of Kansas. Published in the department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Editorial Staff The Daily Kannan aims to please the students of the University of Kanran, to go furiously by standing for the deals she has written, or her written orientees; to be clean; to be cheerful; to leave more serious problems behind to the best of ability the students. University Editor-in-chief Hawkeye Editor Newa Editor Sport Editor Editor Alumni Editor Admiral Editor Ruth Carter Benn Hebbis Glacier Raymond Dyer Glick Schultz Glik Schultz Ruth Carter Business Staff Board Members Cheater Shaw Dean Borg Shawn White Caroline Harbruder Miri Hart Caroline Harbruder DeVaughn Francis Carlton Powers Lotte Leish Ted Hudson Jacob Feldman THURSDAY, OCT. 5, 1922 A burglar robbed a church ir WHAT OF J. E. HOUSE Jay E. House has been attending the movies again; at least, his syndicated editorial, "Thoughts on College Life," which appeared in papers throughout the country on September 25, indicates as much. Mr. House has evidently seen the movie here leave the farm and prance away to college, the hayheads still in his hair, only to return at the end of one short semester perfectly civilized—a sophisticated product. Now Mr. House has led himself to believe that this actually happens, and his praise is unstinted for the institution which can transform a "bick," as he calls him, in so short a time. But suppose the reader listens to a bit of his rank flattery. "Any agency," he says, "which tends to mitigate the hick, or reduce his numbers, is of a great social and economic value. A college-almost any college—can do that. We have watched young men who had never known a night shirt go away to the university in September chewing a wooden toothpick. We have seen them come home for the Christmas holidays with silk pajamas in their kit bag. Bill Hedges was one of these. We ate dinner with Bill's folks on Sunday before he went away to school. He was so excited that he could hardly keep the paas on his knife. When he came home for the Christmas holidays he was using a fork for everything." Mr. House should not generalize on the case of Bill Hedges, for Bill must have been an extraordinary chap; no college can equip a cure of the average "sword swallowing" case in one short semester. It just isn't done. And then, when Mr. House says "We have watched," and "We have seen," he surely refers only to things which he has watched and which he has seen upon the screen. He should not assume that universities live up to the high standards set by colleges in the movies. And so he runs on—praise, undeserved praise, for universities and colleges. At only one point does his flattery seem to be justified. Let him tell his own story. "Had we gone to college," he remarks, "probably we never would have been guilty of the gaucherie of wearing a fancy blue waistcoat and a rose-colored cravat coincidentally. We did that once at a football game and the college community in which the indiscrimination was committed pulsated with the shame of it." We agree with Mr. House there! If he had attended college he doubtless would have adorned his person with a corduroy vest and a black and yellow diagonally striked nickel. We blush with him for his indiscretion. In the midst of all the triangle plays and morbid cinemas which are flooding the screen today, it is like an aisis on the desert to find a good clean play. Such a play is "Manslaughter," which was shown in Lawrence this week. A GOOD PLAY Contrary to its hair-raising title, the play deals not with war, but instead teaches the lesson of right and drive it home with straight, clear-cut blows. It has a perfectly obvious moral but does not spoil it by preaching. It is well photographed and the leads are taken by actors who can act; it is well worth seeing from an artistic point of view. We learn from the play a definite material thing, something about the routine of prison life, and thus it is educational. The bits of philosophy in the captions are virile and applicable to common, every-day life; one of these extols love and service as the best things of life. But more than all these, the picture is intensely interesting and wholesome, and we leave the theater without the usual bad taste in our mouth. Jayhawk Jargon Some men are like a sewing machine—a woman runs them best. New Guinea flappers live in the tree tops. The cake-caterors of the island must have to shake a wicked limb to get them. In speaking of the 87-year-old Georgia woman who is to go to the U. S. Senate, the governor of that state said: "She is wise beyond her years?" Is the governor kidding someone? The human dumbbell is still with us. We have in mind the freshman who called up his landlady to find out his telephone number. If the American colleges don't turn out more A. B.'s, the restaurants will be short of dish-washers. Some of these "wet" propagandists evidently think a man is like a hot water bottle—no good unless full. If certain girls on the Hill spent a much time on their lessons as they need trying to break in the rocety when they're supposed to be demand for Phi Beta Kappa keys. Official Daily University Bulletin Following is the schedule of psychological examinations, changed to avoid conflict with Campus Day. These examinations were announced by printed slips handed to students on enrollment days. The tests are required for admission to any college. We make the psychological examination at the University of Kansas last year. CHANGED PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATION SCHEDULE: Vol. II. Oct. 5, 1922 No. 19. until 11:00 a. m Oct. 5, 2000 A to G, inclusive, Thursday, October 5, at 3:30 p. m. Copy received by Florence E. Bias, Editor, Chancellor's Office Those whose last name begins with: H to O, inclusive, Friday, October 6, at 1:30 p. m. P to Z, inclusive, Friday, October 6, at 3:30 p. m. The examinations will be held in Fraser Chapel. Changes necessitated by conflict of classes with the above schedule must be arranged in advance with Professor Rosenow on Wednesday, at 11:30 or 1:30 at his office on the ground floor, East Administration Building. Do not ask for change of schedule on grounds of out-of-school work or week-end engagements at home. F. J. KELLY, Dean of Administration. FACULTY CLASS SCHEDULE CARDS: Class schedule cards should be completed and sent in to the Chancellor's Office at once. Many cards do not bear the street address and telephone number. E. H. LINDLEY, Chancellor. TO HEADS OF DEPARTMENTS: Please call the attention of the members of your staff who are members of the Graduate Faculty to the fact that the faculty meeting on Tuesday, October 10th, will be held in the lecture room of Blake Hall and not in room 101 Fraser as announced. E. B. STOUFFER, Acting Dean. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION: There will be a meeting of the Members of the Department of Education Friday afternoon, October 6, at 4:30 in Room 104 Green Hall. R. A. KENT, Dean. INDUSTRIAL RESEARCH DISCUSSION GROUP: At 8:30 tonight in Myers Hall Professor F. W. Blackman will lead a discussion on "The Evolution of Social Classes." The meeting is open to all. At Harvard University Observa- **The Kansas Court of Industrial tory they have discovered a new star. Relations upheld the minimum After the Jayhawks tangle with the wage law. Those who will be graduate from Harvard will receive the pay. But just that the stars come from Kansas, what the minimum wage will be.** While the White Studio and Underwood WALTER L. MORRISON, Student Leader. JOHN R. DYER, Faculty Advisor. WATKINS NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and of the Board SURPLUS $100,000.00 D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. 1. From the Owls. DIRECTORS C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Ashar, L. V. Miller, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishop Buy Your Jayhawker The 1923 Jayhawker 3. Or come to the Jayhawker office. The Owls are out working at full speed today and tomorrow to windup the sale of the 1923 Jayhawker. When an Owl asks you to subscribe, don't hesitate! Give him your subscription! It's the best investment possible! Remember that in any case you must subscribe before October 12 in order 'to get your name stamped in gold leaf on the cover of your book free. "An Aristocrat of College Annuals" Here is another unusual feature of the 1923 Jayhawker- There will be a fifty page pictorial calendar of the school year. This means that every important event of the school year will be shown in pictures in the 1923 Jayhawker. There has never been a pictorial calendar in any previous Jayhawker because of the expense and details involved. To get fifty pages of pictures we expect to take more than twelve hundred pictures and then to use the six hundred best pictures from this large number. We have a 5X7 Graflex equipped with the fastest lens on the market working every day under the direction of Bob Gilbert. Another thing—the K. U-Army game at West Point Saturday will be covered for the 1923 Jawhaker by the White Studios and also by Underwood & Underwood of New York. These two firms furnish a large number of pictures every day to magazines and newspapers all over the country and it costs money to get them to take pictures, but they get results and wonderful pictures. In your book you will see these wonderful pictures of the game as well as pictures of the trip up the Hudson river of the members of the New York alumni association. & Underwood are taking pictures at West Point we will have two cameras working on the campus getting unusual views of Stadium day. To give you an adequate impression of the 1923 Jayhawker is impossible, but here are a few of the features: Six hundred pages—one hundred more than last year. Nine hundred illustration—three hundred more than last year. Pictures of the interiors of all the buildings—this has not been attempted at K. U. for a good many years because of the expense, but we are going to use sixty views. Every section of the book reorganized. A Fine Arts Section. A Hall of Fame for Sixteen of Our Prominent members of the Senior class. Remember subscribe from the Owls today or tomorrow. They want to guarantee the success of the Jayhawker and to do this they must have your support. A Hall of Fame for Sixteen of Our Prominent members of the Faculty. A Pictorial calender. A Vanity Fair dramatics section. A Section Devoted to the Many Departments at K. U. which are ordinarily overlooked by the Jayhawker editors. Before going to that party stop at the Stadium, the shop of service, and get one of those Boncilla messages and one of Arch's shines. "GIFTS THAT LAST" 1033 Mass. Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF PAIRING 70TH ANNIVERSARY Rock Island 1852 - 1922 1852 1922 FIRST BRIDGE MISSISIPPI RIVER ROCK ISLAND CITY 70 YEARS OF SERVICE Reproduction of medalion to be given to every person born on Rock Island to commemorate the occurrence of its first dam disaster. "Seventy Years of Service" The unknown and sparsely settled West is now the Nation's bread-basket. Trackless plains and rolling prairies have become fertile farms; struggling villages have become thriving cities of wealth and beauty. And the railroads made all this possible in the three-score and ten years allotted as the life of man. We celebrate, in our Seventieth Anniversary, the part the Rock Island Lines have played in this transformation. During our. "Seventy Years of Service" we have grown to a system of 8,122 miles,serving fourteen states. We extend grateful thanks for the co-operation which has made this possible. Our mutuality of interest is inseparable. We are eager to merit your confidence and respect. As we face the future we seek your co-operation and support to the end that we may serve you efficiently and satisfactorily and reap in equitable proportion the prosperity which will result from mutual understanding and reasonable consideration of each other's problems. Rock Island Lines "Lucky-Curve" in a Parker patent which employs the scientific principle or capillary attraction to make a smooth drawing, inkproofed. Neither pen has it. Image-Cover in the employer in the employer the employee the right or capability to make it m a k s i n ing, inkjeted ink and pen file has. 1. 将液体涂于手掌表面。 Get the Pen that Fills by a Press of the Button A Filler That's Not Exposed So Can't Catch and Spill Ink TTHIS is one of the vital reasons why the Parker Pen ranks highest with America's educators and student bodies. Its filler is 'safety-sealed' beneath the neat screw-cap end. There no exposed lever to catch on the clothing, spill ink and spill your suit or blouse. Remove the cap, insert the pen in ink, press the button and the Parker filled. 1 ms simple, perfect filter was created by Geo. S. Parker, inventor of the celebrated leakproof "Lacuria Curve"feed. And in no other place can a simple filter be performed to perform without a hitch. And that's what you want in a fountain pen—not one that distracts your mind when you're trying to concentrate. All Parker points are 14 KR rolled gold, so they can't rust, corrode or tarnish and are not affected by acids. Prices range from $2.50 upward according to style and mounting. These pens are made with the same mechanical perfection and jeweler's accuracy and finish found in the famous Parker 25-season Duofold—the lacquered one at $7 that has taken America by storm. Come pick out the point that best suits your hand—extra fine, fine, medium, coarse or stub. We'll give you a Parker Accident Policy free- insuring you for one year against any breakage, damage or unsatisfactory service of any kind. PARKER LUCKY-CURVE PENS $2.50 up Made by The Parker Pen Co., Janeville, Wis. City Drug Store Hess Drug Store Lander's Barber's Drug Store F. I. Carter McCulloch Drug Store THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PROMISES TREAT IN "ABRAHAM LINCOLN" Manager Dechares McGlynn's Impersonation Is Master Work of American Theatre "Frank McGlynn's insperation will go down as one of the master works of the American Theatre," said J. L. Petrelt, who was here yesterday making arrangements for John Drinkwater's play, "Abraham Lincoln," which will come to Lawrence the sixteenth of this month. "Abraham Lincoln" is to be staged here by the original company, made up of some forty actors, which appeared in London, and ran many shows at Cort Theatr. In 1865 he been on tour for almost four years. "It is almost impossible to describe the play in detail," said Mr. Petrelt. "There is so much of the intangible spirit in the work of both Mr. Drink-water, Mr. McJelpin that, the design of the play can be estimated without seeing it." "There are interesting similarities between Frank McGlynn, the interpreter of Lincoln in the play, and the Martyr Pope President," he said. Mr. Glynn would be Lincoln for years before he began playing for Mr. Harris' company. Ober's Get Radio Set Mr. Pelret promises that the performance here will be as fine in every detail as when "Abraham Lincoln" was first produced in New York. Ober's have installed a new radio receiving set in the sporting goods department of their store. They will receive the world's series play by play and also the football games on Fridays and Saturdays. During the afternoon concerts will be received from various points of the country. "SuitingYou" THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULTZ 917 Mass. St. Thomas Shoe Electric hop DALE PRINT SHOP 1027 Mass. Phone 228 Low Funds Not Causing Withdrawal by Students In spite of the fact that many of K. U.'s men students are still without work, or at least without as much work as they would like to have, there have been practically no with-drawals from the University on that account, according to John R. Dyer, Dean of Men. Nettels Coaching at Pittsburgh George Northee, A. B. 21, for three years a star tackle on the K. U. team, is assistant to Coach Garfield at the Pittsburg Normal Training School. His duties are those of line coach and he is good at coaching. heavy line this year are good. Nettels was an all-Missouri Valley tackle for two years and captain of the Kansas team in 1920. So far there have been only forty-three withdrawals among the men students, and practically all of these have given for their reasons conditions which were practically unavoidable, and did not concern the financial problems, so generally believed to be facing our University men. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY WANTED—Boarders. Best home cooking in town. Eat all you want. Chicken dinner Sundays. Welcome door entrance. Same building, University Book Store Annex. Roommates for two boys. 1524 Red. 6-13 © 1983 Ed. V. Price & Co. TOP COATS made to measure In Tweeds and Other Fine Material at $30.00-$35.00 S. G. Clarke 1033 Mass. St. The Mode of the Season Suede Oxford$6.50 to $8.00 Some are cleverly trimmed with Patent leather, featuring heels of various heights and sharp clean cut contours. Friday and Saturday Hosiery Special $2.65 Luxe All Silk Full Fashioned Hosiery. Regular $3.00 Quality. Otto Fischer's SHOES. TIRE GOOD SHOES Special Hat Sale FRIDAY and SATURDAY Beautiful Panne and Lyons Velvet Hats Over 100 to choose from presenting models actually worth two and three times this remarkable sale price Oil Painting $5.95 Drescher's Correct Apparel for Women & Misses A specially prepared sale bringing the smartest modes of the moment—a timely sale no woman can afford to miss. The most authentic modes for Fall—an assortment varying from the extremely large black dress hat to the smart little close-fitting bright colored model. Clever trimming touches of novelty feathers, handsome ornaments, self trims of velvet in artistic bows and other effects; flowers and coque feathers feature each hat. See Our Special Display of these Hats In Fairness to all Every Sale Must Be Final Church Member? Your local church wants your affiliate membership, and next Sunday, October 8 is the special day for receiving affiliate members into all churches. Wear your uniform! It helps you It helps others Phone your student pastor or minister of the local church Information about them at either "Y"office Your Last Chance for BASKET BALL Early reports indicate that two thousand Student Enterprise Tickets will be sold by Saturday night. That means that there will be no single admissions for Basket Ball at any price. There is still time for three or four hundred wise students to buy their tickets. See a salesman or call at any one of the following before Saturday night. Athletic Office - - - Law School Office - - Office of the Dean of Women Office of the Dean of Men Y. W. C. A. - - - Y. M. C. A. - - - - Gymnasium - Green Hall - Fraser Hall Fraser Hall Henley House Myers Hall THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ASSIGN MANY CASTS FOR CLUB TRY-OUTS Individual Parts Will Be Selected Soon According to Miss Burton About 175 aspirants to the Dramatic Club were assigned to tryout plays Tuesday afternoon in the Little Theatre. More were present at the meeting than could be taken care of in one afternoon, and Miss Cecile Burton, of the department of public speaking, announced that he would be another meeting at lil'clock this afternoon, in the Little Theatre. The casts assigned were given copies of the plays they are expected to present, and should have the parts copied as soon as possible. When each cast has the parts copied, they can be moved to individual parts. But to select individual parts, Members of the Dramatic Club will be given the positions as coaches of the productions, and the plays will be given before the Dramatic Club as a Two hundred twenty-five persons signed up for the tryouts, making a new record for the club. It is hoped that a great deal of talent may be discovered among the new actors. Indications are that the club will enjoy the most successful year of its career. ANNOUNCEMENTS Walker Means, President. Pen and Scroll will meet tonight at 7:30 o'clock in the Rest Room of Fraser Hall. All members are urgently requested to be present. C. E. Jacoby, consulting engineer for Kansas City, will speak before a meeting of the civil engineers at Marvin Hall, Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock on "Practical Problems in Drainage Engineering." Come and join the Methodist students on their hike Friday evening Meet at the church at 5:45 o'clock. The Baptist young people will have an old fashioned hay rack ride Friday, Oct. 6. All Baptist young people and their friends are cordially invited. If you want to have a good time plus good eats be at the corner of Eight and Kentucky streets about 5:45 o'clock Friday evening. Pen and Scroll will meet tonight at 7:30 in Room 205, Fraser Hall.—Walker Means, President. Troyeats for the cast of "Adam and Eve" will be held this afternoon in the Little Theater in Green Hall, between 2:30 and 4:30. "Join the Luther League Tramp on a bike, Friday, October 6." is the invitation issued to all Lutheran students. No meals will be served at the Commons Saturday because of preparations for the lunch to be served at the Stadium. Meeting of K Club in Green Hall at 7:30 o'clock Thursday-Joe Bloomer. Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods United Army Stores Co 706 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Army Goods Student Enterprise Tickets on sale at six places:- Athletic Office Gymnasium Law School Office Green Hall Office, Dean of Men Fraser Office, Dean of Women Fraser Y. W. C. A. Honley Hall Y. M. C. A. Myre Hall A word to the wise is sufficient PHONE 442 Kirby Cleaners and Dyers 1109 Mass. St. WANT ADS LOST-A Delta Phi Sigma Finder call 2577. SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire to earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Please work, maintain and manage your library. 344 Wayne Ave, Kansas City, Mo. — S72? FOR RENT—Boy's room at 1019 Alabama street. FOR RENT—Room for girls. 1228 Ohio. Phone 2545. 00 FOR SALE - Complete two-step wire- less receiving set. Excellent results guaranteed. Bill Garland. Phone 429. O-5 LOST—Triangular pum in set pearls and emeralds, lettered Phi Theta Kappa. Reward. Call Katherine Alexander. Phone 2776 or 1308. 05 ROOM FOR RENT—One or two boys. Good location. 1145 Kentucky. Phone 2484 White. 66 FOR RENT—Room for boys near Stadium, 1001 Maine. Phone 1599 Black. 67 ROOMS for men—Two double, one single. $7.50, $8.00, $9.00. 1336 Tennessee. 1918 FORDS—$75 up. Butler-Sanderson Motor Co. 1005-07 Mass. St. —05 MOTOR BOAT--For rent. After- mores, Saturdays, Sundays and nights. Call George Edgar Jr, Phone 1537 Black. —08 FOR RENT—1 large, well furnished room, suitable for 2 or 3 boys; prices reasoned. Phone 1289. O-7 LOST-Student Enterprise Ticket, No. 1630; between 14th and 15th on Tenn. St. O-7 FOR RENT—One large room at 901 Maine, for boys; also garage for in rent. 1968 Black. O-12 100 LOST—Kappa Alpha Psi pin, nears and diamond; liberal reward. Return to 1215 New Jersey. O-7 FOR SALE-Party grows, good as new, Misses' sizes. Call mornings: 1530 R. I. St. 0-8 Insist on Good-bye to the Rubber Sac! For this week we offer: Honey Fruit Salad Strawberry Brown Bread Pineapple Grape Chocolate Vanilla Wiedemann's Ice Cream PROFESSIONAL CARD DR. J. W. ORYON. (Dentist) Special attention to prevention and treatment of pyrrhhea. 304 Perkins Building. Tel. 507. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Ex- clusive Optometrist). Eyes exam- dated; glasses made. Office 1025 Mass. Purest For Over 50 Years Icees Ambrosia Pineapple Brick or Bulk Special Sunday Bricks Honey Fruit Salad and Vanilla Pineapple Grape and Vanilla On Oread Avenue Just a Step From the Campus Phone 182 Students of K. U. Plymouth Congregational Church welcomes you to Student Membership on Sunday, October 8th, at the 11 o'clock service. The Fountain Poin with the Little Red Pump Handle. The Dunn Poin has purrurahere porous rate. It doesn't leak, it doesn't spill, it doesn't break when you are filling it. It absolutely guaranteed. $18.00 • Standing Pints. $5.00 • Popular Points Pints. $5.00 • Popular Points Pints. $5.00 the marvelous DUNN-PEN Whether you take out membership or not you are always welcome at all services. Live Classes for University men and women at 10 o'clock Sunday morning. Gustafson Morning Service at 11 o'clock. Sermon theme: Where do you live? Evening Service at 7:45 o'clock. Sermon theme: Hankering for Cubits. Real Music-Brief, Inspiring Sermons. THE pen at the left is a rubber sac self-diller —the barrel, a more than half full of ruber. It holds only 28 drops of ink. The pen at the right in the marvelous Lemn-Fen, the "Fonant Pen" with the Little Red Pump-Handle. It holds a pen so much murky that you can pump it up in a jiffy. We are serving more K. U. students every day. They are realizing the value of our cooking and that they can eat better meals here, with a lower cost. Our fountain is popular. YE COLLEGE JEWELER If you are looking for a church home during your stay at the University we ask you to consider Plymouth Congregational Church. THE OREAD CAFE E. C. BRICKEN, Prop. Just a Step from the Campus Charlie Sample Bob Stewart SAMPLE - STEWART BARBER SHOP Ladies and childrens hair bobbing Baths Across from Wiedemann's 838 Mass. St. Charlie Sample "A real insurance policy against Upper-classmen Pain" Freshmen Caps All Color Buttons $1 CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES New Suits, Top Coats, Overcoats arriving daily- "Football, Baseball" returns here—Phone 251 Suits $40 Protch, the College Tailor 33rd Anniversary Specials We are offering the most wonderful values in all our history. Let your eyes be judge of the money-saving possibilities of our entire stock. The finest worsted, serges, cashmeres, tweeds, of the finest tailoring. Anniversary Price for the finest $33 Quality Two Trouser Suits. Anniversary Price for Fine $28.33 Quality, Two Trouser Suits. Correct Freshman Cap of Quality 75c SkofStadS ELLING SYSTEM LAWRENCE, KANS. F. A. U Hall Varsity Dance! SATURDAY NIGHT October 7,1922 Blanc's 6-piece Orchestra Get a Sweater Coat $8.50 Genuine Camels Hair Coats $15 It's mighty pleasant to slip into these Sweater Coats these chilly fall days—just warm enough, and light weight. And, too, they're so neat and attractive that a chap may enjoy their comfort and feel well dressed. Ober's HEAD TO TOE OUTFITTERS BELLS FLOWER SHOP Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS Phone 139 825 1-2 Mass. Pander's QUALITY JEWELRY A Marshall Neilan Pro- A Marshall Neilan Production "FOOLS FIRST" with Claire Windsor—Richard Dix Helen Lynch—Raymond Griffith Claude Gellingwater also Latest Sport Review Adults 33—Children 10 Varsity-Bowersock Today Only Shows-2:30-4:00-7:30-9:00 p.m. CORINNE GRIFFITH See the Big Fire Scene The Fight in the Settlement The Race on Dog Sleds "A Woman's Sacrifice" IRENE CASTLE Friday and Saturday also Sennett Comedy Adults 28-Children 10 IRENE CASTLE in "Slim Shoulders" A Mystery of India "ABOVE ALL LAW" Bowersock Theatre All Next Week ER H.P. SEEMAN OFFERS CLYDE 'RUBE' HOOPER AS PRIVATE C. C. PILL IN "OH YOU WILD GAT" OVERSEAS SOLDIER SHOW As PRESENTED IN FRANCE FOR THE 81st DIVISION An Attack Of Laughing Gat 'FALL OUT' FOR THE BIGGEST SCREAM OF THE SEASON EX-SERVICE MEN DONT MIN IT! 501. 27, 28, 29, OCT 23, 30 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NUMBER 20. TEAM WORKS OUT AT NIAGARA UNIVERSITY A Short Serimimage Against Squad There Is Part of Practice COACHES ARE OPTIMISTIC Doctor Allen Wires That Team Looks Good—Jaybirds Popular (By Junior Huggins) Buffalo, N. Y., Oct. 6 (Above the Jayhawk Special)—Couch "Potty" Clark's prophecy today regarding the K. U.-West Point game Saturday was one of optimism, following two hours of gruelling practice Thursday afternoon on the Niagara University field. Players in Fine Condition Coach Clark made the following statement, "The men look fine. I shall watch them." Every one of the twenty-two players making the trip is in fine condition, with the exception of McAdams, who is nursing a bruised knee. None of the ot or r men is touched by injury. A half hour's scrimmage with the Nigraar University team was held yesterday afternoon in which every man on the squad was used. Line plunges and forward grip made perfect, and the critical Clark passed a tribute to his team. Frivility has ceased among the players. A grim determination to win has replaced the "dark" idea as the special approaches West Point. Have Fighting Spirit The special will arrive in Garrison, New York this afternoon and the two tenns will work out on the West Point field. The men will sleep in bed and hairracks this evening and rest tomorrow morning preceding the game. "Don't worry," said Captain Higgins today, "we'll fight." A telegram from Dr. F. C. Allen, director of athletics, received this morning reads: Coaches Clark and Schlademan are well pleased with Kansas workout against Niagara today. Team displayed a good punch due to good rest at Detroit, Mich. They know that they have been sent home for the team on a plaque trip, but they miss nothing. This Jay bird which the Chamber of Commerce paid for and which "Cheet" Shore designed is a real advertiser and every youngster wants one. Signed, Forrest C. Allen. Applicants Must Submit Manuscripts Before November 1. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, OCT. 6, 1922. PEN AND SCROLL MEETS November 1 will be the last day for the submission of manuscripts in the competition for membership in Pen and Scroll, it was decided in the second meeting of the club held Thursday night in Fraser Hall. Freshmen or sophomores who wish to become members of the club may turn in any kind of a manuscript of a literary nature to the membership committee before this date. The manuscript committee consisting of Rheen Ensign, Harley Ferrier and Peter Clement has the manuscripts and decide upon the literacy ability of the writer, and as to whether he becomes a member of the club or not. A program committee was named which will outline the style and arrangement of the meetings for the winter. Also, in response to the call from Quill Club, which solicits the firm and Penroll for the Publication of Oread Magazine, a tentative board was chosen which consists of the following: business manager, marketing manager, Sam Westerbury; circulation manager, John Montgomery; assistant circulation manager, Harley Ferrin. Women's Club Entertains The University Women's Club held their first meeting for the year in Myers Hall Thursday afternoon. The meeting was purely social. Many new members, including new women members of the faculty and wives of new men on the faculty, brought the attendance to one hundred twenty-five. Tea was served by Mrs. Wm. L. Bardick, Mrs. H. P. Cady, and Mrs. H. E. Jordan. Miss Fanny May Ross entertained the members with flowers. uttertained the members with several plano selections. Autumn flower were used for decoration. BEAT THE ARMY. Sink Holes For Blasting on New Campus Roadway Grading in front of the Administration building has reached a point where it has become necessary to blast through the remaining strata at the grade level. A pneumatic drill is being charged to sink holes for the charges. John Shea estimates that it will be necessary to remove about 2,000 cubic yards of rock before the necessary level can be reached. Most of rock removed will be crushed and used in different parts of the campus. TWENTY-FIVE ASPIRE TO "ADAM AND EVA" Manuscript Obtained From Original Players Instead of Publishers "Adam and Eva," the play to be given here October 31 by the Y. W. C. A., is a modern three-act comedy by Guy Burton and George Middleton. The play had a successful run in New York City in 1919 and 1920 and later was given at Kansas City. The manuscript could not be secured until the battle but was obtained from the "Adam and Eva" players themselves. "Adam and Eva" is an amusing picture of an American family, the head of which has a genius for making something funny. Coated in his family's grape. Goaded to action by his daughters and sons-in-law—half present and future—the flees to Brazil, after turning his check book and family over to the jurisdiction of his young business manager fresh from the Amazon. Adam, the name of this new head of the family, is thrown into contact with Eva, the marriageable daughter of the family, to which he has been attached since time he successes in inventing a successful calamity that brings his family into line. Seventy-five players tried out for the play, including a large number of freshmen. The cast is being coached by Mrs. Myrtle Bird. The ways and means committee of the Y. M. C. A. - consists of: chairman, Elizabeth Dunen, Dorothy Blackmar, Madeline Donnery, Dorothy Brandle, Austa Cross, Elizabeth Parkinson, and Mariana Dunkel. OLD TIMER'S OPINIONS VARY Some Argument Over Signs of Hibernation What manner of winter is ahead is keeping old residents busy right now interpreting signs. Talks with many of these old timers, however, indicate there is little unanimity of opinion. One says the winter will be a cold one as the robins and blackbirds are flocking for the flight southward, much earlier than usual, and that there is more hair ox a calf's back than for several seasons past. Others say sunflower foliage masks the usual and the girls with bubbed hair are permitting it to grow out. And there will be plenty of chances for all comers at the big free for all which will end the real work part of the day. Thirty or more of them, in table of FOOD will furnish a means of quieting and satisfying the hungry mob and there will be plenty of speed connected with all operations. So don't think that you are going to be left. Of course every normal and able person will see to his own comfort. UNIVERSITY LIFE WILL BE SHOWN BY CLUBS Followers of Fletcher Must Display Ability With Palms Before Exercising the Molars The women of the Universi- will all be present. Dressed up in nice white aprons and things, they will certainly tend to what you any la- gard appetites. But such an appetite has no excuse for being in existence on Campus Day. Every one must be on the Job. And the women, County Organizations Will Give Thirty Minute Plays in Kansas High Schools The line forms on the right! And if you are lucky you may get "Seconds." But, listen Buddy—don't be so anxious to grab it and get it over. For you will want to pay some attention to the resizing young ladies who will dish it out. "IT," of course, means the wonderful reward of soul satisfying food which will be given to those Jayahawkers who will prove their loyalty tomorrow during the Campus Day activities. Sponsored by the department a public speaking, each county club o the University will present during the Christmas recess in every high school of its respective county, a one or two-act thirty minute play which will portray life in the University of Kansas. Members of the Department of Public Speaking Will Do Coaching Prize Is Offered The object of the plan is to have the performances given by the clubs replace the usual program of sending out a number of speakers to the high schools to advertise University life before theumns of the state. Call Meeting for Tuesday STUDENTS TO BE AUTHORS The plays to be dramatized will be written by students of the University. A prize of $25 has been offered by the Dramatic Club for the best production submitted. In case the judges are unable to make a single choice more than one play may be chosen, and only one winner can be divided among the winners. All contestants must have their manuscripts in by November 15. Immediately following the selection of the plays, they will be cast so that rehearsals may begin as soon as possible. Coaching will be done by members in the department of public speaking. The organization of the county clubs will take place under the direction of the Alumni Association. All those who are interested in writing a play for the clubs to present are called to a meeting Tuesday at 4:30 o'clock in the Little Theatre where they will be instructed with detailed directions as to play writing. Something of the style and construction of the short play will be demonstrated during the purpose of making the entries as worth-while as possible. The first meeting this year of the Circle Fernce Paas was held Wednesday afternoon. Catherine Gard, the president, gave a talk, after which Miss Neuen Schwander related the past history of the Circle Fernce Francis, and told about the French periodicals on the subject. The evening included an hour, the members of the club sang two French songs, "La Maraillaise" and "La Petit Navire." A new feature has been incorporated with the Dramatic Club, that of a playwriting section. Those plays that are not accepted by the county library are dispatched from the club with regard to admitting the author as a member. Cercle Francais Meets Florence Reynolds, e26, spent the week-end with friends in Kansas City. under the direction of Miss Barrium, manager of the Commons, will be doing their various duties connected to preparation and serving of the meals. The followers of Fletcher must display an ability with the palms before they may exercise the molars. Once again—EVERYBODY OUT!: Report to the squad leader whom you will be under and then keep at it. The entire working program has been so arranged that the labor of the day will be made up by co-operation of the student body is only used as it can and should be. The tables will be located somewhere south of the stadium in order that the sod of the playing field will not show up when you don't forget your tickets! They will be the only means of admittance to the Hall of Epicurus and only the The team will be fighting the Army and the army of men and women of the University of Kansas will be carrying on "back home." Don't let any one ask you in the future, "Where were you last Campus Day?" and not only do they have to answer ready, but say, "I was in the job." World Series Polo Grounds, New York, Oct. 6—John McGraw's New York Giants today rapped Hoyt and Young, the two Yankee pitchers, for twelve base hits and three runs while Miller Huggin's Yankees were collecting four safe blows and no runs, taking the third game of the World Series, 3 to 0. The Giants now have two games to their credit, the game yesterday ending in a 3 to 3 at the end of the tenth innings. The Giants took a two point lead in the second innning. Scott singled and took third on Bancroft's single over second. Bancroft went down field and scored on Grob's base blow into right field. The Giants were then retired. The next run came in the last of the seventh. Huggins feeling Heyt weakening, sent in Young to take them down on Bancoff. The down Bancoff came up and singled and then stole second on the next pitch. Groh grounded out and Frisch laced out a clean hit scoring Bancoff, then flied out ending the riveting. R H Yanks ...000 000 000 000 0 4 1 Giants ...002 000 10* 3 12 1 Batteries: Yankees, Hoyt, Young, and Schang; Giants, Scott and D. Smith. SPORT EXTRA A special issue of the Kanan Saturday afternoon will carry complete returns from the Kansas, Army game being played at West Point and from the fourth World Series game being played in New York. These extras will be for sale on the streets a few minutes after the game is over. LINDLEY ADDRESSES UNIVERSITY ASSEMBLY "Institution Exists For Its Results in Human Life," Says Chancellor Problems of the University for the next two years were discussed by Chancellor E. H. Lindley and F. J. Kelly, dean of administration, at the University assembly yesterday afternoon. The Chancellor, in his talk, emphasized the proper functions of a university, and Dean Kelly presented statistics showing economies already accomplished, and in prospect for the future. These included the increased use of room space and the advantages gained by presenting some subjects "A university exists, not for itself, or for its faculty, but for its results in human life," declared the Chancellor. "The people are looking more and more to the universities for moral leadership. It must bring forth hard product more fitted for their places in the world. "Science in this country has been backward because it has failed, through systematic search, to discover and develop the talent for carrying on its research for the discovery of new truth. "The real objective of this, as of other universities, must be: instruction, research, and the dissemination of knowledge. "This university, in addition to its instruction of the great body of students who go into the world's general activities, must adopt some systematic way of discovering the more scholarly rly ones. We owe it to civilization to produce our quota of the scholarship of the future." The Chancellor declared that only by fulfilling these aims in the fullest measure could the University go before the people of the state and ask for the appropriations that would be carried on this work effectively. A. E. Stevenson, Ph. C., '09, B. S., '12, is spending a part of his vacation visiting friends in Lawrence. Mr. Stevenson is research chemist for the National Canners' Association with headquarters at Washington, D. C. Research Chemist For National Canners Here The purpose of the National Canners' Association is the improvement of the canning industry all over the United and the solving of chemical and bacteriological problems in canned beverages. K. Kanen, B. S. '12, Ph. D. (Yale) '14, with also the National Canners' Association and is president of the K. U. Society in Washington. First Number Will Have Forty Eight Pages, Say Editors "WHO'S WHO" IS NAME OF INITIAL SOUR OWI OUT HOME-COMING DAY Cartoons Will Be Feature—To Publish Four Numbers During Year "Who's Who" will be the title of the first issue of the Sour Owl, which will make its initial appearance Nov. 11, the day of the Nebraska-Kansas clash, according to Chester K. Shore, editor. "Contributions are coming in very nicely, and all indications are that we will have a splendid issue for this number," said Shore today. "It is out plan that the Owl will have a maximum number of contributors, and he will offer other humorous publications will not be used extensively, as in the past. Illustrated Stories Needed Anything from a single quip to a long bibliography will be appreciated, and may be handed to any member of the Owl Club. Illustrated stories will be appreciated, and we hope to have several such articles." The cartoons in the first issue of the Owl will be more numerous than in previous issues, according to William R. Blanc, editor, and with a good number of the Hill's best artists promising material, this part of the Owl will be of a high standard. "Clean, snappy cartoons are what we need," said Blanc, "and we want lots of them." The Owl is in our hands not later than Nov. 1, and should be drawn double size. "He cuts, except the cover and fro-aispiece, must be column width, which will be the same as last year. Prize for Best Drawing "A prize of $8.00 will be given for the best art contribution, regardless of its size. The cover is to be in three colors and will denict "Who's Who." However, the artist for the cover will not necessarily win the prize, as all drawings will have a chance." There will be four issues of the Owl this year, according to the managers. The first one will possibly be forty-eight pages and it is the hope of the teachers, presidents, pop and joy of the University will be reflected through its pages. MORE STUDENTS THIS YEAR Statistics Show Increase of 540 Over Last Year An increase of 540 students in the enrollment of the University over last year's figures is shown in stata. The figure is from the office of the various deans. The total enrollment in all the schools is 4166 and includes 614 dupile enrollments of students taking work in more than one school. This leaves a net registration of 3552. The total enrollment a year ago was 3629, of whom about 600 were duplicate enrollments. All the Schools of the University, except those of Law Engineering, and Pharmacy, show some increase. The College of Liberal Arts leads with an increase of 455 in the actual number of students enrolled, while the School of Education has the greatest percentage of increase. N57, N62 1924 1922 Graduate school 100 135 College of Liberal Arts 2220 2675 Engineering 646 609 Law 169 150 Fine Arts 291 373 Rosedale) 83 121 Pharmacy 92 186 Education 16 17 3026 4166 Medicine(exclusive of University Post Office Publishes Mail Hours The postmaster of the University postoffice wishes to make known the general postoffice hours and also the hours of collection of mail. The postoffice hours are as follows: 8 a.m. to 11:40 a.m; m; 12:50 p.m. 8 a.m. to 10:00 p.m; m; 5:10 p.m. to 5 p.m. 8 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. as follows: 0:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Henry Smith, c'25, has withdrawn from his classes. He will return to school the second semester. 'Hello Day" to be Held Wednesday, October The annual "Hello Day" will be held next Wednesday. This is an all-University affair, started two years ago and sponsored by all of the students on board members. On this one day everyone he passes to speak to every one he passes. A spirit of friendliness will prevail. It will be a chance to know all follow students, and it will promote a feeling of good will among the students that will last throughout the year. Everybody is urged to remember "Hello Day" and put his best smile where everyone can see it. ANTI-FOREIGN FEELING INCREASES IN CHINA American Corporations Are Accused of Trying to Steal Railroads Peking (By mail to United Press) - Anti-foreign feeling is growing again in China—not rapidly but steadily and noticeably. The growth is being carefully watched by all foreign elements as well as by a number of Chinese who are not in control. We have to call on the foreigner for help. The anti-foreign campaign grew out of the so-called anti-Christian campaign last winter. That movement began while the Washington Conference was in session. It saddened quickly when Chao Tie-lin soldiers menaced the northern cities, open to the Chinese were the midwives and pounds. It has cropped out again. The Peking-Siyuan railroad is practically out of operation because officials and employees alike have declared the road to be independent of the government. The action was anti "foreign." An American company inats the road 600 freight cars, but when the road had no money. The Americans had proposed that a special account be named to keep a record of the American cars, and that the road may for the cars out of their earnings. A cry at once arrose. "The American car is on our railroads," said the employees. "Down with the foreigners." The employees en masse called on the minister of communications, threatening him with a general strike if he yielded to the Americans. The matter is still undecided and the cars are still undelivered. Then came a strike on the Peking- hankow road, a far more important line. While premarily they wanted them to be given up and supported them to abuse foreigners. The employees declared there were too many foreigners employed as experts on the road and that the Belgians in particular were too anxious to safeguard the loans made on the road. "Down with the foreigners," shouted the strikers as they left their trains at various stations. "They are stealing our railroad." Student elements have directed an attack on the employment of foreigners and especially in the postoffice, one Chinese institution which is efficient and a money making institution. Students in the national schools and their faculties have begun an agitation for freeing the staffs of foreigners as soon as present contracts expire. The Chinese want to do their work. French and German and in science. On the streets and quite frequently in business, the foreigner feels the growth of anti-foreign sentiment. Dr. Siler Urges Medical Missionary Work in Asia Charles Siler, M.D., *10*, spoke to a number of medical students in the lecture room of the Museum at 4:30 p.m. (8:30 a.m.) for medical missionary work in China. For several years prior to 1919 Dr. and Mrs. Siler were actively engaged in this work among the Chinese, and to go back to resume their work. Dr. Slier brought out the fact that the opportunities in this field for a young doctor to perfect himself in his profession were unlimited, and at the same time he would be persecuted by the authorities. Manicity in alleviating pain and disease among the peoples of a nation in need. Edwin R. Lewis, e23, spent the week-end in Kansas City., Kans., visiting friends. MOBILIZE FORCES FOR CAMPUS DAY Army of Workers to Meet at Appointed Stations at 8 O'clock Armed With Varied Weapons MUST REPORT Women Not Serving Dinner With Give Stadium Real Fall Housecleaning—Report at Field An actun K. U. army will be mobilized tomorrow for Campus Day while the K. U. football team will be battling the Army eleven at West The enemy on Mount Oread will consist of huge, bare places needing sodding and acres of campus needing grading and cleaning. The Battle of Mount Oread will start promptly at 8 o'clock and will continue till noon. Then the commissary department (largely female) will swing into action and food will be served at 12:30 o'clock at the Stadium. After that the batting workers, victorious, will watch the electric score board tell the story of the battle of West Point. All students, men and women, who work tomorrow morning will receive tickets admitting them to the Stadium. Tickets will be in the afternoon starting at 2, 3 p.m. All men of the University have definite places to report for work, according to the school in which they are enrolled. Women to Bring Brooms All women students not engaged in the big task of serving the Stadium meal at noon, are requested to bring a lunch container and the morning, and their task will be to give the Stadium the first real housecleaning it has ever received. Field Marshall H. A. Rice announced today noon that townspouses may see the electric score board in the Stadium for fifty cents. Following are detailed instructions according to schools as to the places where the workers will report: College Men at Stadium Seven hundred and fifty men of the College of Liberal Arts have been assigned by fifty-five squad leaders. Dean Dye, general organizer for the College, announced today that those not assigned should report at the State Fair with the teams. Every man is requested to bring tools when possible. The laying of sod on the bare places about the Stadium will make the chief job of the college workers. Following are the instructions for the men of the College of Liberal Arts: “On the day when K. U. rides the “On the doy when K. U. rides the Army Mule训 will report at Stadium Field at 8 a.m. with full farming equipment—shovels, hoes, rakes, and wheelbarrows. With the bare places on Stadium Field the glove will be fed by the girl's auxiliary. "At 2 p. m. equipment will be stored and the entire company will go to the Army game at the Stadium where every play will be displayed on an electric scoreboard within three minutes after it is made. "He who does not work shall neither eat nor attend the game. (Signed) Travis Hale, first sergeant (Approved) Andy McDonald, commander-in-chief Engineers Are Organized Detailed instructions to engineers for the part of Campus Built issued by the Shand, in charge. All engineers are asked to report with tools when possible at 8 o'clock in the following places: (Continued on Page 4.) Kappa Phi will entertain its members Thursday with a "White Elephant Ride," followed by a pienic supper at Brown's Grove. They will leave the church at 4 o'clock and will return early in the evening. --- - * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * In order that all faculty and students may share in the Campus activities, there will be no morning classes on Saturday, October 7, 1922. E. H. LINDLEY, Chancellor. 16 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University Subscription price $2.50 In advance for the first nine months of the academy; year; $2.90 for one semester; 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 California, Berkeley and in the department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phones. K. U., 18 and 25 Editorial Staff The Daily Kannan aims to pio- ne students of the University of Kananu to go for- ward in the field, by standing for the deaits of the orates to be clean; to be cheerful; to be quiet; to leave more serious prob- lems; to serve to the host of its ability to serve to the host of its ability. Editor-in-chief Ben Hibben News Editor Raymond Dyer News Editor Katherine Johnson Sport Editor Glik Schultz Editor in Chief Glik Schultz Alumni Editor Faith Carter Alumni Editor Jillian Aveyard Business Staff Business Manager .Lloyd Ruppenthal Asst. Bus. Mgr. Mr. Montgomery, Jr. Asst. Bus. Mgr. Mr. Clyde Burnside Board Members Chester Shaw Dean Bogggs John White Carrie Holmes Mary Hirt Caroline Harakter DeVaughn Francis Carlton Powers Roland Diane Ted Hudson Iolande Lance FRIDAY, OCT. 6, 1922. The trouble with a lot of college students is that they have wish-bones where their back-bones ought to be. DETERMINED TO WIN A wire to the Kansas from a special correspondent traveling with the dayjawkers on their trip to West Point says that among the members of the team there is a grime determination to win. That is a sample of the Kansas fight—the unyielding spirit that remains after the hilarity and excitement of the start have subsided. The team is determined to win! Are those of us who remain in the Sunflower State just as determined? While the Kansas eleven is fighting next Saturday for the athletic recognition of the University by eastern schools, we are stay-at-homes with an air of nonchalance going to busy ourselves with our own personal affairs? The University authorities have arranged Campus Day in order that every loyal K. U. man and every K. U. woman who has a true regard for her school can gather in one great working, cheering throng. In the concentrated thought and desire of 3,000 students there is a potent force that can reach out over a half-dozen states and lend courage and stamina to a battling team—a force which, when thrown into the balance of the gridiron, means a winning touchdown. But when that force is scattered in Kansas City, in Topkas, and in several other towns throughout this section of the country it loses its power. If K. U. is to beat the Army Saturday we must all be massed in one place—at the electric scoreboard—and our minds must be intent on one thing, A FIERCE It is hardly necessary to point out that it is part of each student's duty to be on hand Saturday morning in order that the campus may be made presentable. Students take that part for granted; everyone believes that Campus Day will be no less successful than Stadium Day. In conclusion, it should be said that such days of student work at the University produce a profound impression among the people of the state. When the citizens of Kansas learn that the students at K. U., for nothing more than the satisfaction of demonstrating their loyalty, are willing to place a day of manual labor at the service of the University, he realizes that there is something whole some in the school—some good is intercollegiate athletics which arouse student loyalty to its highest pitch. A report from Manhattan tells on a novel scheme being used to combat homesickness among the freshmen of the Cow College. Furrows have been plowed from building to building on the campus, and the report adds that a marked decrease in tardiness has also has been effected. ABOUT ATROCITIES ABOUT ATTRACTIES The "Unspeakable Turk," as he is called, is on a rampage once more, and morning and evening the newspaper readers of America are served a printed diet regarding the atrocities that are alleged to have occurred in the strife-torn regions of the Near East. The Turk is pictured as a hook-nosed, buggy trussed fend incarnate; one who, if he could, would rule the world with a rod of cruelty and oppression. Perhaps it would not be a bad idea to take the account of many atrocities with a grain of salt, as the saying goes. It is granted that the Turk has been oppressive whenever and wherever he has had the chance; it is probably true that the Turks as a nation have never made any contribution to civilization—to art, literature, or the sciences. However, modern wars are aided largely by propaganda, and it is barely possible that the Turk is not so bad as he is painted by his enemies. Soldiers who fought in the World War found that many of the atrocities charged against the Germans were propaganda myths, put forth to make the people of the allied nations bend every effort toward winning the war. The soldiers found also that some of the allied armies were not without sin so far as cruelty was concerned. Some things are bound to occur in any army in any war. W'll grant the Turk is no bloomin' angel, as Kiping said, but for the honor of the human race we will hope that he is not so bad as he is pictured. STUDENT KLEPTOMANIA When you get between four and five thousand people in one place you must have a fairly representative body. You can expect to run a university the size of Kansas without having two or three sneak-thieves or leptomaniacs in the throng, but you can set the other four thousand some dd watching the two or three. Property right is a sacred thing. It is inherently American—Anglo-Saxon further back than that. And it is non-Socialistic, if that means anything. Common law in the United States holds that no man has a right to take property belonging to another, no matter how well the loser might be able to afford it. As it applies to Mt. Oread, then, a man would violate the law if he took another's hat or note book or watch, no matter if the individual robbed could buy another with a wave of the hand. And, just to be frank, there aren't so many who are in a position to pull this waving of the hand stunt. And there is another angle to it that isn't so pleasant. There are some who consider it more or less "Smart" to get away with something that belongs to somebody else. You know the follow. He walks out of a restaurant without paying a two-bit check and brags about it for a week. He's the guy that always has to tie his shoe while you buy his ticket to the show. Potentially he is no better than the out-and-out "dip." Actually he is worse because he lacks the rook's backbone. K. U has never had very much trouble with this element in the past and it is to be hoped that this year will show further improvement. The freshman cometh forth in the morning and he that weathre his cap shall be blessed. In all his works he shall prosper. But the capless are not so. They shall be as the grain in the earth, and they the fails shall reascend in the land. Plain Tales From The Hill The tree bringeth forth fruit in its season and the freshman his cap in its season which begins on Campus Day. When our team goeth forth to battle against our enemies, forget not thy headpiece nor leave it off during the celebration of victory. Shirk not thy tasks for surely the paddle will find thee. Bring thy spade and thy shovel; they will protect thee. Some shall be wise and some shall be foolish and the foolish shall have need of their oils. Yen, of their heal-thrust, of their armies shall they cry great need. Take not these admonitions lightly for so surely as a paddle carrier splinters just so surely should these words carry conviction. Yea, verily, such is THE LAW. Official Daily University Bulletin Commissioned by: St. Paul College Oct. 6,1922. Vol. II. COMMONS CLOSED SATURDAY FOR CAMPUS DAY LUNCHONE: The University Commons will be closed all day Saturday as it will be occupied by the Lunch Squads in the preparation of the Campus Day lunchroom ANNA H. BARNUM, Director. ANNA H. BARNUM, Director. UNIVERSITY BAND TO REPORT AT STADIUM: The University Band, in uniform, will report at the Stdium at 9 o'clock Saturday afternoon. In the event of rain, please report at Robbinson Golf Club. J. C. McCanless, Director No.20. EDUCATION SEMINAR MEETS MONDAY: There will be a meeting of the EDUCATION SEMINAR at 3:45 Mon- day. R. A. KENT, Dean ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE OF THE GRADUATE SCHOOL: X. A. KENY, Dean. E. B. STOUFFER, Acting Dean. ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE OF THE GRADUATE SCHOOL? There will be a meeting of the Administrative Committee of the Graduate School at 4:30 Monday afternoon in the Graduate Office, 101 East Administration Building. E. B. STOUFFER, Acting Dean. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF K. U. MEMORIAL CORPORATION: There will be a meeting of the Executive Committee of the Memorial Corporation at 6 o'clock Monday evening. Members of the Committee are to meet at the K. U. Commons for supper and immediately after (probably 6:45) will hold a brief session in the Chancellor's Office. OPENING CONCERT, UNIVERSITY CONCERT COURSE: The opening concert of the University Concert Course will be given Monday evening at 8:20 in Robinson Gymnasium by Cyrena Van Gordon, Contralto, Chicago Opera Company. ALFRED G. HILL, Secretary. OPENING CONCERT UNIVERSITY CONCERT COURSE; ADVANCED R. O. T. C. MEMBERS MUST SIGN RATIONS VOUCHER: Members of the advanced course, R. O. T. C, are requested to report to the office of the Department of Military Science and Tactics, to sign voucher for commutation of rations. H. L. BUTLER, Dean. A. P. D'AMBRA, Sergent, U. S. Army. PHYSICAL EXAMINATION REQUIRED OF ALL FRESHMEN WOMEN: All Freshmen women must have completed the required physical examination before November 1st. On Other Hills MARTHA M. BACON, Assoe. Prof. of Physical Education A. P. D'AMBRA, Sergueant, U. S. Army. The University of Missouri boasts this year of its first Chinese woman student. She is Miss Eva C. Chang from Shanghai and she has entered the School of Journalism. She came to the United States a year ago and attended Oberlin College in Ohio. Prior to that she was a student at St. Mary's Hall, a boarding school for girls in China. A moving picture camera and projector given to the school by business men of Columbia, Mo., is assisting the football squad of the University of Missouri to master the tech skills required for the game's "shot" in action and the coach points out the weakness of the players as seen on the screen. Willmore Kendall, Jr., although only thirteen years old, has been admitted as a freshman to Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill. He was one of the first students he has offered him a position as feature writer during his spare time. Thirty-two thousand four hundred students were enrolled in Columbia University last year, while the University of California lists 42,300, and the University of Wisconsin had a student body of 20,000. The majority of these were non-resident and extension students. Mental alertness tests will be given the freshmen at Northwestern University this year to determine their ability to carry the necessary work. The exceptionally brilliant students will be placed in special classes so that they will not be hindered by the duller students. Always at Ye Taverne— Sandwiches . Salads Desserts at all times. Make our place Special 40c Luncheon your eating headquarters downtown Good Service Well Prepared Food Courteous Treatment Say!— Select Cafe 846 Mass. St. Ye Tauerne Right Next to the Varsity Theatre and get a real meal Drop down to Ray's X Cafe Jayhawks Flown George George, C22', is working in the Missouri Pacific railroad offices in St. Joseph, Mo. Body captured the 1922 Jawayhawk ball team and was chosen forward and captain of the All-Missouri Valley team. Kate Hansen, A. B. '13, is a missionary teacher in Sindai, Japan: Laura Harkrader, A. B. '22. is teaching sewing in the El Dorado schools. A number of graduates from the University are engaged in business in Emporia. Roland Boynton, LL.B. 16, is the County Attorneys; W. W. Parker, LL.B. 06, is also an attorney; and Frank Agkrelus is head of the department of Bacteriology at the State Normal School. Louis Hull. A.B. '17, is doing Chemical work in New Jersey. Augusta Guffer, A. B. 175, is now an instructor of Home Economics in the Home Economics Institute in Kansas. Winfred Luther, A. B. '06, is an instructor in English in Southwestern College at Winfield. Gordon Saunders, B. S. 22, and "Hap" Hoover, B. S. 21, now have positions with the Cooke Paint and Ink Company in Kansas City, do. A. G. ALRICH Engraving, Printing, Binding Rubber Stamps, Office Supplies. Customers. Stationery Printing by any process 736 Mass. St Thomas Electric Shoe nop Oread Shining Parlor CHARLIE'S Best Shines in Town "Suiting You THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULTZ 917 Mass. St. "GIFTS THAT LAST" Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO LOW TITLED JOBS OF PAIRING WATKINS NATIONAL BANK SURPLUS $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Asher, L. V. Miller, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishon Bob Stewart Charlie Sample Charlie Sample SAMPLE - STEWART BARBER SHOP Ladies and children's hair bobbing Baths Across from Wiedemann's 838 Mass. St. Suits $40 ★ Protch, the College Tailor Simply Gorgeous and Gorgeously Simple A woman sewing a dress on a man's shoulder. The woman is wearing a tiara and a long skirt, while the man is wearing a short shirt and pants. Both are standing in a room with a bed and pillows. The woman is holding the dress by her side, while the man is holding it by his arm. The dress has a long neckline and a floral pattern. The man is wearing a light-colored shirt and dark pants. The background of the image is plain white. Are the new silk undies that are being featured at Drescher's 815 Mass. Your inspection is required in association. We're Here--to give you the best in Laundry and Dry Cleaning service. Our workers are skilled and all our equipment is the best. The result is: We Guarantee Satisfaction. May we serve you? Phone 383 LAWRENCE STEAM LAUNDRY Water as soft as melted snow 14 ARMAMENTS COUNCIL SECRETARY TO SPEAK Frederick J. Libby Will Address Lawrence Chamber of Com- merce on October 9 CHANCELLOR TO PRESIDE Committee Asks That Those Who Attend Reserve Tickets In Advance The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce will have a luncheon meeting in honor of Frederick J. Libby, Executive Secretary of the National Council for Reduction of Armenia, who will speak at 12:30 o'clock Monday, October 9. Chancellor E. H. Lindley will preside at the meeting. Mr. Libby comes with high recommendations as a speaker who has a message to give. Tickets for the luncheon will be sold at sixty cents and reservations by those who wish to attend should be made in advance so that they may be provided for by the committee. They may be had at the Chamber of Commerce, or a Dean Kent's office in Fraser Hall. The National Council for the Reduction of Armaments was formed less than a year ago in November 1921, by seventeen national organizations and has grown to a present membership of forty-two. Among these organizations all religious groups are represented, Catholic, Jewish, Protestant, and organizations of farmers, industrial workers, war veterans, educators, and many kinds of women's organizations. The Council supported the Washington Conference and the ratification of all its treaties, and is now urging that an economic conference be called by this government to meet in Washington early in the winter. Its program is in general terms, progressive world organization, world reduction of armaments and education for world peace, and its slogan is a sentence from Major General John F. O'Ryan, "The American people can end war in our time if they get on the job." To Commemorate Valor In Bronze The Council's activities include meetings and demonstrations to give expression to the sentiment of the present generation, education of the coming generation and national and international organization to make effective the world-wide sentiment against war. St. Louis, Mo., Oct. 6—The memorial commemorating the heroism of Missouri soldiers in the world war will be ready for its place in the Argonne by November 1, according to word received here from the scultptress, Mrs. Nancy C. Haha, on her behalf, having been executing her in paris studio. The French government has not yet designated the exact location for the statue. Mrs. Hahn sent word that the figure was virtually completed and the architect had selected granite for the base and shaft. The 1919 state legislature appro- The monument will consist of a 12-foot granite base, surmounted by a six-foot female figure of Victory in bronze. The figure is an animated one, with wind-swept draperies, the right hand holding laid off an olive wreath, the left hand on an olive handle. The nose and expression are of exaltation. Historical Society Will Mark Graves of Pioneers Topkea, Kan., Oct. 6—One of the important matters to be discussed at the annual meeting of the Kansas State Historical society here October 17, will be a campaign to have the Kansas pioneers and missionaries marked. "Most of the women who were prominent in the shaping of early Kansas history are buried in obscure places." Mollely, secretary of the society, said. Another feature of the annual meeting will be the showing of twenty-three reels of war pictures that are owned by the society. Memorial Corporation To Meet Memorial Corporation To Meet A meeting of the executive committee of the Memorial Corporation will be held on Monday evening. The directors will eat at the Commons, and meet later in the Chancellor's office. George Strible, Bassem Fearing and John Glendinning from the University Y. M. C. A. are teaching Sunday school class taught by Bailie Smith is teaching a Sunday school class in north Lawrence. By The Way The French Club opened its twenty second year with a large attendance at the first meeting, yesterday afternoon, in Fraser Hall. Katherine Gord, president, presided over the meeting, and Miss Neuen Swander in interesting account of club's record for the past twenty-one years. The Phi Lambda Sigma reception for all Presbyterian girls on the hill, which was to be given Saturday afternoon at Westminster Hall, has been postponed a week on account of Campus Day. Dorothy Giltner, c'24, returned from her home in Wamego Wednesday after a bad attack of tonificitis. Jules Kohn, c'24, will spend the week-end at his home in Kansas City, Mo. Sigma Chi announces the pledging of John Hubbell, of Fredonia. Ralph Corrall, fs22, of Chanute, and Clifford Johnston, fs23, of Kana- city City, Mo., spent Sunday at the Sigma Chi house. Kappa Alpha Phi announces the pledging of Ralph Shannon and Oliver Crump, of Kansas City. August Lautscherb, 123, left Tuesday for West Point, N. Y., where he will see the K. U-Army game next Saturday. Robert M. Smith, L23, spent Wednesday afternoon and evening in Kansas City. Mr. J. L. Finley, of St. Francis visited Wednesday with his son Lewis c24. Professor F. H., H. Hodder has been unable to meet his classes the last few days on account of having trouble with his eyes. Radah June Price, of De Soto, will spend the week-end with Lela Conboy c'25. Delta Sigma Pi, professional commerce fraternity, held a smoker Wednesday night. Delta Sigma Pi, professional commerce fraternity, announces the pledging of Joe Bloomer, *c23*. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Botany Club will initiate new members with a hike this afternoon at 4:30. Laura Harkrader, A. B. 22, of Pratt, is teaching in El Dorado this year. Prof. James L. Foster, who was an instructor in the department of English here two years ago, is also a graduate of the graduate work for a Ph. D. degree. The Bacteriology Club will entertain with a picnic tonight from 5 until 8 o'clock. The picnic is a "get-together" affair, to get the new members of the department acquainted. Ann Suderman is the new president of the club. The members of the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity will open their new Before going to that party stop at the Stadium, the shop of service, and get one of those Boncilla messages and one of Arch's shines. Student Enterprise Tickets on sale at six places:- Athletic Office Gymnasium Law School Office Green Hall Office, Dean of Men Fraser Office, Dean of Women Fraser Y. W. C. A. Honley Hill Y. M. C. A. Myers Hall 1033 Mass. A word to the wise is sufficient Among those from the University who attended the Priests of Pallas parade in Kansas City were: Betty Moore, Juliet Bull, Josephine Ryan, Rachel Long, Lucile Haush, Gladys Long, Clara Ferguson, Bette Meade. Kenpa Alpha Psi, professional commerce fraternity, announces the pledging of Leand Thomas, '26, of McGill University, Johnson, '26, of Kansas City, Mo. name to their friends with a hour warming on Sunday, October 8. Frances Wright will spend this week-end at her home in Kansas City. Belva Sangater, Mildred Orm, Florence Hutchinson, and Irene Post drove to Kansas City Tuesday to see the P. O. P. parade. Jean Bennett, c'24, went to Kansas City Tuesday to see the Priests of Pallas parade. The Delta Tau Delta fraternity will give their seventh annual Paddle Party Friday night, October 6. The guests will include the freshmen pledges of the chapters at Baker and Manhattan and alumni members. The Kappa Sigma fraternity will give a party at the chapter house Friday evening, October 6. Varsity-Bowersock Friday and Saturday Shows-2:30-4:00-7:30-9:00 p.m. Miss Elizabeth Howard, of Lees Summit, Mo., and Miss Pearl Packard, of Kansas City, returned to their town on the first visit a at the Sigma Kappa house. Bernard Meidinger, e'23, left this morning for West Point to attend the Kansas-Army football game. WANTED - Boarders. Best all you cookin' in town. Eat all you want, Chill all you need, Get a new entrance. Same building, University Book Store Amnes. Roommates for Book Store Annex. Roommates for two boys. 1524 Red. 0-13 LOST—A Delta Phi Sigma pin. Finder call 2577. O-7 WANT ADS SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire o'carn enough to more than pay their ↓ "FRENCH HEELS" A comedy drama with a thrill in every situation. A veritable style show. Irene Castle We strive to please you on the largest or smallest job. 75 New York Cleaners Also Pathe News Fun From Press ADULTS 28c Phone in A Mystery of India "ABOVE ALL LAW" A gorgeous story of forbidden passion and revenge. Also way through college. Please work. after school hours. Write J. F. Stanky. 3446 Wayne Ave., Kansas City, Mo. -S79 Earl Hurd Comedy "Fresh Fish" FOR RENT-Boy's room at 1019 Alabama street. CHILDREN 10c FOR RENT—Room for girls. 1229 Ohio. Phone 2545. 66 FOR SALE -Complete two-step wire- less receiving set. Excellent results guaranteed. Bill Garland. Phone 429. O-5 OST—Triangular pint in pearls and emeralds, lettered Phi Thetaappa. Reward. Call Katherine Alexander. Phone 2776 or 13035. 085 MOTOR BOAT—For rent. After- noons, mores, Sundays and nights. Call George Edgar Jr., Phone 1537 Black. —08 1000 FOR RENT—One or two boys. Good location. 1145 Kentucky. Phone 2484 White. 760 FOR RENT—1 large, well furnished room, suitable for 2 or 3 boys; prices reasonable. Phone 1209. O-7 FOR RENT—Room for boys near Stadium, 1001 Maine. Phone 1599 Black. 07 ROOMS for men—Two double, one single. $7.50, $8.00, $9.00. 1336 Tennessee. 918 FORDS—$75 up. Butler-Sand- erson Motor Co. 1005-07 Mass tt. —05 FOR RENT—One large room at 901 Maine, for boys; also garage for rent. 1968 Black. O-12 DALE PRINT SHOP 1027 Mass. Phone 228 LOST—Student Enterprise Ticket, No. 1630; between 44th and 154th on Tenn. St. O-7 LOST—Kappa Alpha Psi pin, pearls and diamond; liberal reward. Return to 1215 New Jersey. O-7 FOR SALE—Party growns, good as new, Misses' sizes. Call mornings. 1530 R. I. St. O-8 DOL J. W.'OBRYON, (Denist) Special attention to treatment and treatment of pyrorahn. 304 Perkins Building. Tel. 507. PROFESSIONAL CARD LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Ex- clusive Optometrist). eyes exame; glasses made. Office 1025 Mass. Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 WELCOME STUDENTS Visit the Army Goods Army Goods United Army Stores Co 706 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise PHONE Army Goods Army Goods 442 Kirby Cleaners and Dyers 1109 Mass. St. New Compact Colgates Block Phone Large Compact Black Enamel $1.00 If its advertised—We have it Refills 50c each The Round Corner Drug Co. 801 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kansas We Press the Suit But Not the Purse OUR WORK IS FIRST CLASS in every particular, and our $3 ticket (providing for 11 suit presses) saves you money. 爱 ASK ABOUT IT W. E. Wilson 712 Mass. Phone 505 Bowersock Theatre --For its an attack of Laughing Gas. Shine up your ole Tin hat for its a Attack of Laughing and they Bast all Bast. GET OUT YOUR GAS MASKS 20 Miss Grace Connelly CLYDE “RUBE” HOOPER As Private C. C. Pill “OH! YOU WILDCAT” Lunch of the Season Monday Shows 3 - 7. - 9 p.m. Wednesdhy Shows 7 - 9 p.m. Jonathan Goodman, vice-president Lawrence churches to speaking to the of the Cosmopolitan Club, and Rufus young people's meetings in an effort Case, head of the K. U. student volunteers, are making a tour of all the foreign and native students of K. U. [Digitized image of a historical document header with laurel leaves and decorative elements]. "Time" The most valuable raw material A watch that does not tell time correctly, not only disguises you, but may often cause you to miss a very important engagement. The cost of this service never exceeds $2.50 and usually much less--Don't delay—bring it up. Have Sol Marks & Son Watch Repair service adjust your watch so it will tell you the correct time—to the second. Sole Agents Sole Agents Rookwood Pottery Cordova Leather Sol Marks & Son Mass. St. Easy Payments You don't have to scrimp and save to pay cash. Instead you pay only a little each month in amounts conveniently small, that you will hardly notice them. While all the time you are paying you will be enjoying the use of one of our new models. Woodstocks and Remington Portables Lawrence Typewriter Exchange Blissner Bros. 737 Mass. CLOWN Whipcord wears and wears and wears It stands at the top of the list when hard service is the first thing to consider. But whipcords also are attractive in appearance—they look well, at first, and retain their shapeliness and style. $30.00 to 37.50 Houk-Green Clo. Co. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LANDIS IS MOBBED BY FANS AT CALLED GAMI Crowd Vents Anger on Judge When Umpires Decide Day Too Dark YANKS AND GIANTS TIED Fans Thought Sun Was Stil High Enough For Playing Polo Grounds, New York, Oct. 6—Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis was mobbed by two or three thousand angry baseball fans at the Polo Grounds yesterday evening after the game between the Yanka and the Blue Devil, in what the umpires called darkness at the end of the tenth imminent. Interest was at fever heat. The score had been tied by the Yanks in the eighth inning. The sun was still above the horizon, and the teams were just trotting on the field for the eleventh inning when the umpires announced that the game was called on account of darkness. Ulterior Motive Suspected The crowd was angry. They saw no reason for the calling of the game except to stretch the seven games promised to eight. They were keenly interested in a tie game carried into extra innings in the Big League. Judge and His Wife Composed Then somebody saw Judge Landis standing in his box with his wife, talking to friends, and he booed at the Judge. The crowd, anxious to vent their anger on someone, pressed closer and hissed and booed him. The crowd was to clean up baseball and this was a "bed of a wav" to clean it up. Judge and His Wife Composed The police closed in around the Judge and his wife, but he waved them aside and came out through the mob, pushing the surging crowd away. They hurried up to the program and threw them at the white-haired gentleman as he was making his way to his car. The Judge was very angry, but when he reached his car he soon recovered his composeure, and said that such things had happened before with no bad results. Mrs. Landis was smiling all the time. R. O. T. C. Will Use Nationa Guard Rifle Range TARGET PRACTICE BEGINS Rifle practice by the local R. O. T. C. unit will be started the latter part of next week, according to a statement issued by Capt. H. G. Archibald this morning. Considerable time and money has been expended by the local units in preparation for the variation of the rifle range, which is located at Six Corners, about 10 miles northeast of town. The firing points have been placed in condition and telephone communications established between the University and the The R. O. T. C, is considerable in debt to the Kansas National Guard which has given the University unifi free use of the range. A number of the members of last year's team are back in school this year. They, together with several new men who have enrolled from Citizen's Military Training Camp and Junior R. O. T. C. units, should make a strong impression at City Rifle队 this year. Cecl I U Bradley is captain of the team. "Broken in Limb But Not in Spirit"—Rex Rex has returned. This means more battles for Pi, the most sophisticated dog on the hill. Rex is a shaggy airbird who hot blies about on three legs, the fourt being broken and in a plaster cast Pi and Rex became engrossed in a very heated argument one day, all of which resulted in a fracture of Rex's foreleg. Later while leisurely crossing Oread "Boulevard" he was run over by some "squeer contraption" which completely broke the already fractured limb. For this reason he was removed to the hospital for several weeks, but he is now back on the hill to recuperate and to continue his arguments with Pi. Order More Books from Paris Spooner Library has ordered a shipment of over fifty books from J. Terenqu, book-seller in Paris, at a cost of 1,043 francs. The books are expected within a few days, and will be turned over to the library of Rochester, where they are shared. Two sets of scientific work in French by Lavisoir and by Fourcroy have arrived and will be removed to the chemistry library. Elephants And Peanuts Feature Kappa Phi Ride Yesterday was a gala day for Kappa Phi. A "White Elephant Ride" was held in honor of new Methodist girls. Three white elephants, bearing sighs "We know our potatoes," etc., came shaking along with their trunks waving in the air. Over fifty girls were on stage, with mindful of their heavy load and with snorting and bellowning, bounded out of the city. Arriving at the grove the girl roasted wienies around a campfire and games were played and songs sung. Finally, after the elephants were fed peanuts, and the moon was coming up over the hill, the girls rode back to town to the tune of "Good Night, Ladies." CROSS COUNTRY TEAM GETS STIFF WORKOUT Captain Wilson Has Loweree Time of One Record Already This Season Capt. "Jimmie" Wilson is putting the aspirants for the cross-country team through intensive workouts while Coach Carl Schladenmann is in the cast with "Fotsy" Clark and his football sound. Last fall the best time made on the two and one-half mile course here was 13:24, made by Patterson, and two years ago the fast figure was 13:46. Wilson, already this season, has whittled the record to 12:53. The strong contenders at the tryouts the day of the K. U.-Washburn game are: Wilson, Captain, Schauh, Merrill, Coggil, Ming, Mings, Pratt, Lewis, Graddy and Wunch. The first team men will compose the regular team. Tomorrow they will make their first workout on the five mile course, a race that will count largely at the all-Valley meet at St. Louis, Nov. 11. W.A.A. TO GIVE FROSH MIXER Thursday, October 7, Is Date Set for Entertainment Plans were made, at the first meeting of the W. A. A. which was held Wednesday afternoon, for a party to be given Thursday, October 11, at 7 o'clock, in Robinson Gymnasium for all freshmen women and women who have entered the University for the first time. About thirty women were present at the meeting owing to the closed membership ruling which the Kansas council adopted this year relegated women to health at least 125 points before she can become a member of W. A. A. The purpose of the party will be to acquaint new women students with information regarding K sweaters; to meet the W. A. A. women; and to have a general mixer. Regarding the change in the membership plan, Nestor Moore, president, who attended the W. A. A. convention in Colorado last April, reported that she found Kansas the only university having open membership. She said Moore will adopt the same plan as other institutions in choosing members. "If women come here from other schools, who have taken part in their school activities, will turn in their points to Jean Bennet, at the gymnasium office, they will be given credit, providing the school belongs to the Athletic Conference of American College Women," according to Miss Moore. "If other women in the University having points turn them in they may have enough for membership." Margery Ashby was elected swimming manager, to fill the vacancy by Olga Fulton, who is not in office. She also endorsed at the meeting that she attended members be 100 per cent in the purchase of student enterprise tickets. Commerce Society Plans Activities For This Year Gamma Epison Fp honorary commerce sorrority, hire its first meeting of the year last week, to discuss membership and activities for the coming year. The local chapter was installed March 4, 1921. Ruth Lennen, c23, is the president of the organization. At the annual convention last spring, consolidation with two other national commerce sororities was accomplished. Pi Sigma Chi Chi have now taken the name and印 of Kamma Epsilon Pi, making a total of seventeen chapters. Gamma Epsilon Pi was organized by the University of Illinois in 1918. Elizabeth Meade, fa'24, and Clara Ferguson, c, 23; went to Wellington yesterday evening for a few days visit at the home of Miss Ferguson. Evidenced in Every Class, Meth ods and Customs as Est ablised Fact ARGENTINE IS UNDER AMERICAN INFLUENCE Buenos Aires, (By mail to United Press)- North American penetration in the Argentine is now evident in every fact it has evoked in every market. penetration, cultural penetration, legal, industrial- in methods, in customs, in everything, to the vices. In the economic order of the republic many great banking institutions and many important American firms are definitely established. Five or six years ago there was not a single number of an American firm have and very few firms were all-American. All the newspapers now carry large ads of products of the United States. The merchants talk of American commercial methods, and when they want to tell an employee to accelerate his activities, they advise he be more "Yankees," to think rapidly and work quickly, to lose no time. In court cases when a lawyer has made a good case and can find no further precedent in Argentine law to support his argument, he cites laws or precedents of the United States. The judges themselves uphold their decisions by citing pronouncements of their American colleagues. In cultural aspect also the Argentina people incline toward America, while European development is receiving less attention. The newspapers receive their news largely from American agencies, the United Press maintaining a leading position. Daily many columns are filled with news and comments of the United States. The part of the population which understands and speaks English, which is large, reads the American magazines, papa, etc. A few years ago boxing interested nobody. Footwear known to be popular is as much enthusiasm for boxing and football, as well as for tennis and even baseball, as in the Anglo-Saxon countries. The smart dressers attempt to copy American styles of wearing apparel. The devotees of the movies ape the customs and habits of the stars of the silversheet, where they see how people live north of the Rio Grande. Even in the cabarets, salons, and social functions, the tango is giving way to the fox-trot, the shimmy, and the "Boston." Alpha Epsilon Iota, women's medical sorority, will entertain pre-medics and first year women at a party at Honey House. A man is playing golf. Tom Wye is so smart and so popular with the best dressers that you expect it to be high priced. TomWye KNIT JACKET Many men think that a Tom Wye is a knight jacket that is seen only in country clubs, yacht clubs, and $800 cars. Let's Straighten This Out in Your Mind You are right in your idea that it is worth a lot, but its price is only KNIT JACKET Our Cash Price Two-pocket style $7.50 Two-pocket style $ 8 “C” $ 7 Four-pocket style our 33rd Anniversary prices on odd trousers SkofStadS Forces to Be Mobilized For First Campus Day (Continued from page 1) fessor Okerblad in front of Marvin Hall. (Continued from page 1) Architects in front of the observatory to Professor Goldsmith. Mining engineers in front of Haworth Hall to Professor Young. Chemical engineers west of Marvin Electrical engineers east of Marvin to Professor M. Johnson. Mechanical and industrial engineers in rear of Marvin Hall to Professor Tate. Six hundred engineering students have been given definite assignments to squad leaders, according to lists posted in Marvin Hall and Chemistry building. A large program of fruitful camp work has been arranged. The largest student stone wall around Potter Lake, moving brick west of Administration building, grading road in front of Marvin Hall, cleaning territory south of road west of Marvin, and laying sidewalk at new electrical laboratory. Students will step by step at 8 o'clock. The Law forces will direct their chief energies to cleaning up Marvin Grove. Hand axes are especially needed by the Laws, as well as scythes and rakes. The Schools of Pharmacy and Medicine will meet at the east end of the Church Saturday morning. Their equipment will include essentially the same tools as the law students are requested to Chemical engineers west of Marvin Hall to Professor Kinney. FOR RENT - One room brick cottage. Furnished and suitable for light housekeeping. Moderate rent. Corner suite and Tenth floor. Phone 2570. —64 TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY LOST-Black leather coin purse contain four keys, on campus Thursday. Reward for return to Business Office, Fraser Hall. O-10 LOST—Fountain pen without cap, between Spooner and Ohio. Finder please call 2572. O-16 Insist on Wiedemann's Ice Cream Purest For Over 50 Years Purest For Over 50 Years or this week we will Honey Fruit Salad Strawberry Brownie Pineapple Grape Chocolate Vanilla Brick or Bulk 12. 8 Ambrosia Pineapple specii Sunday Bricks Honey Fruit Salad and Vanilla Pineapple Grape and Vanilid Phone 182 The Florsheim Shoe Smart enough to please the most extreme trim enough to suit the more reserved. A THE SPOT CASH SHOE STORE. Florsheim shoes are worn wherever good fellows get together. Oxfords or Shoes $9. COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY BAPTISTS HAVE YOU ACCEPTED ITS HEARTY INVITATION TO; THIS IS YOUR CHURCH 1. BECOME AN AFFILIATED MEMBER. 2. ATTEND ITS SERVICES. 3. ENGAGE IN ITS ACTIVITIES. 4. ENJOY ITS FELLOWSHIP. "THERE IS NO TRUE EDUCATION WITHOUT RELIGIOUS EDUCATION." Y EVENING 7:45 p. m. The World's Series by Radio 2nd Floor! Sermon by Rev. Eliot Porter. ? $1.00 Every Freshman Must Wear a freshman Cap—The Freshman Cap Season Is On—Get Your Caps Today. Ober Freshman Caps, of the Better Kind, for You at Ober's HEAD TO TOE OUTVIPTERS --all 592 and reserve a table for Sunday evening dinner. BELLS FLOWER SHOI Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS Phone 139 825 1-2 Mass. Pander's QUALITY JEWELRY Your School Days They will long be remembered as the good old days at K. U. Walking The days when you met the bunch at Brick's and talked things over—where it was quiet and comfortable, yet—with an atmosphere of pleasure and University life. THE OREAD CAFE E. C. Bricken, Prop. Just a step from the Campus Varsity Dance! F. A. U Hall SATURDAY NIGHT October 7,1922 Blanc's 6-piece Orchestra SPORT EXTRA THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XX UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SATURDAY, OCT. 7, 1922. SPORT EXTRA NUMBER 21 JAYHAWKERS LOSE. 0-13 GIANTS WIN 4-3 FROM YANKEES Yanks Lead Out Strong, Soring Twice in First Inning, While Giants Delay Game WARD HITS HOME RUN CARRY CRIMSON AND BLUE AGAINST ARMY McGraw's Team Takes Sudden Spurt in Fifth, Bringing in Four Men to Home Home 1930-31 Polo Grounds, New York, Oct. 7. —The New York Giants took the fourth game of the World's Series here today with a rcore of 4 to 3. The Yanks led out strong, scoring twice in the first innning. At various times it looked as if the Giants wanted to throw the game, for they hadn't been changing from the bench to the field. Meanwhile it wasraining heavily. Wade made a sensational home run in the fifth inning for the Yankees. This was the second home run he made so far in the series this year. First Inning Giants: Bancroft hit to Mays in pitcher's box and was safe as Ward Yank second baseman, failed to reach. Giroh ground to pitcher and wan, Bancroft going to second. Frisel lined to Meusel and was out. E. Meusel out on a ground to short. N. runs, one hit, one error. Yankees: Witt singled to center field. Cunningham fielded it nicely and cut Witt out of a two-bagger Dugan singled and Witt was held at second. Ruth hit a long fly which was caught by Cunningham with his back against the fence. Witt went to third after the catch and came in for a kill, scoring Dugan remained on first. Pitt singled to right field, scoring Witt. Pitt caught out, going second. Meusel singled to right field, scoring Dugan. Schang Second Inning buck out. Two runs, four hits, and one error. Third Inning Giants: Young fled out to Meusel Kelley out, Mays to Pipp. Cunningham ham walked. Snyder on a fast grounder to Pipp. No runs, no hits, no errors. Still dizzling; Giants trying to kill time, apparently. Fourth Inning **Yankees:** Ward fired to Young in right field. Scott out, Bancroft to Kelley. Mays out on a fast drive to no. No runs, no hits, no errors. Yanks trying to get a game in before rain stopped. They played fast ball. Trow Row, left to right: Line Coach Schadmane, Lonberg, Gilbert, Hodges, Edwes炉, Rakey, Jouce, Burt, Hilderman, Anderson, Moby, Griffin, Coach Clark. Bottom Row, left to right: Kluwer, Kremer, Cave, Division, McDaven, Source, Captain Hughes, Wilson, Black, Ivy. Giants: McQuillen out, Schang to Pipp. Beronk walked. Groh filed to the Muscle in left fold. Began running into the fence. Ruth in left field. Giants killing time. No runs, no hits, no errors. Yankees: Witt up and filed. Dugan out, Groh to Kelley. Ruth walked. Pfitt filed out to Young. No Umpires urge players to hurry game. Giants: Meusel out on groundt to first. Young singled to right field Kelley grounded and Young was at at second. Cunningham grounded and Kelley caught at second. No errors no no errors. Wet hath mother Mays. Yankees: Mussel struck out. Schum- on out on hard fly to Young in right field. Ward struck out. No runs no hits, no errors. Fifth Inning Giants: Snyder singled through Scott. McQuillen hit a two-bagger, sending Snyder to third. Bancroft singled over Ward's head, scoring Snyder and McQuillen. Grob was safe at first on a ground ball. Bancroft safe at second. Frisch sacrificed three yards. McQuillen grounded out, Bancroft scoring, Grob going to third. Young scored Grob with a single. Young was caught napping off first and was out. 4 runs, 5 hits, no errors. Yankees: man fainting if尔德斯. Scott drew a free ticket to first. Maya fouled out to Kolley. Witt hit it. Tommy was retired. Retired. No run, no hits, no errors. Sixth Inning Giants: Kelley flied out to Witt. (Continued on Page 4.) ACTIVITY TICKET SALE REACHES 1600 MARK Two Thousand . Will Probably Be Sold Before Monday Evening With 1600 Student Activity Tickets gone at 5 o'clock last evening, and with several solicitors not yet reporting, the sale of 2,000 tickets by some customers. The average sale for the 2002 solicitors selling tickets is about eight apiece, although some individuals made much larger sales. The highest individual sale was made by Narciso E. Abella, of Gibc Philippe Islands, who is a soph摩 in the School of Engineering. His sales amounted to forty tickets. The second highest was Virgil Miller, cheerleader, who had sold twenty tickets before his departure for West Africa. The other reports were made last night, said that undoubtedly Virgil Miller would have sold a great many more if he had been here for the whole week. Another ticket seller worth mention is Van, the Animal Man, who sold five tickets. Dean Dyer expressed himself as pleased with his appearance. The tickets, which have been on sale at the offices of the Y. M. C. A., the Y. W. C. A., the athletic office, the office of the dean of men, and several other offices, as well as in the hands of the hundreds of solicitors, are now on only at the office of the dean of men and the athletic office. CROSS COUNTR. TEAM BUSY content, like them, without having to sleep in them pulmur births too. But the jokes on guys that went to westpoint, which is where this contest is going to be pulled of. The university has got a big electricrick scor bored somethin like what we watched the White Socks steal the 1920 worlds serious on only fixed for a football game. So this p me w that was attached to our studys like we outgather is going to get to watch everything that happened to kick their in-west point. I looks at this boulder a m and says—'science is sure wonderful.' Just like that is the way I said. This Here Muss Up Between a Brick Wall and a Bird Is Nothin' to be Predicted Upon its just like him alas that virtue would get rewarded, or something like that. Here I stay at home here at Laurence, while a lot of these guys went back there, and now I get to see the contest like them, without having The Kansas football team, which is more often commonly known as the Jayhawkers, has gone and flew out of his territory today, and is back trying to whip the whol d-m United States armie. Dear Al: Great excitement holds fourth here at Laurence, wherest of us has been kept by a natural devotion to our studys. Some guys who did care about weather or not they ever got no knowledge up and went back to lift the Armwheel with them to aid the Army down here for an贮化 and no football team is going to stop me." Just like that is the way I said. K"Books Are Available At University Y. M. C. A. Practices Every Afternoon at 4:30 O'clock A number of "K" books are avail able at Myers Hall for those who for late enrollment or other reasons did not secure their "Student Bibles." This little book is free for the asking and contains indispensable information about the city, the campus and the faculty. The books may be secured at the office of the University Y. M. C. A. in Myers Hall. or three nights like they had to. The cross-country team is practicing every afternoon at 4:00 ock with Captain Wilhelm at the only letter from the squad, Coach Schadman. But there are several good men from last year's squad, who did not make their letters last year, and several members of last year's freshman squad have reported for practice. The first try-out for time was held Friday, September 29. There was promise of flaving a good cross-country team from the time that was made by several of the men. Captain Jimmy Wilson led the field in 12 minutes and 52:2 seconds. The rest of the squad finished in the order named: Schabu, Merrill, Prentil, Lewis, Kendall, Willson, Hilliard, Merrell and Grady, of last year's freshman squad, are showing up especially well, while Wunsch and Schabu, of last year's varsity squad, are showing up better than they did any time last year. Your friend, Jav Tea tore nights like they had to. I never could get into them d-milk hammocks in them things, anyway Clumis, I guess you-d say, Al, but you got to have your little joke. has all the heavy archeirie in the line back neck, Al, and that a feller had just as soon to try to ram his head thru a brick fall or something as to try to carry the festif pigskin (som phrase, eh, Al) thru them. But thehesa lot a I could say about that. For one thing “potys” Clark, who teaches the Jayhawk footballers all he know, has picked a great instructor, he is named phrase, ch, Al) some of themaint got much sense. Which is why “potys” picked them, because a brick wall or such like is children play for them, and they nint get no more sense than to set in to kickin these bricks till it was time to go and lead me to predict that theygrows to be a lot of boles kicked in that armstone wall, messors Davidson, Weildlein, Higgins and Cave do the kickin. These is some of “potiesis good but rather dum boles, Al. Well, Al, you know I never was a gray to count chickens when they are about this p-m clash between a brick and a brick wall (nifty phrase, ch Al). Will rite you the 1st of new weak and tell you how or why i They are sayin here that the armic CAMPUS DAY TRIUMPH OF OLD K. U. SPIRIT Schools Work Around Own Buildings While College Sods Stadium Field With all hands on deck at 8 o'clock sharp this morning and with the sun trying desperately to break through murky clouds, but with the old, indestructible K. U. spirit running through and infusing the student at school to off to a good start. And it finished as triumphantly as it began. A Bucket Brigade on Job While the engineers were grading around Marvin Hall and the Laws and medics were cleaning out Marvin Hall, the busy covering of the slopes of the stadium field with fresh sod. It was a little muddy from the vain last night it is true, but nevertheless valuable in helping further erosion of the bare slopes. Everybody was on the job! The old bucket brigade had a chance to try out some of its old formations. Three or four lines were formed from the top of the slope at the end of the track down to the level and the roll of sand were reloaded at top speed. So the team felt it, it was quickly unrolled into place. The brown color of the slopes rapidly changed to a bright green. "Chain" gangs could be seen from almost any place on the campus. One or two stalwarts, armed with trusty staves, would tag along just to see that everything happened all right. "Field Marshal" H. A. Rice kept the watchful eye bulb and prevented the man at the bottom of the slope from falling too low. He attended of the men higher up. Enthusiasm Lasting Fall house cleaning was in order about the Stadium. Fifty to seventy-five men, armed with brooms, brushes, and clothes swept and dusted the seats so that the place would be presentable. The enthusiasm of the crews lasted much longer than the supply of sod. The great rolls were used up by 10:45. The engineers worked on the exterior and grounds of their building. The southeast corner of the grounds was graded and the same methods were also applied to the front and rear of a building. A few men inside inside applied paints to the free beams which are used as supports for the experimental motors. After a brief wait the lines surged forward toward the tables, heaped with sandwiches, pickles steaming and ice cream in toppy red cocoons. Luncheon over the crowd moved up the Hill to the gymnasium to watch the Kansas-Army game played, move upon a miniature gridron. Fifteen long lines of tables, buttressed by as many surging columns of ravenous workers, featured the moon feed. Only ready paddles in the hands of the "K7" men thwart an immediate confession of the Fifteen Tables Set Rebecca Richardson, c'25, with spend the week-end with her parents near Valley Falls. VAN GORDON HERE MONDAY 1922 Concert Course to Be Best in K. U. Annals The twentieth annual concert course of the University will be opened by Cyrenea Van Gordon, mezzo contrata of the Chicago Grand Opera Company, Monday evening, in Robinson Gymnasium. "Miss Van Gordon possesses a voice of beautiful quality. It is full toned, resonant and always employed with taste. This, with her magnetic personality and admirable stage presence, makes her a very satisfying artist. Besides her phenomenal voice, Miss Van Gordon is considered one of the most beautiful women on the planet. In 2013, she, her lawyer, who heard her sing the role of "Brunhilde" in Wagner's "The Valkver," last year in Chicago. In the last twenty years there has been a marked growth in the development of the University concert course. The first concert was given C. S. Skilton was dearest of the School of Fine Arts. The first course consisted of four numbers, and only one artist was of first rank. Gradually the number of concerts for each course was increased until six were added to the original number. Then it went up to the University it was for the festival course and an extra admission fee was charged. Eight or nine years ago the two were combined into a larger course with all high grade art courses. During the last seven years the amount of money paid out for these entertainment has been greatly increased. Two years ago the amount was $5,500, and this year $7,000 will be paid to the artists and organizations alone. The other expenses will amount to about $400. Perhaps the most popular organization which has appeared here was the Zoellner String Quartet, which gave four concertes at the University. This year's course consists of eight numbers, the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra giving the last two numbers. Will Fit Up Club Room In Robinson Gymnasiusi The department of physical education is to have a clubroom for the convenience of its instructors. A room on the ground floor, gymnasium is now being fitted up. It is the plan of the department to use the clubroom both as a recreation room and dressing room, with the possibility of office functions also. Lackers, writing desks, rugs and carpets are being installed this week and next. The Way They Started Kansas Position West Point Black l. e. Myers Ivy l. t. Mulligan Joy l. t. Briederade Weldinell l. c. Garbisch Higginis (Cap.) r. g. Farwick Cave r. t. Goodman McLean r. e. White Wilson q. b. Smythe Kruger h. Dodd Graham b. Timberlane Spurgeon f. b. Wood Referee: Trowley, Strathmore. Umpire: McBride, Kansas City Head Linesman: Wonkersburg Harvard. KANSAS' STRONG LINE DEFENSES WITHSTAND ARMY'S ONSLAUGHTS West Point Scores Obtained by Intercepted Forward Pass, and by Gains Made Around the Westerners' End SECOND PERIOD IN CENTER OF FIELD Six Hundred Former Kansans Watch Spurgeon's Splendid Punting—Wet Field Made Effective Passing Impossible West Point, N. Y., Oct. 7.—Playing away from home on a heavy field, part of the time in a drizzling rain, and against a team whose line from tackle to tackle averaged twenty-five pounds more to the man, the Kansas Jayhawkers went down to defeat before the Army eleven here today, 13 to 0. The first Army touchdown followed a forward pass which netted the Army more than 35 yards, placing the ball on the Kansas 2-yard line where it was carried over. The second and only other touchdown of the game was made when Smythe intercepted a Kansas pass on the 50-yard line and ran for a touchdown. The West Pointers failed to kick goal. McAdams, the vaunted Kansas punter was injured in a scrimmage with Niagara University, and Spurgeon did all the kicking for the Jayhawkers. His punts were high and for a good distance, and several times the Army receiver was downed in his tracks. The rain was falling lazily at 2:50 when Garbisch, the Army center, kicked off. The surprise of the game was the defensive strength shown by the Kansas line, most of the Army gains being made by end runs and forward passes. The Cadets tried the Kansas center and tackles time and again for no gains. This afternoon the University of Kansas made its initial appearance in the East, when the sunflower state eleven tackled the United States military eleven on the West Point gridiron. The westerners' eastern debut was made under rather unfavorable weather conditions, as a drizzling rain set in just before the game began, making a wet field and slippery ball. Despite the weather there was a large attendance of military football devotees There is little or no wind. At 2:47 both elevers trotted on out the wet field and ran through the usual preliminaries of signals, punting, and getting down the field under kicks. The Jayhawkers made a favorable impression as they tried out their skills on the ground, then chose the south goal. They will have a little wind behind them as it is freshening from that direction. Garbisch kicked off for West Point, to the 25-yard line. Spurgeon downed with no gain. Brought back for another kick-off as West Point was offside. Kansas refused penalty for an offside, but the 25- yard line. First down, K. U.'s ball on her 25 yd line. Spurgeon hit center, no gain, third down, eight yards to go. Spurgeon tried center for no gain. Spurgeon fumbled pass on next play and Army recovered ball. West Point's ball on Kansas 20-yard line. Wood failed to gain back after the pass. Forward pass. Smood to for ten yards. First down, West Point ball on K. U. 8-yard线. Refreec gave pass out of bounds. Spurgeon punted to West Point 40-yard line. Wood shot around Black's end for twenty yards. First down. Timberlake went through right tackle, Cave, for five yards. Dodd through center for first down. Army ball on Kansas 25 yard line. Wood broke forward. Army ball on Kansas 25 yard lines. Wood through left tackle, Ivy. A forward pass, Smythe to Myers, who ran to the Kansas two-yard line before being done. First down. Army ball on Kansas 2 yard line. Dodd tried center for no gain. Wood through center for a touchdown. Army 6, K. U. 0. Smythe kicked goal for extra point. Army 7, K. U. 0. Kansas kicked off to West Point 10-yard线. Wood ran ball to '50 yard line. Referee called Army off. Army took control of 8 yard line. Wood around left and for 5 yards. Third down. 5 yards to Timberlake failed to gain through center. Wood punted to Jayhawkers 30 yard line where Higgins caught the ball but was downed. McAdams failed to gain in try through left tackle. Spurgeon through left tackle. S spurgeon kicked out of bounds at Army's 20 yard line. Army's ball, first down. Ball is very wet. On a ground field before being downed. Referee called ball back. Army's ball on her own 25 yard line. Wool then kicked to Spurgeon on Kanas 40 yard line. Krüger turned Army's left side for no gain. A bad pass was fumbled by Spurgeon and the next play was over. Army's ball goes to go. Spurgeon pointed to Smythe who was downed on the Army's 35 yard line. Second Quarter Exchange goals. Army's ball on their 35 yard line. First down. Wood kicks to Kreuger on the Kansas 20 yard line, where he was pulled down to wet grass. No gain. A delay pass gave the ball to Kansas on the second half of the game. McAdams through right tackle. Third and 7. McAdams failed to gain. Spurgeon kicked to a touch back. Army's ball, second and 3. Timberlake bucked center twice for gains. Army's ball on their 35 yard line. Wood kicked out of bounds on the next play. Kansas' ball on the 44 yard line. Two to go on the see-through field. Army's ball on the 44 yard line. McAdams made first and ten through the Army's right tackle. U. K. uball on the Army 49 yard line. Spurgeon 4 yards through tackle. McAdams fumbles and Timberlake recovers on next play. Time out for Army. Garbisch resumed play with the Army ball on her own 35 yard line. Hell for Ball on the own 35yard Wood faild the kick. McAdams on the kick. Spurgeon on the Kansas 35yard line. Detrick uses the Kansas 35yard line. Resumed. Forward pass incomplete. Third and ten. Another incomplete pass. A delayed pass was nipped by the Army 45 yard line. Timberlake ran to Kansas 45 yard line. Forward pass to Meyers nets 5. Incomplete pass. The line when he attempted to pass. Wood punts to Kansas 15 yard line. Spurgeon returns kick, ball going to Army in mid-field. Wood for 7 yards. Second and 10. On no gains. Dood tried left tackle. Timberlake found a stone wall. David intercepts Army pass. Spurgeon for a gain through center. McAdams through the line. Army on his own 37 yard line. Spurgeon hit左 end twice for gains. Smythe intercepts forward pass when he makes sensational jump and funs 60 yards with the entire Kansas team after him. Army's second touchdown. Try for goal, incomplete. Score: Kansas 0, Army 13. Spurgeon kicks off to Wood on Army 14 yard line. Half ends just before kick. Army is playing steady game and fighting hard but that wet field makes it impossible for passes to work well. Wood was downed on Army 42 yard line. Army's ball, first down. Dodd (Continued on Page 4.) THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Japan Subscription price $4.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.00 for one semester; 50 cents a month; 16 cents a week. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kananas, 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 California, San Diego, and in the Department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phones, K. U. 35 and 66 Editorial Staff The Daily Kannan aims toplease the University of Kannan, to go further by standing for the ideals that cities to be clean, to be cheerful; to leave more serious problems out; to ability the students to the University. Editor-in-chief Rivera Editor Newe Editor Spart Editor Glick Schultz Alumun Editor Alumni Editor Lake Carter Lawrence Editor Ben Bibbs Glassman Raymond Davis Glick Schultz Alumun Editor Alumni Editor Lake Carter Business Staff Business Manager ..Lloyd Rumpenthal Assist. Bus., Mgr. ..John Montgomery, Jr. Assist. Bus., Mgr. ..Clyde Burnside Board Members Chester Shaw Dean Bogggs Lievelyn White Caroline Harraden Carlton Powers DeVaughn Francis Ted Hudson Roland Blanc SATURDAY,OCT.7,1922 DEFEATED BUT NOT BEATEN Today Kansas was defeated by one of the heaviest, best trained football squads in the East! The Jayhawker eleven was defeated by the Army but not beaten. That never happens: a Kansas team is never beaten. Nohb Webster lists the words "beat" and "defeat" as synonyms, but that sage surely never attended a football game. Some teams may be both defeated and beaten but never a Kansas team. Never is a square beaten so long as that indeterminate spirit of fire and fight remains; even though the score may spell defeat as the first whistle blows, the team that goes from the field with a smile and the knowledge that it has fought as only men can fight—that team is not beaten. Captain Higgins and his squad fought a good fight today—fought against a team that heavily outweighed them, a team that had been in training a month longer than the Jahawkers, a team battling on its own gridiron supported by its throne of sport-mad, wildly cheering rosters. Against all of these odds the Kansas eleven battled, and the game is one never to be forgotten by those who witnessed it. Kansas is proud of her football team—proud of a team that can go into another section of the country and show other educational institutions that our Western brand of loyalty is as good as that of the East. The University of Kansas has had its initial taste of intercolateral athletics, and that taste it has found good. It is only recently that coaches have deemed it wise to take inter-college teams on such long journeys, but now a sentiment is spreading among the great schools throughout the land that a closer relationship should be knitted between them—that West should know East and North should know South. And with this feeling Kansas is in full accord; K. U. will help lead the way, for, although his football team met defeat today, the soul of the Jayhawker is never tamed. THEY LIVE BY THEIR WITS We have discovered another group of individuals who "live by their wits". No, that is not true; we have not discovered them, but we have classified them. they have been carrying on their nefarious practice for years and we have called them many uncomplimplemental things in our wrath; yet they continue to flourish. They are the parasites of the educational system. They are a group to be found in every institution of learning, a group of people who "toll not, neither do they spin," and yet who, because of a superficial quickness of perception and a glibness of tongue, manage to wriggle their destructive way through course after course, bringing despair to teachers and disgust to students. Their watchword is "get by." We have been told that criminals, standing by their wits', take pride in their ability to "work" the public. The persons we have classified have the same pride in their profession—with a difference. Their brothers seldom betray their pride except when they are with their own blind. Our criminal in education, on the other hand, struts pridefully before his vultims as does the savage when he fastens the scalp to his girlle. He flaunts his skill; he bargains about it like a child; and we allow him to continue. Although the group is still small, some say it is growing. Which is to blame, the system, the instructors, or the students? Vegetarians are becoming the rule rather than the exception on the hill, and if the present missionary work continues "meat eaters" will soon be met by a no admittance sign when they come to the University. The G. O. P. elephant, unlike the typical animal, must never appear with a limp tail, so Missouri Republicans say. Here's a chance for the political grafters to get in some good work. The University of Wisconsin has unda method which it believes will ut an end to its hailing troubles. it seems that the students there have adopted a new kind of cap for the osham, and that the yearlings have been given their novel edgear. The account from a Wismin paper follows: On Other Hills The green skull cap—badge of the humble freshman—is gone from the campus of the University of Wisconsin for the first time this fall. With it have gone the old traditions of hazing, student leaders predict. After hit the mass-meetings, recollections, protests, and actions of the students at the university, the college three years, has come a new freshman hat—still green—but already looked upon as a sign of class pride. It was planned by a committee of students last spring and is being worn for the first time with the opening of the university this fall. The new hat made its official appearance at the Varsity Welcome last week and the students are wearing it several days before. It is now quite the talk of the camps. The faculty hopes that its popularity means the end of having. Instead of being a foolish little skull cap, the new hat is built like the hats worn by enlisted men in the U. S. navy — but green in color, with six red ribs running to the cenetr of the crown and a red brim on the front. A colored button on top of the crown indicates the colleges to which the man belongs engineers wear a purple button, agricultural students a brown button, Letters and Science students a yellow button, and commerce a white button. This feature will assist the hundreds of freshmen in various departments of the university to See Said the Daily Cardinal, student newspaper, in its editorial column last week: "The passing of the old skull-clinger marks the death of one of the most discordant influences in student life at Wisconsin. With it the intolerable ideas of compulsion and fear of inferiority, stimuli of roadwidm." "Then Wisconsin grew. Greater enrollment brought more rowdy students, groups, formerly small enough to be held in check by individual sense and decency, became unruly mobs. "That old cap represented a tradition of intense class rivalry and enmity. It was dangerous tradition. It began in the days of small enrollment, when it was good fun to let good-natured class spirit break forth into harmless hazing and friendly fights. "The tradition became degenerate. It came to mean ice water and pennonia; lead pipes and gloose eggs; phosphorus bombs and burns. "That new cap means Wisconsin and Freshmen will wear it because hey are proud to be Wisconsin students. "It became a loathsome thing. is well dead. "It represents the traditions that have come from the men who have made Wisconsin great - personal service." (The New York Times, "militantic inquiry, militantism") "These are real traditions of which every student can be proud and against which none can rebel." He: "Doris, you're looking fine this morning. You look good enough to eat." Plain Tales From The Hill An Old One "Gee, this is getting easy," said the soph as he finished his third nut test at $1.00 per. She: "I do eat, Phil. Let's go down to Brick's." It's Up to Her "I say, old top, There'll be a bop Ain't too much, "Why, yeh, that's right, I guess I'll go, But,—dannfino." It's Up to Her —B. W. C. Frankly Speaking Economics Professor; "Miss Jones, Indiana" of NYa Miss Jones: "A utility is anything that satisfies one's desires." that satisfies one's desires. Correct: "Poor. Now would The Ghosts Walk you consider a diamond a utility?" Miss Jones: "Well, yes—for me it would be." No answer. "Where is Mr. Whitman?" Professor Blackmar had called the roll, and there were only a few scattering absences. "Now, Mr. Whitman, will you tell us why Virginia was settled before Ohio?" "Well, what's the matter with this loss?" Just then the learned professor discovered that he had called the roll for the wrong class. The question put to two others present according to the roll was equally fruitless. "Can't the person who answered roll for Mr. Whitman answer the question?" Jayhawks Flown Dorothy Roberts, fs'23, is teaching in the elementary schools at Salina. The quality of our workmanship and the service rendered is of the very best. The only Barber Shop with a manicurist. PALACE BARBER SHOP Serving Better Meals has made a beaten path from the Hill to Brick's Door. Dorothy Graeber, fs2'24, is teaching in the grade schools at De Soto. Edward L. Jacobs, A.B. 20, has been a graduate student at Chicago University in the vocational training department under the supervision of the government. He is now assistant professor of English at Denison University in Grandville, Ohio. His wife is Mrs. Edith Roles Jacobs, A.B. 21. Florence Hall,fs24, is attending baker University this year. Frank Vaughan, Prop. Emerson Said— Lloyd Bryan, B. S.22, is connected with the York Midwet Ice Machine Company, of Denver, Colo. "If a man preach a better sermon, write a better book, or build a better mousetrap than his neighbor, the' he hide in the wilderness, the world will make a beaten path to his door." Lionel Mincer, A. B. 22, in Political BEATEN PATHS Emerson Was Right No answer. 730 Mass. St. The crowd goes to the best place to eat. The crowd knows where they get service, and sanitary cooking with the home-made taste. The Oread Cafe "Bricks" No answer. Varsity-Bowersock Just a step from the Campus Saturday Only Shows -2:30 4:00 -7:30 -9:00 p.m. Irene Castle "FRENCH HEELS" FRENCH HIDEAWAY A comedy drama with a thrill in every situation. A veritable style show. Also Pathe News Fun From Press ADULTS 28c "ABOVE ALL LAW" A gorgeous story of forbidden passion and revenge. Say!— Earl Hurd Comedy "Fresh Fish" CHILDREN 10c Drop down to Ray's X Cafe and get a real meal Right Next to the Varsity Theatre "Pete" Jones, LL. B. 22, captain of last year's football team, is now practicing law in Council Grove, Kansas, and has the Republican nomination for county attorney of Morris County. He is also coaching the football team of the Council Grove High School. Science, is now enrolled in the Law School at Harvard University. Mary Underwood, A. B. 23, who is teaching in the high school at Reading, spent Saturday and Sunday at her home in Lawrence: Bess Bozell, A. B. '13, who spent the past summer in Europe, is now studying in Paris. Make our place your eating headquarters downtown Good Service Well Prepared Food Courteous Treatmen Select Cafe 846 Mass. St. Oread Shining Parlor CHARLIE'S Best Shines in Town "SuitingYou" THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULTZ 917 Mass. St. "GIFTS THAT LAST" Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING WATKINS NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. DIRECTORS SURPLUS $100,000.0 D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Asher, L. V. Miller, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishop Bob Stewart Charlie Sample SAMPLE - STEWART BARBER SHOP Ladies and children's hair bobbing Baths Across from Wiedemann's 838 Mass. St Suits $40 Protch, the College Tailor Simply Gorgeous and Gorgeously Simple O Are the new silk undies that are being featured at Drescher's 815 Mass. Your inspection is respectively invited. We're Here--to give you the best in Laundry and Dry Cleaning service. Our workers are skilled and all our equipment is the best. The result is: We Guarantee Satisfaction. May we serve you? Phone 383 LAWRENCE STEAM LAUNDRY Water as soft as melted snow THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN M. M. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. YOU NEED THE All of these things are important to hill life一to YOUR hill life. THE KANSAN brings the news of all them to you. Every day THE KANSAN is chuck full of things which are of interest to you regardless of your status on the hill. News stories covering every school activity, announcements of meetings and what is shown by the merchants of Lawrence. KANSAN This number is an example of the service which THE KANSAN is attempting for you and K. U. If you haven't subscribed, call K. U. 66 and have it delivered at your door every evening. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN K. U. Strong Line Defense Withstands Onslaughts (Continued from page 1) tried Kansas line for no gain. Pass from center went over Wood's head. Wood recovered ball on Kansas 15 yard line. Wood punted to Kansas 35 yard line, where Burt was downed for no gain. McAdams went through left tackle. A forward pass, Spurgeon to Black, was fumbled. Spurgeon punted high in the air, and Wood fumbled it. McAdams recovering the ball for Kansas. On the next play, Wood punted over covered by West Point on Army 45 yard line. Wood through center for five yards. Wood made two more yards on a cross buck. Time out for Kansas. Play resumed. Army's ball on Kansas 35 yard line. Wood through center for 2 yards. Wood through left tackle for eight yards. Time out. Dodd went through left tackle for first down. Army's ball on K. U.'s 22 yard线. Dood through for 3 yards. Timberland through right tackle for four yards. Dodd through for 3 yards. Army's ball on K. U., 12 yard line, second down. 10 to go. Dodd failed to gain through end. Line of third quarter. Score: Army 13, K. U. 0. Third Quarter Mulligan kicked off to Spurgeon, on Kansas 20 yd. line. Spurgeon advanced the ball 10 yards to the 35 yd. line before being downed. McAdams went through Army left tackle. A forward pass, flipped by Spurgeon, was incomplete. Spurgeon punted to the Army's 30 yard line. Smyther running the ball back to the Kansas 40 yard line. Referee called the play back and penalized the Army. Army makes 10 yards on next play. Kansas penalized 20 yards for holding. Spurgeon. In the end from the Kansas 22 yd. line but was pushed out of bounds with no gain. Wilson was hurt in play and was helped from 'field. Time out Kansas. Burt replaced Wilson at quarter. Spurgeon punted to Wood on the West Point 36 yd. line where he was downed. Wood kicked to . U. 17 yd. line. Kansas ball first on her own 17 yd. line. Spurgeon slipped and fell in trying around left end. No gain. Spurgeon kicked to the Army 25 yd. line, Wood receiving the ball and being downed in his tracks. Army's ball on their own 25 yd. line. Spurgeon punched McAdams receiving, and was downed on Kansas 23 yd. line. McAdams failed to gain on delayed pass. Spurgeon hit line for no gain. Spurgeon punted to Wood. Fourth Quarter They exchange goals. It is Army's ball, first down on K. U.'s 12 yd. line. A forward pass by Wood to Smythe was incomplete. A forward pass by Wood was called incomprehensible and completed a forward pass but the referee ruled it out. Ball was given to Kansas on her own 15 yd. line. ↓ CALL US for the baseball score, also for the slickest cleaning and pressing in town. Phone 75 New York Cleaners McAlden through center for three yards. A forward pass by Spurgeon was thrown back to Spurgeon then punted to Army's 20 yd. line. Smythe caught it and ran ball back to Army 35 yd. line. Dodd fumbled to center for 3 yards. Mulligan fumbled but recovered. Third down, 15 yards to go. Wood punted to K. U. 30 yard line where Burt was downed.刀球 McAlden tried center for no gain. Time out. Wood hurt. McAlden fumbled but recovered. Another forward pass was incomplete. Spurgeon kicked out of bounds on the Army 33 yd. line. Gilmore replaced Wood. Ellinger sent in for Goodman. Gilmore through left tackle for 3 yards. Gilmore fumbled but recovered. Fourth down, 13 yards to go. Gilmore punted out of bounds at K. U. 18 Krueger was downed. first down U. ball on their own 25 yd. line. McAlden took a shot at the line. Mack replaced Mullican for the Army. Black dropped a forward pass from Spurgeon. On a fake forward pass Spurgeon was downed for no gain. Spurgeon punted to Army 28 yard line. Brierden ran the ball to the Army 45 yard line. Doyle replaced Myers. Pitzer removed Breidaster. Dold made five yards breaked. Time out. Stores reclaimed Fawcick for Army. Play resumed. A forward pass by Gilmore was done. McAlden called Gilmore was called back. Gilmore punted out of balls back. K.U. 18 yard线. Kansas ball, first down. Spurgeon tried a pass, ball hitting ground and incomplete. A fake forward pass netted Spurgeon 5 yards. Krueger lost a yard around Army right end. Lawrence replaces Dodd for Army. Spurgeon put, and the Army exchange dhte punt. K.U. ball on her own 45 yard line. Spurgeon put in the field. Gilmore was downed in his track. Gilmore flipped a forward pass for 20 yards. Army man off side and ball was brought back. Another forward pass completed, but was brought back by referee. Gilmore threw for 15 yard loss on next play. Kansas ball. On a trick play McAdams got around Army left wing and ran to Army 30 yard line before he was downed. On next play K.U. fumbled, and Spurgeon, Army left wing and ru New York Giants Win From Yankees, 4 to (Continued from page 1) who made a nice running catch. Cunningham ham was out; Dugan to Pippen Dugan made spectacular stop, and he was taken down by Nugamby by a few inches. Snyder singled to left field. McGuillen fanned. No, runs one, hit no, errors. Score: Yanks 4, Giants 2. Yankees: Dugan filed into Frisch at second. Ruth knocked high foul to Snyder. Pipp out on a grounder to Frisch at second, who caught him on a fast whip to Kelley at first. No runs, no hits, no errors. Seventh Inning (Continued from Page 1) Giants: Baneroff filed out to Meusel. Groh grounded to Pipp, unassisted. Frisch filed out to Witt in Half-Court. He hit no hits, no errors. Score. 4 to 2 Yankee: Menseel out, Groh to Khely. Schang out to a grounder, Frisch to Kelley. Ward drove home run into left field bleacher, second home run of the series. Scott flied out to Bancroft, 1 run, 1 hit, no errors. Eighth Inning Giants: Meusel singled to center field. Young flied out to Meusel. Kelley hit into double play, Pipp to Scott. No runs, 1 hit, no errors. Yankees: Smith batting for Mays; struck out. Pipp knocked two-bagger Insist on Wiedemann's Ice Cream Purest For Over 50 Years For this week we offer: Honey Fruit Salad Strawberry Brown Bread Pineapple Grape Chocolate Vanilla 1208 Brick or Bulk Ambrosia Pineapple Blouses to Wear Under Your Wool Sweaters Special Sunday Bricks Honey Fruit Salad and Vanilla Pincapple Grape and Va- nilla Phone 182 Made of a good quality white volle in round and square neck. Sizes from 36 to 42. Priced, each, $2.00. New Vanity Fair Silk Underwear A full range of sizes in fresh color silk vests and bloomers. A new wavae called Vanta Silk will just strike your fancy. It is a self toned strike in all the popular shades. Vests $3.50. Bloomers $4.50 WEAVERS --through Groh. Dugan fled out to Cunningham. Ruth fled to Frisch who backed up against right field fence for catch. No runs, 1 bit, no Do you know that all Vanity Fair garments are made from pure silk and will wear much better than a silk garment made from part artificial silk which dissolves to a certain extent each time it is laundred. Quality G'abardines and Plaid Back Over Coat's $27.33 33rd ANNIVERSARY Also wonderful values in Gabardines and overcoats at - - - - $22.33 CO SkofStadS SELLING SYSTEM LAWRENCE, KANS. Giants: Cunningham filed out to Witt. Snyder popped out to Scotts in short left on first ball pitched. McQuillen filed out to Witt, in center field. No runs, no hits, and no er- Ninth Inning rows. Score: Giants 4, Tanks 3. Yankees: Pip hit a long drive over first for a two-bagger. Meusel hit to Groh and Pip was run down between second and third, Groh to Bancroft. Schang hit to left center for a ample, sending Mets to third base, and was put out. Ward fired to Mets in left field. No runs, 1 hit, no errors. Before the Game Carls During the Game Carls After the Game Carls We'll talk it over together tonight CITY HALL CARTOUCHE: An ancient Egyptian tablet of oblong shape, bearing the design of roundy. The GRUEN CARTOUCHE TRADE MARK New examples of the genuine Cartouche can now be had at $77.50 and up. An oblong movement in an oblong case, the Grunen Cartouche forms a wrist watch of the most logical shape. An ornament of rare beauty, it is a timekeeping instrument of reliability, fashioned to the exacting standards of the Grunen Guild. THE GRAVITY How the Grum Cartouche makes possible greater strength and accuracy by providing almost doble the movement space. We will gladly show you many other exquisite Gruen Cartouche models. Gustafson KNOX HATS Here Exclusively in Lawrence KING OF THE KINGS Knox 5th Avenue Men who give proper thought to correct style are wearing this hat. Featured in Mode — Seal Brown French Gray — Light Tan For real hat satisfaction you'll like this Knox at SEVEN DOLLARS FRESHMAN CAPS 75c Houk-Green The House of Kupperheimer Good Clothes The Autumn Exposition — of — Art In Merchandise beginning Monday evening, October 9th,and continuing through the week. THE SHOW WINDOWS OF OBER'S WILL BE AN OUTSTANDING FEATURE --- Ober's HEARY TO OOF OUTFITTERS (2) ---LOOK--- Make your Jayhawker appointment now. They will also solve your Christmas Gift Problem. Squires Studio Photographers to K. U. Student $ _{s} $ GET OUT YOUR GAS MASKS Bowersock Theatre —For its an attack of Laughing Gas. Shine up your ole Tin hat for its a Laugh of Laughing and they Bast all around. 50 Miss Grace Connelly CLYDE "RUBE" HOOPER As Private C. C. Pill “OH! YOU WILDCAT” The Biggest Laugh Show of the Season Wednesday Shows 7 - 9 p.m. Varsity Dance! F. A. U Hall TONIGHT October 7,1922 Blanc's 6-piece Orchestra THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XX. NUMBER 23 KANSAS PLAY CAUSES FAVORABLE COMMENT Doctor Allen Wires From Buf falo Where Squid Detrained For Brief Rest TEAM IN GOOD CONDITION UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS,TUESDAY,OCT. 10. 1922 Boys Now Requesting Trip to Coblenz for Game Three "The Kansas队 play caused most favorable comment from Army critics," read a telegram from Dr. F. C. Allen, director of athletics, this morning. The telegram was from Buffalo, New York, where the squad detrained yesterday for a short rest. The special is scheduled to arrive in Lawrence at 11:24 tonight over the Santa Fe. "The team is in excellent condition," Dr. Allen wired. "We decried in Buffalo for rest, Kansas team play caused most favorable comment against us. Our team popped most inappropriately for Kansas. Army played fiercely. Kansas met them more than half way. Constant rain prevented Kansas open plays. Boys missed nothing. They won the ball hard and fall for a game with the Heinles." Game Was Fairly Even And that's about the story of the game. Outside of the two times that the Army scored, most of the game was played in the center of the field. And in the last quarter when Kansas had started for a touchdown, a bad break, a fumble, stopped it. But no alibing. Leave for Drake Friday The Gird-Graph account of the game Saturday which the Kansan published was slightly wrong as to who made the plays. The account was sent by a telegraph operator did not know the Kansan players. The men will have three days at home before leaving for Des Moines where they will play Drake Saturday afternoon. Three days of intensive practice, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday will lift the Kansas men for Friday practice. The Tsuq队 will leave for Drake either Friday afternoon or Friday night. Correspondence Courses Have Many Foreign Students Enrolled EXTENSION STUDY POPULAR The freshman and the varsity players who did not make the West Point trip have been practicing every evening. The men who make the Drake pilgrimage will probably be selected from those who were present at the Army game, but the men on the third varsity team will undoubtedly get a chance in the Washburn game a week from Saturday. Practically every state in the union, and several foreign countries are represented in the enrollment in correspondence work under the direction of the University Extension Division. A large per cent of those enrolled are taking educational work, in an effort to secure state certificates, according to the corresponding sec- According to the annual report made by this department for the year 1921-22, 1579 students were enrolled for correspondence work. Of this number, 1,403 were from Kansas, representing 807 town. Foresters are located in China, Cuba, Canada, Alaska, and other countries. nistry. Others are taking high school work in order to get enough credits for entrance in the University. "Indications are that the enrollment will far exceed that of last year," said the secretary, "as the number taking work the past month has been far in excess of the average month heretofore." Blind Student on Freshman Crew William J. Beggs, Jr., of Winches ter, a blind student, has reported for the Harvard freshman crew. He was assigned by Dr. R. Hober. The blind student had an hour's workout He formerly rowed for Tabor academy. London—The first legal recognition of the value of an atom was regis and here when an insurance company paid 147 pounds in respect of the breaking of a radius tube at the breaking of another an atom of radium was lost. Legally Recognize Atom Rain Deprives University of Hay Crop For Horses The University hay crop was damaged by the rain last Friday night. The meadow on the south side of the hill had been cut and raked and the hay was ready to be handed to the barn when the weather upstairs all "Rock" and "Howdy," the University's two horses, who dwell in the barn just south of Fowler shops, were affected by the loss, as they do pend largely on shearings of the campus for their meals. The state team拿 its board, however, for almost every day in the year it is hard to catch traps whenever else is too difficult for the trucks to handle. . 0. O. F. DELEGATES WILL INSPECT K. U. University Buildings Will Be Open to Visitors on Wednesday Evening University of Kansas museum, laboratories and offices are to be open tomorrow evening for the inspection of delegates attending the Grand Lodge, I. O. O. F. The days of the week vary with sessions, and comparatively few will have the opportunity to visit the University except on Wednesday evening, when the convention program has been transferred to the campus. Probably not all will be able to attend the exercises in the library for the purposes of the others. University offices are to be open. Included in the list of buildings open will be Dyche museum, with its collection of animals and birds, as well as fossils and antiquities. The North American animal collection is one of the best flora is a notable one and very complete. The geology museums have minerals and fossils. They are to be found on the second floor of the mining and geology building. The School of Fine Arts has prepared a special display of the work in the departments of painting and of design, the latter including sketches from life, commercial designs, and crafts works. The display is on the third floor of the Eas Administration Building. PRIZES FOR DECORATIONS Houses to Compete in Decorating for Home-Coming Day Prizes will be offered to fraternities, sororities, boarding clubs, or any organizations on the hill whose houses in the student district are the best decorated at the time of Homecoming, November 10. “In previous years the down-town district has been decorated in honor of the alumni and visitors,” said Alfred G. Hill, secretary of the Alumni Association, “but the student district has remained unchanged. This year we want to see K. U colors displayed all over the hill.” Prof. Herbert Hungerford, Chair man of the Homecoming Committee, will appoint a sub-committee to work out plans for the awarding of the judges will be appointed to inspect every house on the hill at that time. Fine Arts Students Would Have Day Off A day off for the University, to be dedicated to the Fine Arts School, is the goal for which members of the School are working. At a recent meeting of the officers and members of the department of drawing and painting at the school, it was decided to make the necessary preparations for putting it over. If this plan materializes the day will be given over entirely to the School of Fine Arts. They will have a banquet at the Commons, for which they hope to secure one well-known speaker as a guest and speakers for the occasion. An art exhibit in the afternoon and a dance on the evening are also planned. Miss Jacqueline Glimore, A. B. "22, and a story accepted for publication by the Youth's Companion. She says hat the story was written in her unior year for an assignment in "Narration and Description." She worked it over this summer and sent it in, having no idea that it would be accepted until she received a check or $50 one morning. Theodore Wear, c'24, spent week end at his home in Topeka. ENGINEERS SQUABBLE OVER 4 QUART HAT Agitation Started to Change Distinctive Insignia Worn by Seniors REQUEST SENIOR MEETING President Treat Refuses to Call Gathering to Reconsider Action Agitation to change the distinctive insignia of the senior engineers from the sambrore who was adopted last year has received a definite check in the action of Burnett F. T, president of the School of Engineering, who refuses to call a meeting for considering such a chance. Pettitions, bearing a total of fifty-six signatures, were presented to Mr. Treat. They request a senior engineers meeting for reconsidering the action taken at a meeting on Sept. 18, at which time theembrored, chosen last year as the distinctive emblem of the senior engineers to be worn by them during their senior year, was again accepted. **Treat Explains' Reasons** In refusing to call the meeting, Mr. Treut explains his reasons. They are in brief that the meeting was regularly attended by members of associations behind it, and that due to the lateness of the presenting of the petitions, many seniors have already purchased the hats. Treat Explains Reasons It is claimed by those who desire the change that on the contrary, the meeting was not regular and that the somberer is not distinctive of the enclosing profession and that there is neither desirable or appropriate. Text or statement The text of Mr. Treat's statement follows: "The president of the School of Engineering acknowledges the receipt of petitions with signatures totalling sixty-five names, requesting a senior engineering meeting to reconsider the wearing of the sombrero which was worn on September 18 or chosen at the end of Sept. 18 as the insignia for this year. "In view of the facts that this meeting was regular, that the hat has custom behind its wearing, that it has a certain historical association with the hats used in the past, that in addition to the fore-greening reasons, those persons who handled the petitions did not get together until after the date set for the initial appearance of the hats and many men had already purchased the hats, that they were not willing to change the hat for some other piece of apparel and the petition refused." STUTZ ANNOUNCES PROGRAM League of Kansas Municipalities Will Meet in Pittsburg The greater part of the program is given over to consideration of proposed municipal legislation that is presented to the legislature in January. The tentative program of the annual convention of the League of Kansas Municipalities at Pittsburg, October 17, 18, and 19, has just been announced by John G. Stutz, of the Municipal Reference Bureau at the University and secretary of the league. Mayor George L. Kreeck of Lawrence is president of the League and will be on the program. Secretary Stutz will give his annual report on the first day. Prof. A. H. Jewell, director of the University Water and Sewege laboratory and member of the State Board of Health, will give a presentation on "Construction and Maintenance of Sanitary Tourist Campus." Inter-marriages Lead to Trouble in Alsace The annual convention met in Lawrence last year. ment and they foment sentiment for war," the minister added. Wichita, Kann, Oct. 10—"Kindy feeling can never exist between France and Germany as long as intermarriage takes place between the two nationalities in Alaacae-Lorraine," said the Rev. Mr. Hubert Herring, pastor of the College Hill Congregational Church, who has returned after a three month's tour of Germany. "France has deported thousands of Alsatians into Germany because of their Teutonic tendencies. These men have been killed by policemen whisves. They rebel against the treatment and they fight again." RALLY—Tonight at 11:24 o'clock when the train bring- ing you to the Santa Fe sta- tion in at the Santa Fe station. Everybody out, no freshman excused. PIONEER FILIPINO NOW VISITING ALMA MATEH "Bob" Giberq Assistant Cheerleader. "Bob" Gilbert, Eusebia Barba Was First of His Countrymen to Enroll Here Eusebia Barba, LL.B.17, the first Filipino ever enrolled at the University of Kansas, arrived Sunday to visit his alma mater. Mr. Barba is a member of the Bar Association of Kansas and the Philippines, and for the past three years has been practicing law in Manila. Because of the differences between the common law of the United States and that of his native land, he was obliged to spend a year after reaching home preparing to be admitted to the bar there. Since he, as a lawyer of Manila and is specializing as a corporation attorney, INTENSIFY R. O. T. C. WORK Mr. Barba came to the University in 1914. In spite of the fact that he worked his way through school, he carried extra hours and graduated three years later. While here, he was employed as assistant to H. B. Sparks, then secretary of the Chamber of Commerce. "I am taking this trip partly for pleasure and partly for business," Mr. Barba said. "My main purpose in coming was to visit my alma mater, which was incorporated in K. U. and plan to study! We again some time, perhaps soon." Indoor Gallery Practice Will Begin Soon After leaving Lawrence, Mr. Barba will visit a number of eastern cities. He plans to sail from New York for Europe where he will spend several months in England and on the continent. Since he speaks both French and Spanish, the journey through Europe will be especially interesting to him. In that he plans to take work abroad for two years, future, he looks forward to seeing Paris with eagerness, he says. From France, he will go to Rome and Naples. He expects to sail for the Philippines some time in February. The work of the local R. O. T. C. unit is fast becoming more intensified. The freshmen will begin drill with rifles tomorrow, each man being given a rifle and held responsible for it. The sophomores are now taking up the system of War Department correspondence and the duties of a non-commissioned officer. The Junior Coast Artillery men are taking up Field Fortification and organization duties. Many of them are studying Military History, Civil War Campaigns, and the like. Football Reservations Open to Public Oct. 16 The Senior Coast Artillery men are working on Gunnery of Heavy Artillery, seacoast fortifications, and the handling of large caliber guns. Senior Engineers are investigating the Organization of the army and the duties of the engineer troops in warfare. The athletic office will reserve activity tickets until 8 o'clock the morning of October 16, according to an announcement made from that office this morning. After the above date, reservations for the football games will be thrown open to the general public. Measurement blanks have arrived and those few students who have not done so, may now report to theary Department for measurement. Indoor gallery practice with the 22-caliber rill will begin as soon as the boilers can be removed from the R. O, T. C, shed. Students who had subscribed to the Stadium fund were given the first chance of reservation, but this priority closed Monday night at 5:00 o'clock. These priority orders will be filled immediately and other reservations will be accepted beginning next Monday morning, October 16. John Ogden, c'26, spent the week end at his home in Kansas City, Kan. Spirit of Friendliness and Good Will to Prevail Among Students "HELLO" WILL RULE CAMPUS TOMORROW DATE IS SET FORWARD Hope Thus to Encourage Acquaintance to Last Through-Year Tomorrow, October 11, marks the annual appearance of K. U.'s "Hello Day" on the campus. Everyone will say "hello" to everyone else, friend or perfect stranger, engineer or law, man or woman. The cheer "heyle" are intended to propagate a spirit of encouragement among the students of the University. "We want the men and women of the University to carry their greetings over Hello Day and through the entire year," said Leon Baumgart-merzke, who will be the department Government Association, this morning. "It was desired to have it this fall in order that the students can make friends earlier in the year through the medium of Hello Day and to have the day fail in the mid-afternoon because that is the time when most of the students are in Lawrence." Receives Ardent Support A spirit of good fellowship in the student body is one of the fundamental purposes and ideals of the two governing bodies in the University, the institution and propagation of an ethos that honors their ardent support and sanction. "Sure, we like an annual, Hello Day!" declared one of the members of K. U.'s School of Law, when accosted this morning. "Only I think all members of the University student body should wear tags with their names and telephone numbers on them." Weekly Event Suggested It has been suggested in the current meetings of the Women's Student Government Association that the anthem should be a weekly Hello Day. A day of each school week would be set aside for the purpose of becoming acquainted on the Hill. K. U.'s annual Hello Day has been an institution on the Hill for three years. Weekly Event Suggested HOSPITAL SERVES STUDENTS Urge Everyone to Get Typhoid Inoculation Immediately During the first four weeks of school the University hospital has served 914 students in the dispensaries and has had 40 bed patients Quite a few students have heeded the warning to get inoculated for typhoid, twenty-seven having availed themselves of the opportunity thus far. There are still a great many students who have not taken this precaution, and they are urged to do so immediately. The inoculation is free of charge, as is the rest of the attention given by the hospital, with the exception of typhoid victims who have not been inoculated. The hospital is in good shape the year to take care of the winter sled noses. Six nurses have an increase of hel over the number employed last year Minnesota University to Start Memorial Drive The University of Minnesota is a launching a Stadium-Auditoriumrive, according to a telegram received this morning by Publicity Director, W. A. Dill, and are seeking information from the University. In the telegram request was made or a picture of the proposed Stadium and Union, together with various orms of public matter and campaign-plans as used by K. U. in heir drive. Request was also made or figures on the amount of student subscriptions to the fund here. Ralph Brigham, LL. B., 22, spend the week-end at the Phi Pai house. Mr. Brigham is engaged in the lumber business in Kansas City. He expects to spend several months in the southern lumber camps in the near future and then return to Kansas City. Marshell County Club will meet Wednesday afternoon at 4:30 in room 210 Fraser. Dorothy Goodman, President. Journalists Make Best School Board Members George Sturble, B.S.22, now working for an A. M. degree, is the author of "A Study of School Board Personnel," appearing in the October number of the American School Board Journal. The article reports the result of an investigation into the relative value for different activities of different kinds of people on school boards. The data studied was obtained by means of a questionnaire sent to various city superintendents in cities all over the United States. The journalists were found to be the most valuable of any of those in the project, and were often received, while the professions ranked high in general. Women were found to make poor board members in many respects, although not in all. VAN GORDON PLEASES IN OPENING CONCERT Contralto's Flexible Voice and Charming Appearance Win Favor With her remarkably flexible, colorful voice, well chosen program and charming personality, Cyrena Van Gordon, contralto of the Chicago Opera Company, who gave the opening number of this season's concert course in Robinson Gymnasium last night, won for herself an enduring place in the hearts of University concert-goers. Miss Van Gordon's well varied program included both old and new favorites. Her first number, the art, "I'Ahorite Rivale" from Verdel's "Alatha" was sung in Italian in excelent form, but in large, flexible and true to pitch. Her singing of Liszt's setting of "Die Lorelei" and of Strusra's "Case," both in German, was well done. Eboni was the group of four French songs. The fourth group was perhaps the best received, probably because of the fact that it was in English and that she loved it. "And we worked all of the numbers. Miss Van Gordon graciously responded to encores with 'Comin' through the Rye" and Cadmarn's "Land of the Sky Blue Water." Her actress she played her own accompaniment. The climax of the program was reached when Miss Van Gordon seemed to forget that she had a mezzo contrato voice and sang one of the most difficult dramatic operas arias ever written, "The Cry of the Valkyrie," by Wagner, with intense dramatic effect. Miss Van Gordon's voice covers a wide range and shows an evenness throughout which is most satisfying. The transition from contritto to soprano roles is an art that very few singers possess. Throughout the program she was generous with her encores. POSTAL FORCE IS SWAMPED Students Get Only One Delivery a Day Frequently The post office force of Lawrence is literally swamped these days with mail for the students added to the mail of the residents, and, consequently, the students get only one delivery a day when the carriers have more mail than they can put in their allotted eight hours. The post office force is doing all that it can to speed up the deliveries but with the great influx of students this year, the carriers have been frequently unable to cover the whole of their territory twice a day. The curtailed service is a result of the lengthening of the routes this summer to serve more territory. Several requests have been made to the department for the addition of new services, and these requests have fallen on deaf ears and the postmaster here can offer no hope of immediate relief. Y. W. C. A. to Work For Quota Until End of Week The Y. W, C. A. Financial Campaign has reached a total of $1,534, and many of the women on the campus have not yet been solicited. They will all be seen by the end of the week, and those in charge expect the totals to go above the amount asked. The teams in the lead are: first; Lacille Stewart; second, Emma Neur; third, Lola Belt; and fourth, Margaret Butcher. OLD FASHIONED RALLY WILL WELCOME TEAM Returning Jayhawkers Will Receive Great Ovation When They Arrive TRAIN IS DUE AT 11:24 Band Will Be There to Furnish Music for the Occasion Band Will Be There The entire student body is asked to turn out to greet the returning gridiron warriors and coaches. A tally-ho will be waiting at the stage where honored tradition of a ride up Massachusetts Avenue will be observed. Tonight at 11:24 o'clock the Kansas team will arrive in Lawrence on the Santa Fe, and the Jayhawkers who held the Army to two touchdowns will be given one of the greatest welcomes that has ever been Johnson and Blue assistant cheerleader. The K. U. Band will be on hand to add to the enthusiasm of the homecoming, and a rip-roaring welcome will be waiting for the twenty-two athletes who carried the Kansas team successfully against the West Point cadets. Speeches will probably be demanded from several members of the team and also from the coaches be held. Speeches may be down Massachusetts Avenue. To March Down-town To March Down-town. Following the outburst of enthrasure the team will be loaded into the tally he team will march down-town will commence. Every student is asked to turn out and add to the welcome that the Kansas team so well deserves. The closing hour will be lengthened to make it possible for the women to attend also. TO END MEMORIAL CAMPAIGN Executive Committee Discusses Final Plans of Drive Memorial Campaign were discussed last evening at a meeting of the executive committee of the Memorial Corporation. It was decided to call meeting on the morning of Oct. 21, and at this time the board will consider the next steps in the Memorial program. At the present time, Memorial pledges total $850,000 towards the $1,000,000 goal. Construction of the Stadium is half completed. Plans are under way for the Union Building. Members of the board of directors, who have been working with the committee are expected to attend the conference, are: Chancellor E. H. Lindley; Governor H. J. Allen; James A. Kimball, state business manager, Kansas City, Mo.; J. C. Nichols, Kansas City, Mo.; Irving Lawn; Lawrence, Frank Crowell, Kansas City, Mo.; G. L. Kreek, Lawrence; T. S. Sweyne, Lawrence; M. B. Morgan, James M. John M. Porter, Topica; Dorothy Stanley, Kingman; W. J. Baumgartner, Lawrence; R. W. Magill, Wichita; George T. Guernsey, Jr., Dependency; W. Y. Morgan, Hutchinson; Mrs. John S. Weaver, Kansas City, Mo.; C. P. Woodbury, Kansas City, Mo.; Alfred G. Hill, Lawrentee; M. L. Brendelan, Kansas City; R. J. Keloan, Kansas City; J. W. Helma, George O. Foster, Lawrence, Sherman Ellert, Kansas City, Mo.; Thornton Cooke, Kansas City, Mo. Sedgwick County Desires District Court Division Wichita, Kans., Oct. 10.—A movement is under way in Sedgwick county to have the next legislature create a fourth division of the district court for relief of the present congestion of civil and criminal dockets. With three judges working full time, they have been unable to keep ahead of the division of hawtnuts that are filed daily and it is believed a new division will have to be created soon. Inamuch as the expense of such a departure does not fall on the tax-payers, it is believed the bill will be passed. ... All band men report at Santa Fe station tonight at 11 o'clock to play at rally. J. C. McCanless. --- THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University Subscription price $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.00 for one semester; 66 cents a month; 18 cents a week. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kanans, under the act of March 3, 1879. Published in the afternoon five times a week by students in the Department of Psychology, University of Kansas, from the press of the Department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phones. K. U. 25 and 66 The Daily Kansan aims to plea for the University of Kansas to go forwarc by standing for 'the ideals' she deserves; to be clean; to be cheerful Editorial Staff Editor-in-chief Ben Hibba Glenn Glesias New Editor Raymond Dyer News Editor Jeffrey McCormick Sport Editor Glik Schubata Alumni Editor Rachel Cox Alumni Editor Rust Corter Business Staff Business Manager ..Lloyd Ruppenthal, Aast, Bus, Mgr. John Montgormery, J Asst, Bus, Mgr. Clyde Burnside Board Members Chester Shaw Dean Boggas Lievelyn White Dean Jones Carolina Carrolls DeVaughn Francis Carlton Powers Lottie Lush Ted Hudson Jane Lane TUESDAY, OCT. 10, 1922 Now that winter has set in, the squirrels are laying in their winter supply of nuts. Thus far, no attacks on students by these vicious little creatures have been reported. ABOUT SATURDAY SCHOO1 Periodically the question of Saturday school is brought before the University Senate, and periodically the measure is defeated. This year, however, the endeavor to place the University class schedule on a six-day basis seems more determined than usual, and a motion to that effect will be voted upon at a meeting of the Senate which is to be held early in November. The Kansan realizes that there are certain advantages to be obtained from a six-day schedule, but, on the other hand, it believes that the disadvantages of that sort of *rangement* would greatly overbalance what good might result from such an innovation. The Kansan attempts to voice the opinion of a majority of the University students, and it believes that it has back of it the overwhelming sentiment of the student body when it says that Saturday school is not wanted at the University of Kansas. Certain members of the University faculty have referred to Saturdays as "good time wasted." Surely such a judgment does not apply to the majority of K. U. students; those faculty members are certainly speaking of that small group of students who come to the University only for the good time involved. Students, as a rule, and this is particularly true of upperclassmen—do not waste their Saturdays. If "good time wasted" has reference to a few hours spent in recreation and exercise, then we must admit that many students do "waste" portions of their sixth day. The need for a proper amount of recreation and exercise has been discussed so many times that anything we could say here would be a mere platitude. However, very few students spend the entire day even in the proper sort of play. Outside readings and reports fill many Saturday mornings! Upperclassmen often have four or five long term papers to write each semester, and each of these, if properly done, requires the larger portion of one week-end. No, the student who is here for business does not fritter away his Saturd- And then we must look at the question from the working student's point of view. Many self-supporting men and especially those who work by the hour, find that Saturday is the big "bread-winner." If classes are scheduled on that day an additional handicap is placed upon them. When the advocates of the measure point out that school work will be lessened on the other days of the week, they miss the point of the argument. Saturday here has always been a day uninterrupted by classes—a day when the student might don his old clothes, Official Daily University Bulletin copy received by Elizabeth W. White Editor, Chamberlain's Office No. 23. Oct. 10, 1922. Vol. II. O. O. F. DANCE NOT OPEN TO STUDENTS: The University will be host on Wednesday evening to more than 4,000 visiting delegates attending the Grand Lodge of the Independent Order of Fathers. Our Petition: "Missouri will not attend alumni art or our V仪ions." Our students will recognize that as a matter of courtesy our guests should have exclusive use of the Gymnasium tomorrow evening and that the dance, therefore, will not be open to 'students.' E. H. LINDLEY, Chancellor. BAND MEN TO MEET FOR I. O. O. F. PARADE: All band men will meet in uniform at 13th and Massachusetts Streets, at 6:50 sharp Wednesday evening. J. C. McCANLES, Director. BALANCE OF DRAMATIC CLUB TRYOUTS TO BE CAST: All those who have registered to tryout for the Dramatic Club and who yet been cast in parts will report at the Little Theatre at 7:30 TONIGHT CECILE BURTON', Instructor in Public Speaking. and earn his living, take a bit of exercise, or catch up in his school work. The six-day system may be feasible in some of the expensive eastern schools, but the Kananan does not believe that it is fair to compare K. U., where a large portion of the men are self-supporting, to those institutions. The Kananan stands squarely against the six-day class schedule, and believes that it is voicing the opinion of the majority of K. U. students. A TASTE FOR GOOD MUSIC When the minister says, "We will now take the usual evening offering," it doesn't bother you a bit if you are listening in on a radio sermon. A TASTE FOR GOOD MUSIC Last night Yceema Van Gordon, contralto, presented the first number of the 1922 University Concert Course—a concert course which seems destined to be one of the best ever given at K. U. The artist pleased her audience from the very start and swept the music lovers along with her through the entire program to its climatic close. The recital last night, and, in face the entire concert series, are merely a part of the unceasing attempt of the School of Fine Arts here to develop, in the people of the Mid-west, an appreciation of the fine and the beautiful in music. Last summer the faculty of the school gave a series of concerts for the benefit of the summer session students; during the winter terms a number of recitals are given by the faculty and students of the School of Fine Arts. But the attempt to foster good music does not end even there; in addition to the concert course, the administration of the school brings in much in the way of excellent musical talent each year. The faculty of the School of Fine Arts is certainly pursuing the logical method in its effort to kill the spirit of jazz. Instead of an endless and vain harangue against trashy music, the faculty presents to the students the best that is to be obtained in concerts and recitals. This is surely putting the educational method into practical use, and, if the size and enthusiasm of the audience last night are any indication, the effort of the School of Fine Arts is having its effect. ANNOUNCEMENTS The Zoology Club will meet at 7:15 Wednesday evening in room 304 Snow Hall. Dr. Robertson will be the principal speaker. Afterwards elec- tors from members will be held, and other important business will be transacted. At Syracuse University each student is taxed $2.50 for the support of the Daily Orange, the school paper. This is the first time the university has used this plan as always before the subscription plan has been used. The Christian Science Society will meet tonight at 7:30 in Myers Hall. All students interested are cordially invited. Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Regular rehearsal of Men's Globe Tuesday evening at 7:30 in central Administration Building. A members must be present. Oread Shining Parlor CHARLIE'S Best Shines in Town Thomas Shoe Shop Electric A. G. ALRICH Engraving, Printing, Binding Rubber Stamps, Office Supplies Printing by any process 736 Mass. St. Printing by any process 736 Mass. St. Before going to that party stop at the Stadium, the shop of service, and get one of those Boncilla messages and one of Arch's shines. 1055 Mass. The quality of our workmanship and the service rendered is of the very best. The only Barber Shop with a manicurist. PALACE BARBER SHOP Frank Vaughan, Prop. 700 Mass. St. "SuitingYou" THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULTZ 917 Mass. St. WATKINS NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, J. C. SURPLUS $100,000.0 D. C. Aher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. CAPITAL $100,000.00 DIRECTORS D. C. Asher, L. V. Miller, T. C. Green J. Moore, S. O. Bishop Suits $40 Protch, the College Tailor Pander's QUALITY JEWELRY 18 Copyright 1922 Hart Schaffner & Marx EVERYBODY CAN BE WELL DRESSED It Costs Less "The cost" isn't any excuse for not wearing good clothes Good clothes are made so well and of such fine materials they outwear other clothes You buy less often you save money you look better-feel better But why take our word-Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes will prove it to you once and for all PECKHAMS ENGINEERING COURSES COMPARED BY WALKER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Dean of School Publishers Article Showing Relative Standing of Work Here NEW TYPE IS DISCUSSED “Management Engineering” is Name Applied to Instruction Now Offered That the course in Industrial Engineering at the University of Kansas is well on a par with similar courses given at other universities is shown in a comparison at the work at K. U. with the average of the work at seven other schools which is made in an article in the last issue of Management Engineering. The course in Industrial Engineering at the University of Kansas" is by P. F. Walker, dean of the K. U. School of Engineering. A dingram is given showing ten subjects and the average number of hours taken by each student. One nine represents the average of the seven other schools and the second show K. U. in relation to them. Excess Mathematics Here There is an excess in the mathematics taught at K. U. due to students entering with incomplete preparatory training in the subject. This is not the case in the eastern institutions. An increase in the amount of language taught is shown, however. An option is allowed and language is offered selection with political science and psychology as second choices. As yet industrial or management engineering has not come in for much attention. But at the second conference on commercial engineering, held at Pittsburgh, Pa., this year, the outstanding feature was the interest manifested by administrative officials of many large concrete manufacturers; a need exists for analysis of the needs of industries and for the establishment of co-operative relations with them. Two Teaching Policies There are two policies which govern the teaching of industrial engineering. The idea underlying the first policy is that men will be graduated who will, in whatever connection they may happen to establish in industry, be able to understand engineering activities based on technical standards, but whose activities are those of the business man in general. There is a diversity of opinions as to the meaning of the various names applied to this class of engineering terms, and in particular the secuents to be the proper compromise. The second policy constitutes the field for a distinct department of instruction comparable to civil engineering and the others. It is the applicative work of the economic and social sciences, just as electrical engineering is made up of the applications of physical science. East Battles West In War of Arts rhilladelphia, Pa., Oct. 10. (United Press)—The war of the arts is on—East against West. The Widener collection of Pennsylvania and the Huntington collection of California are vying for the final championship, the world's title in art With the recent acquisition of Rembrandt's famous masterpiece, "The Descent from the Cross," the Widener museum offset the prestige won by Huntington, by his purchase of Anthonyaugh's "The Blue Boy," for $80,000. While the purchase price of the "Descent from the Cross" has not been made public, it is said to run considerably over the amount Widener paid for his last Rembrandt, rumored to have been $300,000. "The Descent from the Cross" is the flowering of the genius of the great Dutch master and marks the culmination of his effort to interpret religious fervor. Like other "old masters" it has had a long and varied history and for many years its authenticity was disputed. At last we noticed it situated to its rightful place in the art world, it moved from owner to owner, until it was sold at Christie's, London's famous auction room. While Huntington has been built ing a magnificent museum out of his California estate, Widener has quietly acquiring picture after picture. Leonard Isern, c'23, spent Sunday in Kansas City. SHOULD STUDY SNAKES MORE Okmulgee Teacher Sa/s They Are Farmer's Protection Okmulgee, Okla., Oct. 10—Farmers and gardeners should study makes more, says W. H. Barton, head of the science department of his Okmulgee high school, who had a make exhibit at the fair here. He had fifty varieties of snakes in fluid, and a few live reptiles. He declared that the popular idea of all snakes being poisonous was erroreous. There are snakes of only two species, but most really poisonous—rattlesnakes, cottonton mouse or southern moccasin and copperhead, he explained. "Snakes form one of the chief protections the average farmer has in his fight against harmful bugs and insects. The non-poisouvariety should be allowed to roam at will over the farms of the country. Not only are the common snakes good bug chasers, but there are no better mousers in the animal world than these same so-called deadly snakes. Physiologists Have Four New Eyes? Four new eyes! Would anybody like to have them? If you happen to be one of the medical physiology students you may get a chance to use the new artificial eyes which are being made. Chester Johnson, who has charge of the physiology supply room, is completing the new apparatus. These artificial eyes cost about forty dollars each, so the amount saved by making them here is significant. Each "eye" consists of a wooden box about five inches square and nine inches long. A "retinol" of ground glass can be moved forward or backward can be moved forward or backward to adjust the image as it is thrown on the retina. The focus is varied by the insertion of lenses of different power in the moveable front. The effects of a few of the diseases of the eye can be studied with these artificial eyes, and the actions of abnormalities in these the actions of abnormalities in these organs can be observed as well. By The Way Alpha Xi Delta announces the pledging of Helen Marcell, fa'26, of Ottawa. Helen Marcell spent Sunday at her home in Ottawa. Caroline Mize of Atchison was the guest of her sister at the Kappa house this week end. Miss Mize is attending the University of Missouri this summer. Bud Sigman of Kansas City spent the week-end at the Ppi House Mr. Sigman is attending the University of Missouri this year. Kappa Alpha Theta will entertain with a dance next Saturday in honor of their pledges. Ernest Clark, A. B.'21, spent the week-end at the Phi Psi house. Phi Chi announces the pledging of Glenn Casey, Lawrence, William R. Davis, Morrill, and Harve M. Clodfer, Lawrence. Donald Chitchfield, Lucin Ellis, Cobell Hawks, spent the week-end at their homes in Efingham. Jean Bennett and Louise Dorn visited at Baldwin over Saturday and Sunday. George Glaskin, c² 24, Erwin Cole, c² 25, and Marion Lewwell, c² 23, motored to Baldwin this week-end on business. Sara Buchanan, fa26, spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. A. E Smith on their farm west of Lawrence. Mrs. S. E. Donney stepped over in Lawrence Saturday with her daughter, Madeline, on her way to her home in Salina. Kappa Kappa Gamma entertained with a party Saturday night in honor of their freshmen. Mary Ballou, c'26, and Louise Cowdery, c'25, spent the week-end in Topeka. Mrs. M. E. Murphy, 1142 Indiana Street, spent the week-end with her daughter, Mrs. B. E. White, A. B. '12, of Kansas City, Mo. Harry Faris, A. B. 722, who is teachi ng this year in the high school at Oaklanda, spent the week-end in Law. renise visiting friends. Vine, Lucille and Ruth Robertson spent the week-end in Kansas City, Mo. Miss Nadene Weible, c'22, spent the week-end in Lawrence visiting friends. ROOOMMATE wanted by man student. 939 Indiana St. Close to Hill and town. All modern conveniences. Phone 1790 Black. WANT ADS Gladys Bilderback, fa'26, spent the week-end at her home in Atchison. Oliver DeWatteville, c'26, was visitor in Kansas City, Sunday. FOR SALE -Remington typewriter, old style. $15.00 if sold at once. C. Kirkpatrick, 939 Tennessee. O-12 LOST—Purse containing ring and changed, Wednesday between East Ad and 3d and Main. Reward. 841 Maine St. Phone 2161. O11 WANTED-Boaders. Best home cooking in town. Eat all you want. Chicken食堂 Sundays. West door entrance. Same building, University Book Store Annex. Roommates for two boys. 1524 Red. 0-13 FOR RENT — One room brick cottage Furnished and suitable for light decking. Moderate rent. Corner of the kitchen and Tenth floor. Phone 2570. — 04 SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire to earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Pleasant work, the school hours. Write L. J. McLean. Wayne Ave., Kansas City. Mo. -S73 FOR RENT—One large room at 901 Maine, for boys; also garage for rent. 1968 Black. O-12 FOR RENT TO BOYS - Large double front room with two study tables and two lights in modern home. Call 817-390-6100, m. 1700 White, 9450 Gold, 012 817-390-6100 LOST—Fountain pen without cap, between Spooner and Ohio. Finder please call 2572. O-10 FOR RENT-Furnished light house-keeping rooms. Call 2724. 099 LOST-Purse containing change and ring, Wednesday, between Ad. and Ninth and Maine. Finder please call 2161 or call at 841 Maine. Reward. LOST—Dunhill pipe, in Gymnasium, Saturday. Call 603. Reward. O-13 7ANTED—Roommate for man student at 1323 Kentucky. O-13 WANTED—Drummer and Piano player immediately. Call 1658. O 19 FOR RENT—Two large rooms for girls, 1116 Mississippi; stricly modern. O-14 'OR RENT—Large front room for two boys. Fine location. Call 564. O-17 OR RENT—Large double room, a good location. 1308 Vermont. O11 FOR RENT-Large rooms for men at 1308 Vermont. Phone 1514 Black. O-11 SITUATION WANTED—Cook or Houseman. C. Todd, 932 New Jersey St. O-12 FURNSHED ROOM—For boys or married couple. Nicely located. Call 2541. O-11 LOST—Alpha Omicron Pi pin. Call 1656, reward. O11 I.OST—Cap at F. A. U. check stand Saturday evening. Phone 2557 Blue. O12 Charlie Sample PROFESSIONAL CARD DR. 4, W. O'BRYAN. (Dentist) Special attention to prevention and treatment of pyrrhoma. 304 Perkins Building. Tel. 507. Bob Stewart Baths SAMPLE - STEWART BARBER SHOP LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Ex- clusive Optometrists). Eyes examen. glasses made. Office 1025 Mass. Ladies and childrens hair bobbing Across from Wiedemann's 838 Mass. St. BELLS FLOWER SHOP Send Flowers to the Sign up the Jayhawker card and mail it or bring it to the Jayhawker office—in room 110 Fraser-before that time and your subscription will be entered on our records. Phone 139 HOME FOLKS We are safe in saying that never before have students been so unanimous in their support of the Jayhawker because from any angle they look at the Jayhawker they find many features which are most interesting. This is the reason we expect 2,000 subscriptions for the Jayhawker before Thursday night. Your name will be stamped in gold leaf on the cover of your 1923 Jayhawker FREE if you subscribe before Thursday night. Before Thursday 825 1-2 Mass "GIFTS THAT LAST" E. F. (Ted) Hudson, Editor Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER Everyone we have talked to, wants a book. The thing we want you to do is to sign up the card now so you won't let Thursday slip by without you having ordered. WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING Wm. W. Brehm, Business Manager "An Aristocrat of College Annuals" Remember it is necessary that you reserve your book before Thursday night. Sign up NOW. The 1923 Jayhawker IF YOU want good laundry work LOST-Black leather coin purse condone call M. Perry, 1116 N. J. training four keys, on campus Thursday 2551. Work called for and day. Reward for business delivered. O-12. Office, Fraser Hall. O-10 Make your Jayhawker Appointment NOW at Squires Studio Photographers to K. U. Students Special rates! D. Mille Kansas City, Mo. We are now making glosses for the 1293 Jayhawker and the Christmas season. Call 964 at once for appointment. We are equipped to give all the latest lighting effects. MOORE'S STUDIO Lawrence, Kansas 719 Massachusetts St., Phone 964 Bowersock Theatre EX- H.R.SEEMAN OFFERS GLYDE 'RUBE' HOOPER AS PRIVATE C. C. PILL IN "OH YOU WILD GAT" OVERSEAS SOLDIER SHOW AS PRESENTED IN FRANCE FOR THE 81st DIVISION An Attack O' Laughing Go' 'FALL OUT' FOR THE BIGGEST SCREAM OF THE SEASON EX-SERVICE MEN — DON'T MISS IT! Also Special Picture Feature Pauline Frederick in The Glory of "Clementina." Entire Change of Program on Thursday and Friday --- THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FRANCE BELIEVES IN HER OLYMPIC TEAM European Nations are Actively at Work While United States Quarrels New York, Oct. 10 (United Press) —France apparently has a n唭ing notion that she has a good chance to win the Olympic championship it Homer Baker, one of America's best runners, who is now director of athletics in the Canal Zone, was in Paris recently and he applied for the position of coach of the French Olympic team. He was told politely that France was going to have a Frenchman in charge of her team, so that Americans could not take the credit away from a French victory with a comeback that an American coached them. Baker says that France has a couple of good runners coming up and one good hurdler. Sweden, according to reports, has been working a year with the Olympics in mind and after the present summer season will be ready to put a great team in the field, with two more years for further improvement. Sweden on the showing made at Antwerp will be America's most dangerous rival and a very formidable opponent. Improvement shown in field athletics in the Scandinavian countries was shown recently when Huff, a Norwegian, cleared 13 feet 6 inches in the pole vault and established a new world's record. The pole vault has always been considered Uncle Sam's pet little event. While all of the European nations are actively at work on the development of a 1924 Olympic team, the United States is all tangled up in a petty political fight over the management and selection of the team. Down at the bottom of the fight is a controversy between the Y. M. C. A, which seeks world-wide control of all sports, and the Amatur Athletic Union, which has made some mistakes in the past, but which has been generally successful on a very difficult job. Unless something is done, Uncle Sam is in for a bad disappointment at Paris in 1924. The opinion seems to prevail that all required is to get heads together about March 1, 1924, pick a team off the record books and hunt for a boat. To Determine Policy For Talks on W. D. A. F. W. D. A.F., the Kansas City Star's broadcast station, will send a representative, Mr. Leo J. Fitzpatrick, to a meeting in the Chancellor's office scheduled for 7:30 o'clock Thursday night. Tee meeting will be held for the purpose of determining the policy of the University of Kansas in regard to talks by members of the faculty for radio concerts. The Star has suggested that each lecture be short, consuming approximately ten to fifteen minutes; and that an effort toward greater impact of the subject was because of the large audience. Tonight it will be decided who of the tentative list of speakers will be chosen. The Kappa Sigma fraternity gave a dance at the chapter house Friday evening. After Nineteen Years Divorce Proves Mistake Rawlings, Wyo., Oct. 10. (United Press) — It took I. N. Jones and Mrs. Minnie Dickey Jones nineteen years to find out that their divorce was all over. The children recently. Children and grandchildren witnessed the second ceremony. Marital troubles terminated nineteen years ago when Mrs. Jones resigned. divore had been granted. Later she married J. C. Dickey. After his death she continued to make her home in Knoxville and last winter met her former husband. The old love was rekindled. WOODEN PLOWPASSING AWAY IN OLD MEXICO Modern American Agriculture Implements Furnished to Mexican Farmer Now Mexico City, Mexico (By mail to the United Press).—The day of the wooden plow is passing. These implements are being sold by the government at cost and cheaper than they could be purchased by Mexicans from direct sources, because the government purchases the implements in large quantities. The saving to the farmers is very large. Through a government agency the most modern of American agricultural impairments are being furious with farmers, particularly the small farmer, The agency having charge of the implements is known as the commercial branch of the department of agriculture and operates solely to develop agriculture and assist the smaller farmers. Sections of the country which never When better Ice Cream is made it'll be OURS. Wiedemann's Phone 182 WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods Visit the United Army Stores Co 700 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Army Goods VARSITY THEATRE Tuesday Only Shows—2:30-4:00-7:30-9:00 p. m. BIG DOUBLE SHOW Mr. and Mrs. Carter Dear Haven in "MY LADY FRIENDS" A Whirl of Girl and a Wile of Girl BUSTER KEATON in "THE PLAYHOUSE" See this comedian who never smiles Adults 28 cents; Children 10 cents WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY R.A.WALSH PRESENTS KINDRED OF THE DUST before saw anything but a wooden, homemade plow are now using the best implements that the United States can produce. The picture that all Kansas City is talking about All of the implement are purchased from the United States with the exception of two or three little pieces of machinery. A special freight rate A full line of every modern implement is kept on hand and farmers are given time in which to make payments. Usually twenty-five per cent is paid when purchase is made but if the farmer cannot afford this he is given a certain time to make this initial' payment. At the present time there is approximately $2,000,000 worth of farm implements in government warehouses. The implements are generally purchased through representatives of American firms stationed in cities or rural areas taken care of by a special appropriation for the department of agriculture. A new plan is being projected, however, whereby an agricultural co-operative organization formed by a group of farmers purchases of the implements and will MISSING LISTENING Sharpening wood pencils means loss of time and effort. How Much Time Do You Waste? See this and the other Ingersoll models at your stationery or co-operative store. Uses double length leads, each equal to a seven inch wood pencil in writing and does not clog at the point. Ingersoll Paleoprints Pencil Costs less to use than wood pencils. Endsall pencil sharpening— THE FEATHERWEIGHT= shown here of light-weight Aluminum 50c. Rolled Silver, $1.00. Ingersoll Redpoint Co., Inc. Wm. H. Ingersoll, Pres. 461 Fourth Ave., New York City Bernardo Felix is the chief of the commercial branch of the department of agriculture in the Republic of Mexico in charge of the Mexico City office. also arrange for credits to the farm ers. Twentieth Kansas Vets Meet Survivors of the Twentieth Kansas Infantry, the organization which won fame in the Philippine insurrection under command of Gen. Fred Funston, met in Tetoka today for their annual regimental reunion. Among those who attended were Wilder S. Metaleff and Joseph W. Murray, managing editor of the Journal-World. Student Enterprise Tickets on sale at six places: Athletic Office Gymnasium Law School Office, Green Hall Office, Den of Men Fraser Office, Dean of Women, Fraser Y. W. C. A. Henley Hall Y. M. C. A. Myers Hall Mrs. Virginia Pete, Signa Chi house mother, who has been ill for some time is improved and received visitors Tuesday. A man in a suit is seated at a desk, looking at several books. In the background, two men in suits are walking towards him. A word to the wise is sufficient You are missing something if you are not taking advantage of our 33rd Anniversary Offers in Men's Furnishings 70TH ANNIVERSARY Rock Island 1852 - 1922 1852 1922 FIRST BRIDGE MASONIAN RIVER ROCK ISLAND LINES 70 YEARS OF SERVICE Reproduction of medalion to be given to every employee of the Rock Island Lines on the occasion of their 70th anniversary. SkofStadS ELLING SYSTEM LAWRENCE, KANS. "Seventy Years of Service" Threesecore and ten years ago there was born in the Middle West—a railroad, conceived in the spirit of progress and dedicated to public service. That railroad was the Rock Island. It opened the highway of commerce across the Mississippi. Its coming brought in its wake the grain of the fields and the growth of the cities. It has been the Herald of Civilization, the Bearer of Learning, the Friend of Culture. As a pioneer, the Rock Island blazed the way for others to follow. Today, throughout the fourteen states of the Great Mississippi Valley served by this Railroad, thousands of employees and patrons are joining hands in celebrating the Seventieth birthday of the Rock Island and in rededicating the Railroad to the service of the future. It is Service. The Rock Island is your Railroad. With your continued co-operation our ambitions to serve can be realized and your requirements fully met. Rock Island Lines --- See the Stetson Hat Exhibit of Hats in the making e SHOREVY BRAND Our Windows are the "Mirror of Fashion" The show window is mightier than the word—Simply look into our windows. They are an Encyclopedia of the season's smartest styles under plate glass cover. Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS You Had a Good Dinner at Brick's Last Night So why not eat there all the time? You can save money by buying a meal ticket and making Brick's your regular boarding place— You can eat more, have a greater variety and yet pay less at Just a Step from the Campus THE OREAD CAFE E. C. BRICKEN, Prop. P Has gravity switch-no fires if tipped over. Just the thing for these cool mornings when the furnace isn't going. Kansas Electric Power Co. 719 Massachusetts St. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NUMBER 24 VOLUME XX LAW MANNERS ARE CENSURED BY ARANT "Men of Your Standing Should Not Condescend to Such Practices," Says Dean CALLED LAW CONVOCATION Arant Says He Has Heard of Women Going Thru Fraser to Avoid Green Hall "Men of your standing and dignity should not逊敢 to make the freshman engineers, tip their caps (for honors), to the president Hall," declared Dean H. W. Arent, of the School of Law, this morning in a spirited message to a law con- location in the Little Theatre. Freshman engineers are not worth $100. "But sincerely," continued the dean, "you men have not been subjected to the tribulations of entering the School of Law wearing the freshman cap upon your noble beads, and you ought to have the manliness to refrain from kidding the freshman engineers. Must Stop Crass Remarks "Another thing—it may be in a spirit of jest, but this thing of speaking boisterously to women as they pass Green Hall must be stopped. I have heard women of the University of Texas cry that students in order to avoid the remarks of the students of the School of Law. "You gentlemen are to belong to a profession which has dignity and courtesy as one of its corner-stones, and it is not becoming your professional role. It is funny remarks which have been heard out in front of the building." Engineers Started Empty "Now about this age-old emity between the laws and engineers. In the past, lawyers were taught to understand that when we had the old School of Law over on North College, certain parties from this campus would make nocturnal visits to our office, but was not our fault in the first place. including the freshmen as they pass by. "I want Dr. W. L. Burdick to say something on this subject." Dr. Burdick Speaks "It is deplorable that any friction exists between the two schools, but it is up to us to act like gentlemen and refrain from antagonizing our engineering brothers any more by hiding the freshmen as they pass by. ESSAY CONTEST IS CLOSED Doctor Burdick, who has been with the K. U. School of Law for twenty-five years, took the platform. "If I've spoken once about this trouble on the steps of Green Hall, I've spoken about it forty times," he pre-empted. This was greeted with laughter by the entire audience of law students. Thirty-Five to Forty Kansas Towns Represented Doctor Burdick said that students of the School of Law enjoyed too much prestige to condescend to chide freshman engineers and University women as they passed by that paraphrase spot on the campus, Green Hall. The annual prize essay contest, held by the League of Kansas Municipalities, closed October 10. About 106 essays were received, representing a variety of local towns. This context was held to stimulate more interest in city government and responsibilities of citizenship the scope of these essays is so designed as to give opportunities to designers in small as well as large towns. The judges for the contest this year will be: Charles M. Fassett, lecturer and consultant in municipal government, University of Kansas; William Dill, professor of journalism, University of Kansas; and John G. Stutz, secretary-treasurer of the League of Kansas Municipalities. The announcement of the prize winners and the first prize essay will appear in the Kansas Municipalities on the first of the month following the date on which the essays are due. The second prize essay will be published the following month, and pictures of the first and second prize winners will be published with their essays. All prizes will be paid in The Girl's Friendly Society of the Episcopal Church will hold an important meeting at the home of Martha Lennon. Three day evening at 7:30. American Legion Officer Will Dedicate Stadium A nationally-known American Legion speaker will deliver the address at the time of the Armistice Day dedication exercises of the Stadium, November 11. The speaker will be chosen at the national convention of the American Legion at New Orleans on November 9. He will be a member of the American Legion, and Frank Samuel, state adjutant of the American Legion. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 11, 1922. The state department of the American Legion is in charge of the dedicatory exercises at that time. The 123 men and women of K. U. who died in the service will be honored. K. U. WILL ENTERTAIN ODD FELLOWS TONIGHT Stage a Varied Program of Speeches, Inspection and Plays For I. O. O. F. Tonight is especially prominent in the sixty-fifth annual session of the Grand Lodge of the State of Kansas I, O. O., F. being held this week. After the big parade on Massachusetts street, the 4,000 Odd Fellows will come to the campus at 7:30 oclock for the addresses given by Grand Sire Lucile J. Eaton, of St. Joseph, Mo., and Chancellor E. H. Lindley, of the University, and for other entertainment on the hill. Since the gymnasium can accommodate only about two thousand out of the four thousand delegates, the Museum and other buildings on the campus will all be open. At an inn you can see the Dyche Museum, souvenir booklets of K. U., will be obtainable by the interested. Chancellor Lindley's address will be concerning co-operation between the people of Kansas and the students of the University. For those who cannot get into the gymnasium for the addresses, two plays, "Fourten" and "The Florist's Shop," will be given by the dramatic art class at 8:15 o'clock in Hall. Entertainment will be provided for all delegates. After r the sucesses, a舞 with Aft r the speeches, a dance with special music will be held in the gymnasium which promises a good time for all visitors. ABELLA TO SEE GAMES FREE Has Sold Forty Student Activity Tickets Narcisee F. Abella, c25, of Gible, P. I. champion lightweight boxer of the University, will see all games and student activities for this year at the expense of the department of athletics. Abella, who sold forty Student Activity tickets and is still selling, was given a complimentary ticket to attend the event. Who are the only ones to give free of charge, this year. So far 1700 tickets have been sold. When three hundred more are sold basketball, indoor track, wrestling, debate, concert and Dramatic Club tickets will be torn out of the book because the seating capacity can accommodate those allowed for in the sale of the 2,000 Activity Tickets. According to Dean Dyer tickets are now selling at a rate of thirty a day and that from now on the tickle service will be his office and the Athletic office only. Dr. Allen is highly satisfied with the work of the campaign committee and with the number of tickets sold during his absence, saying never beaten. Former Students to be Married Announcement has been made of the approaching marriage of Margaret Southard and Garnett Reed, A. B. 20, which will take place in Kansas City, Mo., November 30. Miss Southard was a student in the University last year and is a member of the Alpha Delta Pi sorority. Mr. Reed received his A.A. He born in 1928 and graduated from the Kappa Sigma fraternity. He received his LL. B. from the Kansas City School of Law last June and was later admitted to the bar. fore has so large a head that he also bees still sold this early in the year. Dr. Allen recently met Mike Ahearn, theAggie's head coach, who said that the Aggie students at $10 a book and purchased 2450 Activity Tickets. Home Economics Club will hold initiation Thursday evening at 7 o'clock in Room 10, Fraser Hall--Vivian Stanley, president. JAYHAWKER RECEIVES SUPPORT OF STUDENTS Expect Sales to Exceed Those of Last Year by RESERVE YEAR BOOK NOW 600 Free Tomorrow Last Day to Get Name on Annual Tomorrow is the last day that students can reserve their 1923 Jaya-hawkers and still get their names on the cover in gold leaf free," said William Brehm, business manager of the Jayahawk, this morning. "The student body seems to be almost unanimous in support of the 1923 Jayhawker," he added. "For instance I talked to seventy-nine people yesterday afternoon and seized the seventy-three subscriptions from them." "Everybody sens to be signing up the cards, but I want to urge them to mail the cards to us before Thursday night." Everybody Signs Cards The large number of cards in the Jayhawker office at present leads us to believe that we will exceed the threshold last year by more than six hundred. "In order that Ted Hudson and I can start on important editorial work this week, it is necessary that we secure as many subscriptions as possible." Start Editorial Work "Some students who did not at first intend to buy a Jayawaker when they looked over the plans for them and up and become our strongest boosters. Record of School Year The "Jayhawker plays a unique part in school life. It is the only complete record of the school year and about the only means that the people at home have of learning about K.U. Even a visit to the school only shows them life. The Jayhawker shows them the school as if functions and the wide ramifications of such a large institution." Recover Stolen Coupe R. G. Ball, J., had his Ford coupe stolen while he was attending the Varsity dance Saturday night. The loss was reported to the police who found the car late Sunday so someone had been burned out and several gallons of gas had been consumed. A student's notebook containing several names and addresses, which the police believe will lead to the guilty party, was found in the car. Mrs. L. E. Bright, Mrs. C. D. Lodge, and Mary, Gardener, who have been graces of Margaret Bright for the last three years to return their home in Europe. Professor Hollands took a generous interest in him, and calling up Mrs. Hollands, who is also acquainted with the former dean of Butler College, asked her to give the young man what money she had. The youth went to the Hollands home and after exchanging a few reminiscences with Mrs. Hollands, came away with eleven dollars. The young man did not stop with Professor Hollands, but returned to his work with energy and imagina Prof. E. H. Hollands of the depart ment of philosophy found real application for his favorite subject when he parted with $11 about noon yet day. To Kansan Readers The Daily Kansan wishes to be absolutely fair in the controversy concerning the proposed Saturday school. If any advocate of the six-day plan, either student or faculty member, cares to present to the readers of the Kansan arguments for Saturday school, the Kansan will print such a communication in the school column. Owing to limited space, however, statements must be restricted to 400 words. V. F. W. To Meet Oct. 13 There will be a meeting of the Veterans of Foreign Wars at the Chamber of Commerce rooms Friday, Oct. 13. All members of this organization in the University are urgently invited to attend this meeting as is the first one of the year. Business will be disposed of and plans made for the year. Members should bring anyone eligible to membership with them. At 10:45 o'clock Tuesday a well dressed young man in a plain gray suit stepped up to Professor Hollands in the Administration building and asked her if she had ever been the son of a former dean of Butler College. As a graduate of Butler and a friend of the former Dean, Professor Hollands greeted the youth with great friendliness, and although in a hurry to get to a class he stopped for a minute, he said, "The young man told of his experiences as a soldier in France and said that he was returning from California where he had been recovering from the effects of poisonous gas. He said that he received of enough money it got to Chicago. Kansas Professor Turns To Study of His Own Course While Others Escape "College Friend" PAUL FLAGG TALKS TO JOURNALISM CLASSES BEN HIBBS, Editor-in-chief. Talking about a man's hobby is the best way to gain his confidence when interviewing, Mr. Flarg declared. He also gave as his experience that bankers are the most "cold blooded" suspect of saying something "feel like saying something" which might react in an unfavorable way toward business affairs. Within an hour he had become the son of the president of Northwestern, the son of the dean of Butte College, and the viewpoint of the president of Ohio State. Catherine Humburger, e'23, has been forced to withdraw from the College on account of illness. Miss Humburger last night for her home in Seattle. "Newspaper work is not in the category of easy money propositions," said Mr. Flagg in his talk to the class in Newpaper II. "But the reporter and friendship, which the reporter enjoys make up for the hard work." "Divorce and scandal are good subjects to increase the circulation of a metropolitan paper. Circulation managers are unanimous on this point," Mr. Flagg said. He closed his talk by giving as his slogan, "work hard and be faithful." His decision reporter's success is deeply dependent on the number of personal friendships which he has formed. Discusses With Students Practical Problems Met in News-paper Reporting After quitting the Hollands home, he turned his talents toward F. E. Kester, of the department of physics, posing as the nephew of W. O. Thompson, president of Ohio State, and claiming to be a graduate of Professor Kester's class, the godforsaved Professor Kester for when the time came to be generous he was financially unable. Paul Flagg, A.B.21, talked to students of the department of journalism today on the practical problems of newspaper reporting. Mr. Flagg, who was a member of the class of 1917 and returned after the战 to win his work, is on the staff of the Kansas City Journal-Post. The youth tried his persuasive story on Dr. F. B. Dains, of the department of chemistry, claiming to be the son of the president of Northwestern but with no effect. He may have called on many other members of faculty but the only紊妄 reported from the department of philosophy. The hard luck story remained nearly the same throughout, and seemed to be convincing according to the gentlemen who were nearly taken in. The description tails which were about approximately as follows: About five feet eight inches in height, dark hair, prominent cheek bones and ears. He wore a plain gray suit and had an open faded gold watch he continually consulted in order that he might not miss his train to Chicago. First Floor Will Be Ready For Concrete Pouring Within a Week FINISH OUTSIDE WORK ON K. U. DORMITORIES WORK HAS BEEN HELD UP Plans Show Splendid Facilities For Housing University Women Although the construction of the new dormitories for the women of the University has been held up, pending the arrival of steel joists, the work has been going on rapidly and the first floor will be ready to be within a week, recording J. P. Brien of Topics engineer in charge. "We have plenty other material on the ground," said Mr. Brady this morning. The actual brick on the domitories will start within a week, too; we have the outside concrete work all on top of it. The wall is fitted with an araped page." Judging by the outlay in the blue prints for the dormitory. K. U. women will be quartered next fall in one of the finest buildings on the campus, if not the best. Five big floors are provided for in the dormitory, and six shaded for ventilation, each of which is devoted to a specific purpose. Some of the rooms are even provided with private bath, and each floor is provided with general bathing facilities. According to the facilities. According to the present plans, there will be seventy-five living rooms for the University women, all of which will be furnished with the necessary conveniences in including lavatories. A large electric elevator will connect each floor with the remainder of the building. One large room on each floor will be devoted to social gatherings and a discussion center with the parlor adjoining it. In addition, a complete kitchenette for each floor, furnished with the proper cooking utensils, will be installed. A cooling system, complete in itself, will furnish the cool air necessary to keep the fruits and vegetables fresh. The basement of the building will be occupied by the jantor, and space will be reserved there for the storing of trunks. Approach will be made from the juncture of Eleventh and Louisiana streets. A sizable balcony and porch are being built there to command, as it were, the entrance to the dormitory. Mr. Bradley estimates that the dormitory should be completed in 1923, and be fully ready for occupancy by next fall. The M. J. Green Construction Company of Manhattan is the contractor for the building. ALUMNI RECEIVE PRAISE Get Press Notices For Work in Near East The work of two K. U., alumni, Myrtle Shane, '02, and J. Christy Wilson, 14, in the Near East, received special mention in a report by W. A. Bily, printed on October 8, in the Tonek Capital. No woman in the Near East has done more to reflect prestige on her home state than has Miss Myrtle Shane, according to the report. She had charge of the first station of 5,000 orphan children, which the Near East Relief established at Alexandrapla a few years ago. When all relief workers were ordered out of Turkey, because of war conditions there, Miss Shane was the only American girl on the country. She is stationed now in Erivan, Armenia, with the american foreign board of missions. J. Christy Wilson is working as chairman of the board of administration of Near East relief, placing more than 20,000 Assyrian and Armenian refugees on farms in the great Persian district. Photographs accompany the report, which tells in detail of the work of all Kansans engaged in Near East relief work. Marienne Brandimore Marries Marienne Brandimore, fa, 21; was married in July to Monsieur Francois Nigare-aga, an artist for one of the moving picture corporations at Hollywood, California last winter, and met Monsieur Nigare-aga there. She was a member of the Pi Beta Phi sorority, and of Delta Phi Delta, honorary Fine Arts sorority. Marianne Brandimore Marries Glen Miner, c'22, is teaching in the high school at Dighton, Kansas. "Pilgrim's Progress" May Be Given at University Mr. Glanz, a representative of the Religious Drama Producing Company of Kansas City, was on the campus today negotiating with several departments about producing the religious play "Pilgrims' Progress" at the University. The play requires a local cast of two hundred persons for minor parts, the leads to be played by professional actors. The company carries several cars of stage property consisting of six people and two trucks to the extensive property an unusually large building is necessary for the staging. FEWER SNOW CHECKS WRITTEN BY STUDENTS Business Office Notes Decided Improvement in Banking Methods This Year Although University students on the whole are more careful this year than they were last year about写 checks, there are at the present time over fifty bad checks in this Business Office. Probably most of these checks have been written on the wrong check blank, or else the name of the town in which the bank is located has been omitted. Carl Klooz, of the Business Department, is in getting the checks made good. One check was discovered which had no signature. It was written on an out of town bank, so Mr. Klooz the check sent to the bank and there it was easily identified by the handwriting. Just now a number of bad checks have come in from persons paying for season tickets to the University Concert Course. The most common report is "insufficient funds," though often the writer of the check has no account at all, or his account has not been for small amounts as $1.00 are often returned on account of insufficient funds. of bad checks were written; on the fifteenth, $191.60; and on the sixteenth, $109. Last year at one time, Mr. Klouz had $170 in bad checks at one time. So far this year the largest total for bad checks is on September 14, where on September 12, $152 worth of bad cheques were written; on the fifteenth, $191.60; and on the six- Last year all "snow" checks were made good except one for $31.00 which has not yet been collected. On the whole the feeling both at the Business Office and down town is that students are being more careful with their accounts at the bank, and that very little trouble will result through the year on account of bad checks. BROADCAST FACULTY TALKS Speeches to be given by various members of the faculty of the University of Kanaa on educational topics are to be features of a number of regular radio broadcasting programs by the Kanaa City Star, who is the Kanaa City Star. Kansas City Star Radio Wi Feature Their Addresses Arrangements will be made at a meeting Thursday evening with a representative of the Star concerning dates and selection of the speak- "These radio programs will arouse interest in the University of Kansas throughout the United States," said Alfred G. Hill, secretary of the Alumni Association, in speaking of the plans for the programs. School of Sharks Leaves Following One Capture Beaufort, N. C., Oct. 11 (United Press)—Following the capture of one of their number, a school of playful sharks have departed from North Carolina waters, to which the numbers have grown. The sharks ranged from nine to twenty feet in length, and numbered six. The school followed men-laden boats through an inlet into one of the sounds, and then threw a fright into the guests at a summer hotel by the shore, with shade within 78 yards of the shore. Bathing was automatically suspended. The fish were ravenous. After daring fisherman had caught one of the sharks that they were believed to have strained from Caribbean or Florida waters. CROWDS AT STATION WELCOME JAYHAWKS Returning Eleven Greeted Last Night by More Than 2,000 Students WAS SURPRISE TO TEAM Band and Cheerleader Gilbert Led Parade Down Mass- achusets Street The University band and a hilarious crowd of students, both men and women, numbering close to 2,000, assembled at the Santa Fe station last night last week to welcome the Kansas team from their eastward trip during which they were defeated but not beaten by the Army last Saturday. As early as 10:30 o'clock the advance squads began to form at the station. By 11 the band and half of the student body were there. "The Crismon and the Blue," the "Rock Chalk," and the old rally yells, led by Assistant Cheerleader Bob Gilbert, were soon thundering over the town and could be heard clearly on south Massachusetts Street. Special Came at 11:30 Just before 11:30 the special appeared. As the train drew to a stop beetle approached, she forward for a first sight of the returning Jayhawks. The Kansans were tired after their long trip, however, and they quickly descended for the train and were spirited away. Then the line of march formed, led by Gilbert and McCain, band leader. The parade continued to Eleventh and Massachusetts Streets, and after one last Rock Chalk the crowd dispersed. Men Pleased by Display "The men were not expecting such a diaphy, Dr. F. C. Allen said this morning. "They were expecting only a few extra loyal students to welcome them. As the train drew to a stop before the station and the men heard the yells and saw the crowd, their faces immediately lighted up and despite the hard trip the men became the same old joyous bunch." Despite the fact that the date rule was not lifted nor the closing hour lengthened, many women attended the rally and the crowd was one of the largest that has welcomed a Jayhawk team home for several years. ENTOMOLOGY CLUB INITIATES Takes in Six New Members at Picnic Six new members were initiated by the Entomology Club Tuesday evening at a picnic supper in Brown's Grove. The new members are: O. H. Cohen, ¢24, W. G. Garlick, gr, Susie Bayer, ¢24, e3a, Leona Stillwilmann, ¢24, e3b, Joel Orduff, cruff, 24, and Herbert Darby,¢24. The club is an honorary organization of those interested in entomology, most of the members being major students and faculty members. The present membership is approximately twenty. The officers of the club are: W. J. Brown, president, and Harriett Patterson, secretary. Eight Master's Degrees Recommended by Faculty Eight advanced degrees were recommended yesterday at a meeting of the faculty of the Graduate School. One degree was for Master of Science in Education and is the remaining for a Bachelor of Arts. Inows: Arthur M. Swanson, M. S. in Education; Mauree Leah Andrus, history; Lloyd C. Bady, astronomy; Neenett Edward Bleya, education; Jacquette Downing, romance languages; Thurston Johnson, bacteriology; Alice history, and Earles Wood, history. Some of the manuscripts presented as part of the work were "Manon Lescant in Fiction and Drama," by Jacquetta Downing; "Studies on Baca, Lescant, and Fiction" and "A bibliography of Sunspots," by Lloyd C. Bady; "Relation between Extra Curricular Activities and Scholarship in High Schools of Kansas City, Mo.", by Arthur M. Swanson; Support in the City and Rural Districts of the State of Kansas," by Ernest E. Bayles. Ines Murphy, c'23, spent the week end at her home in Humboldt. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Hawaii Subscription price $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.90 for one semester; $6.90 a month; 15 cents a week. Entered an 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 Missouri. Published in the afternoon of the Department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phones, K. U. 25 and 66 Editorial Staff The Daily Kamanan aims to plece the university of Kamanan to go forth to universities of Kamanan to go forth by standing for the play on no written orite; to be clean; to be cheerful; to oure to have more serious problems; to have more serious problems; to the host's ability the host's ability the host's ability Business Staff Editor-in-chief Bain Hebbis Editor-in-chief Glaser News Editor Raymond Dyer Sport Editor Gleck Schultz Sport Editor Ruth Carter Alumnit Editor Rust Carter Alumnit Editor James Business Manager Lloyd Ruppenthal Asst. Bus. Mgr. Montgomtery, JR. Asst. Bus. Mgr. Clyde Burnside Board Members Chester Shaw Dean Bogggs White Hill Marly Hirt Caroline Harhack Devaugh Francis Carlton Powers Louis Lattimore Ted Hudson Island Blaine WEDNESDAY, OCT. 11, 1922 Headlines say Odd Fellows are fill ing the town. The town needs it. POLITICS ON THE HILL. The time for student elections at the University is at hand once more; for the next two weeks politics will be rife on the Hill. Two political parties will meet in secret sessions, choose a number of prominent University men for their candidates, and then proceed to carry out the campaign largely on a personal basis, exploiting the achievements of those candidates. Student elections at the University are a necessity, and wherever popular government holds sway political parties are necessary. But the political organizations at K. U. fall far short of performing the true functions of political parties. Under the two-party system, as we have it in our national government and, on a smaller scale, at the University, political parties have three main duties, and in the successful accomplishment of these three ends lies the only justification for their existence. The first function of a political organization is the electing of candidates to fill positions in the government; the second is the effecting of a co-ordination between the various branches of government; and the third is the presenting of policies—a platform if you please—to the public at large. The political organizations at the University expend practically their entire efforts in performing the first duty—the electing of candidates. The second function, that of co-ordinating branches of government, the parties here perform in sort of a half-hearted manner, and the third duty—as far as real platforms are concerned—they leave undone. Of course, they have so-called platforms. But what do they amount to? Certainly, the parties stand for the abolition of student graft; so does every right-thinking person on the campus. But as far as outstanding policies on questions vital to the University are concerned, the average voting student at the University can not distinguish one party from another. The University of Kansas is too large an institution for the election of student officers on purely personal grounds. A candidate can be personally acquainted with only a small per cent of the students. Should not what the man stands for in government and in policy be emphasized equally as much as his own achievements? Jryce has described our national parties as two identical bottles with different labels and both empty. Is not that a rather apt characterization of our political parties here? No fault is to be found with the type of candidates the organizations select; usually they are of the right sort. But it does seem that the parties might place platforms and policies that mean something before the students. Official Daily University Bulletin Copy received by Florence B. Elles, Editor, Chancellor's Office. 11. Oct. 11, 1922 No. 24. I. O. O. F. DANCE NOT OPEN TO STUDENTS: The University will be host this evening to more than 4,000 visiting delegates attending the Grand Lodge of the Independent Order of Overseas Indians. Our students will recognize that as a matter of courtesy our guests should have exclusive use of the Gymnastics tonight and that the dance, the performance, the ceremony, the lighting, the music E. H. LINDLEY, Chancellor. BAND MEN TO MEET FOR I. O. Q. F. PARADE: All band men will meet in uniform at 13th and Massachusetts Streets at 6:50 sharp tonight. J. C. McCANLES, Director. STUDENT GUIDES REPORT AT 7:15 TONIGHT: Those who have been selected to act as Student Guides for the L. O. F. O. visitors are requested to report at the building to which they ANNE DUDLEY BLITZ, Dean of Women. JOHN R. DYER, Dean of Men. SAMMA EPSILON PI (COMMERCE SORORITY) INITIATION: SAMMA EPSLON PI (COMMERCE SORONYI) INITIATION: Meeting and initiation service of Gamma Epsilon Pi will be held in San Francisco, CA on Friday, May 14, 2015 from 10:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. RUTH LENNON, President. MRS. JENS P. JENSEN, Patroness. 10OK EXCHANGE OPEN THURSDAY: The Book Exchange will be open Thursday from 8:30 to 12:30 and from 2 to 4. Money will be given out for books sold this fall. Advocates of the six-day school refer us to Manhattan. If we had to watch the crops all the time we would no doubt welcome the system. PEARL PUGH, Manager, Book Exchange. THE TOLL OF THE UNKNOWN The Shackleton-Howett expedition has returned to England from its recent ant-acute expedition, leaving its leader, Sir Ernest Shackleton, in a lonely grave in the frozen wastes of the southland. Another great exporter has paid the penalty of man's dissatisfaction with the knowledge man possesses. The great unknown has taken another toll. In the footsteps of all those of unbounded vision and wandering foot, who have thrust back the darkness of the unexplored and made way for the advance of civilization by charting its path, another brave man has given his life. And yet the expedition is credited with a victory upon its return. "A tremendous amount of solid, scientific work has been done by the recently returned party," the report states. Valuable scientific facts have been added to the sum total of human knowledge. Sir Ernest Shackleton gave his life in his chosen service to humanity, and gave it not in vain. Students so persist in getting in the way of cars that the University Senate will no doubt pass a rule requiring all pedestrians to approach the campus from the west to minimize the danger. THE FRESHMAN CAP Scores of freshmen are on the Hill every day without caps. They think it is clever not to wear them. Their actions a brazen faction of aecred University tradition. This fall at the Olympics they will have an opportunity to win the right to discard the cap next spring. THE FRESHMAN CAP The freshman cap is a tradition of the University. Is it a lethargic and dying institution which does not uphold its traditions? The increasing carelessness with which the freshman cap rule is enforced on this campus is a bad sign. Now it is not for them to choose; the cap must be worn and it is one of the duties of the “K” Club to see that they are worn. If a freshman appears repeatedly on the Hill without his cap, report him to a “K” man. The freshman cap isn’t a dead letter by a good deal. The Kansas has taken a firm stand this fall against the illiterate paddling o freshmen and other forms of hazing. Now it is up to the men of the first year class to show that they are deserving of the effort which has been made in their behalf. The freshman cap works no hardship; no calumny attaches to its wearing. It is a privilege accorded but once in the college career, and provides a convenient means for acquainting the first year man with his classmates. It is a tradition of the University and as such ought to be revered and obeyed. Jayhawk Jargon Here's the layout for a snappy scenario entitled "Within the Law." The last of the Dalton hands is now a successful motion picture producer. A baby at Mason City, Iowa, he reported to have talked five minutes after it was born. It probably said: "When do we eat?" Some of these courses on the Hill are like a merry-go-round. You do a lot of traveling, but you don't get anywhere. More girls are taking cooking in the high schools. If this keeps up, housewives will be common again. If good manners were clothes, some of us wouldn't dare to be seen on the streets. A city ordinance is contemptified in Des Moines prohibiting the overloading of automobiles to the point "where the girls have to sit on the men's laps." Do the learned counsellor think overloading the reason? Our darkest suspicions have been confirmed. For three weeks a downtown confectionery had had several customers buying from their window and they haven't melted yet. Try-outs for membership in Mac-Dowell Fraternity will be held Thursday afternoon in the German Room on the third floor of Fraser Hall. Jack Dickson, president, urges that candidates appear at 4:30 as there will be no further opportunity to try out until next semester. ANNOUNCEMENTS All members of the Graduate Club are asked to meet at the Museum Thursday afternoon, at 5 o'clock, for a hike to Smith's timber. The Sociology Club will meet Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock at Room 210, Fraser. All applicants for scholarships should see Miss Gallo at 304 Fraser, Thursday from 11:30 to 12 o'clock. The Prince Hall 'scholarships' for men and women instead of both men and women instead of women only as previously stated. All members of the Cosmopolitan Club are urged to be present at a special meeting at the hold Sunday Oct. 15, at 2:30 cveck p.m. at the Cosmopolitan House, 1653 Indiana. Attendees will be迎接 to the club will be discussed. E. J. Sweeny, president. The Bacteriology Club will hold an important business meeting at Snow Hall, Room 207, Wednesday evening, s 8-dock—Ann Suderman, s 8-dock. The graduate students will have a picnic Thursday afternoon at Smith's Grove. They will meet in front of Green Hall at 5 o'clock. Kappa Phi meeting has been postponed until Wednesday, October 18. Helen Dayhoff, president. Date for fall election is Thursday, October 19. All petitions must be adequately signed and left with proper fees at Dunn Dyer's office before 5 clock on Monday, October 18, Chairman, Election Committee- O-18 The Woman's Glee Club rehearsal will be held Wednesday evening at 7:30, Room 10, Center Administration building. "SuitingYou" THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULTZ 917 Mass. St. Thomas Shoe Electric Shop When you get better Cleaning & Pressing Service You'll get it here Phone 442 KIRBY CLEANERS 1109 Mass. Drop in Here Anytime The girls also find the privacy of these booths very enjoyable for little groups of friends for lunches and teas. We have pleasant little boots where the men sit and shake after a comfortable, satisfying meal. We serve a large proportion of the student body regularly three times a day and for innumerable short orders during the day and evening. THE'OREAD CAFE E. C. BRICKEN, Prop. Just a Step from the Campus PROTCH The College TAILOR DALE PRINT SHOP Phone 228 WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods Visit the United Army Stores Co 706 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Distributors of Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Army Goods "GIFTS THAT LAST" Z This garter is ideal for men's and women's a long hone-joint—and just right for knickers—because the webbing is soft and软木. Huy by name and nickname, Ms. Co. Bridgewood, to The. T. Parker, Co. Bridgewood, to The. TM. Gustafson E.Z. TRADE MARK REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. SPORT GARTER THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING E.Z. Featured by Leading Merchants BOWERSOCK THEATRE Curtain 8:15 Promptly One Night, Monday, October 16 Box Office Sale Open Thursday, Oct. 11 MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTED NOW *licenses: 75c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50, Plus Tax* William Harris Jr. presents John Drinkwater's ABRAHAM LINCOLN WITH FRANK McGLYNN "I if were a millionaire I would buy a seat for every child in New York City." William L. Ettinger, Supt. Schools, N. Y. C. "No fine play was ever presented in America." Chama Clark. "One of the great plays of this century," John White. "He played it with Senator Henry Cabot Lagoon." "I never enjoyed a play more in my life." Herbert Hoover. "A beautiful and stirring thing. You sit entrusted. N. Y. Times." The Only and Original Company of 39 People Largest Dramatic Organization Extant Kaufman Campus 1094 Chas Kaufman & First CHICAGO Clothes Designed by Kaufman Well Tailored Suits Stylish and correct in balance, drape and design; to fit all men; please varied tastes We know taste differs and we make different models to fit men's mind as well as build. We convert pure wool fabric that will give satisfactory wear to prefectal use, and uphold that quality of tailoring and design which is satisfying to the wearer. We guarantee our clothes. Kaufman CampusTogs Clothes forYoung Men $30-$50 CHAS. KAUFMAN & BROS. NEW YORK JOHNSON SAN FRANCisco THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MARITZA SYMBOLIZES CONTENTION OF SLAVS Three Races Lay Claim to River Boundary of Europe TURKS LEAD NOMADIC LIFE Aurianople Is One of Main Factors in Desire for Thrace Washington, D. C., Oct. 11 (United Press)—"The Maritzia River, the boundary of the European territory which the victorious Turks demanded as soon as they drove the Greeks from Asia Minor, is, like the Rhine, between France and Germany, a symbol and one of the contents among Bulgar, Greek, and Turk," says a builder of the National Geographic Society. "Each of these three people has climbed the Maritza Valley as belonging to it on ethnic grounds," continues the booklet, "and such is the racial mix-up in Thrace an the position of Macedonia which adjoins it, that each has at least some excuse for its claim. Thrace—and indeed all of Remelia or Rumult—as the Turkmen whose tribes then three wards conquered has for five hundred years been in the monarchical condition of being Turkish territory, yet more Christian than Mohammedmans, more alien than TurkMoreover, the non-Turks non-Mohammedmans were more intelligent and more industrious than the Molemns, a fact which has heightened the non-Turkish aspect of the country in spite of the burden of heavy taxation, persecution and massacre which the non-Turkmen have had placed on their shoulders. Turks Rule Cities "More or less unconscionally the Turks seem, throughout their tenure of half a millionnium in Europe, to have considered themselves engaged in a military occupation. In the trade and industry of the towns and cities they did not and could not compete with the Greeks and Jews and Armenians; and in the agricultural purposes of the countryside by the Bulgars and Vlachs and the occasional Greeks who are farmers. "Many of the Turks confined their activities to the cities where they were rulers or soldiers. Those who led the lives of peasants never wholly shook off their nomadism. They were less efficient than their despised Christian neighbors, a fact which led many to a pillaging and massacring them. The Turks humble their station, were armed, while the Christian were not. A. Dreary Plain "Eastern Thrace between the Straits and the Maritza River is of little value agriculturally. It is an unattractive, dreary, monotonous plain with here and there swampy depressions. Large areas of the territory were inhabited by the people give the country the appearance of a desert. When the Bulgarians finally controlled the region after the Balkan war of 1912-13, trakked to Asia Minor; and under the Greek control of the past few years that movement has continued. As a result the Throne was unchallenged in non-Turkish than in the past. On the Maritza and in Thrace, barely 25 miles from the present Bulgarian border, is Adriapole, second city of old European Turkey, and a strong sentimental reason for the Turk's desire once more to possess Thrace. Thracian land was the first in Europe to fall under Turkish sway, and while Constantinople still remained Byzantine, Adriapole was the Ottoman city on the south coast of the Serbans, and finally, in 1433, seized the great city on the Stratsa. There, though in ruins, is the first European palace of the Sultan. the first European plate of the Sub- lite, the grave of the first Sub- lite Mura. "Formerly Adrianope was a thriving center of trade. But as the European portion of the Ottoman Emirate, where most of the buildings in Bengrade and Sofa, released from Turkish control, grew from dingy mud villages to *bustling towns*, *Adle* oplost ground. The city still contains about 50,000 inhabitants, however, and has been an island we and other non-Moslem peoples freely outnumbering the Moslems." "Yellow Jacket" to be Different "The Yellow Jacket," comic publication at Georgia School of Technology, will be different from any college comic in the country. Modern conception will govern both editorial and art work. The first issue which will appear October 25 will be affectionately dedicated to the freshman. Frederick Wolf, e25, visited with his parents at Elliwood over the week-end. Industrial Research Will Be Discussed by Forun Industrial Research is the subject which will be discussed Thursday afternoon at 4:20 in room 219 Fraser at the regular meeting of Forum. Walter Morrison, c24, who spent the summer in Europe engaged in research work, and Dorothy Higgins, c24, will speak. The program will be ended with a short business meeting, and committees for the year will be appointed according to announcements by Lucile Stewart, president of Forum. The constitution will be read. Forum's meetings and membership are open to all students who are interested in the discussion of current topics by well informed speakers. WOMEN TO MEET HERE FOR WORLD COUNCH international Organization 1 Composed of Leaders From Twenty-Eight Countries Washington, D. C., Oet. 11 (United Press.)—A world council of women will meet in the United States in 1925. Women leaders from practically every civilized land will visit America at that time, guests of the National Council of Women, of which the General Council of Women's Cuba is a part. Plans for the quinquennial of the International Council of Women which is the first meeting of the body ever scheduled for America, were launched immediately upon the receipt recently of a cagramble to Mrs. Moore announcing the decision of the Inter-American Hugue, to accept the invitation of the United States Council to hold its 1925 meeting in Washington, D. C. In order to insure the presence of women from every one of its foreign organizations at the Norwegian Quinquennial 1920, an appropriation of 40,000 krone from the Storting was secured to help defy the expenses of the delegates from Iceland, Ukraine, Greece, Serbia, and Austria. In keeping with this precedent the United States Council of Women will Ye Taverne GRO A meal ticket saves a lot of bother—Get one on your next HOUK-GREEN CLO. CO. A— Wonderful Showing of the New Silk and Wool Ties 1230 OREAD $1.00 isit. $5.50 meal ticket for $5.00. proceed to take the necessary steps to appeal to Congress or to either furnish transportation or to charter a vessel. There may be other reasons for the disregard of the foreign delegation. FOR RENT TO BOYS* Large double front room with two study tables and two lights in modern home. Call 6 p. m. 1708. White, 645 Wardrobe, 0123 IF YOU want good laundry work doe call M. Perry, 1116 N. J. Phone 2551. Work called for and delivered. O-12. A. G. ALRICH Engraving, Printing, Binding Rubber Stamps, Office Supplies Stationery Oread Shining Parlor CHARLIE'S Best Shines in Town SITUATION WANTED—Cook or Houseman. C. Todd, 932 New Jersey St. O-12 Best Shines in Town LOST—Ring with three locker keys. Return to Kansan office. O-12 The International Council is composed of leaders of the national organizations of twenty-eight countries including the United States. FOR RENT—One large room at 901 Maine, for boys; also garage for rent. 1988 Black O-12 Mr. and Mrs. Wise of Pawhuska, Okla., visited their son, Quinton Wise, e'28, a few days last week. Beta Sigma Chi, honorary psychological fraternity, held a meeting Friday afternoon in East Administration Building. Dr. C. Rosenow gave a talk concerning the psychological tests given to freshmen. Refreshments were served at the close of the meeting. WANTED—Drummer and Piano player immediately. Call 1658. WANT ADS Stationery Printing by any process 736 Mass. St WANTED—Roommate for man student at 1323 Kentucky. O-13 Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 ↘ SWEATERS go good these cool mornings. Have us clean your old one. WANTED- Boarders. Best home cooking in town. Eat all you want. Chicken dinner Sundays. West door entrance. Same building, University Book Store Anex. Roommates for two boys. 1524 Red. 0-13 75 Phone and be assured of satisfaction LOST—Cap at F. A. U. check stand Saturday evening. Phone 2557 Blue. O12 LOST—Dunhill pipe, in Gymnasium. Saturday. Call 603. Reward. O-13 NEW YORK CLEANERS FOR RENT—Two large rooms for girls, 1116 Mississippi; strictly modern. O-14. ROOMMATE wanted by man student. 927 Indiana St. Close to Hikl and town. All modern conveniences. Phone 1709 Black. FOR RENT—Large front room for two boys. Fine location. Call 2564. O:17 SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire to earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Pleasant work, after school hours. Write J. F. Stanley, 3445 Wayne Ave., Kansas City, ley 3440 Wayne Ave., Kansas City, Mo. —S70 PROFESSIONAL CARD DR. J. W. ORYHON (Dentist) Special attention to prevention and treatment of pyorrhea. 304 Perkins Building. Tel. 507. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Ex- clusive Optometrists) eyes exam- dates; glasses made. Office 1025 Mass. Just a Little Tid to Glove Buyers When President Harding signed the Tariff Bill a couple of weeks ago all kid gloves coming in from the foreign makers cost from $2.00 to $8.00 a dozen more than they had the day before. Already stores that are reordering are paying these advances. As long as our present stock lasts we shall continue to sell at the lower price. We advise buying kid gloves now, especially in long and in gantlet styles. First to save this extra cost but mostly because there will be a real scarcity in a very short time. Suits $40 Protch, the College Tailor Stop at our glove counter and see the new styles in gauntlets and fancy backs and also note prices today. ...Weavers... VARSITY THEATRE Wednesday and Thursday Shows—2:30-4:00-7:30-9:00 p.m. J. H. W. B. Kindred of the Dust By Peter B. Kyne A drama of man's undying faith in the woman he loves. An epic of the great Northwest, fired with the thrill and drama of the famous story. By Peter B. Kynne Kindred of the Dust By Peter B. Kyns Adults, 33c Also Sport Review Children 10c ORDER BEFORE THURSDAY NIGHT Tomorrow is the last day you can reserve your Jayhawker and still get your name in gold leaf on the cover of your book FREE. Sign up and mail in the Jayhawker card which you received and that is all you need to do. We want to prevent a large number of students letting tomorrow slide by without reserving their books. Every place we have gone recently there has been an almost unanimous support of the 1923 Jayhawker, We want to know how many students at K. U. want the best record of their school year—the 1923 Jayhawker, a book with more diversion than any other thing you can buy during this year. By reserving your book now, you let us go ahead with the highly important editorial work. To get you to do this we are willing to stamp your name in gold leaf on the cover of your book FREE. And it is easy to subscribe this year! It is seldom that we talk to anybody who says he does not want a Jayhawker. Last night, for instance, the editor talked to about eighty people and seventy-three of these reserved books. Because some did not get Jayhawker return cards we are printing a duplicate in this ad. Tear it out and sign it. Then mail it at once. Tear it out now. Your Jayhawker is the best investment you will make this school year. Here is the card! → The 1923 Jayhawker "An Aristocrat of College Annuals" E. F. (Ted) Hudson, Editor, Wm. Brehm, Business-Manager. SPECIAL INDUCEMENT By ordering your copy of the 1923 Jay- hawkber before October 12, you can get your hardcover edition at www.jayhawk.com. SEND NO MONEY—SIMPLY MAIL THIS CARD. To Bill and Ted, Business Manager and Editor, 1923 Jayhawk: Please reserve one copy of the 1023 day schedule. I promise to pay upon receipt of your bill. ] $5.00 cash, or [ ] $2.50 now and $3.00 not later than January 15, 1923, with the understanding that my name will be stamped on the cover of my Jayhawker in gold leaf, FREE. Name Address Telephone No. Class. Place a check mark before one of the offers and mail to the 1923 Jayhawk managers. If you want to remit now and relieve yourself of this matter, just mail your check and this card in an envelope and we will forward your receipts. 一 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN KANSAS TEAM LEAVES FOR DRAKE THURSDAY Clark Holds Practice Games Tonight and Tomorrow in Preparation ARMY GAME HARD ON MEN Allen Expresses Appreciation For Many Telegrams Received at West Point The Kansas Jayhawks returned from their eastward jaint late last night and after two days at home and two hard workouts, the Kansas will leave at 8:20 o'clock. Thursday night, over the Santa Clara Valley, they will meet the Drake Bulldog in a game next Saturday. Coach Potty Clark said this morning that the trip home had been hard on the men and its effect might be noticeable in the Drake game. Two hard practices will be held tonight and Thursday, however, and the men will have a practice on Friday and will have a day and a night to rest before the game. They Learned in Army Game They Learned in Army Game "The men learned a lot," Coach Clark said. "We regretted the fact that it had to rain, but the trip an the game were well worth while. The team gained much confidence. "It was a hard vicious game," Coach Clark said. "The field was wet and muddy and the Army team, outweighing the Kansas eleven considerably, drove fiercely at the Kansas line. The punting of McAdams was one of the features of the game, Mac making punts for 30 to 40 yards with not a single kick consistently but outkicked Wood, the army palmer. The play of McLean at end was also one of the developments of the game." Army Has Great Team The Army has a wonderful team according to the men who watched the game. The work of Wood and Smythe was great, these two men proving the two most efficient cogs in the Army offensive. "I never saw any finer play," said Dr. F. C. Allen. "The Army team starts its plays with a snap and a drive not seen in the Missouri Valley. All the men who started in the game for West Point were playing their third or fourth year with the Army, playing his second year with the Army and has played three years with Washington and Jefferson." Many Telegrams Received Many telegrams. Dr. Allen expresses appreciation for the team for the telegrams received before the game, he games. The West Point authorities had declared that never in the history of West Point had so many telegrams received urging a team on to victory. The interest in the game in the east was at a high pitch, according to Doctor Allen. It was estimated that 10,000 persons from New York would have attended the game had it not been for the rain. GIANTS ARE PERFECTION Claims Head Caretaker of Polo Grounds New York, Oct. 11 (United Press) —Henry Fabricius is the boss of the barbers and massage experts who keep the playing field at the Pole grounds perfectly grounded. He is a good one, too. He has one abiding devotion, one unswerving fanatism and one idea of perfection and it is all wrapped up in the New York Giants. His loyalty for John McGraw and bigGiants is too big for the Polo grounds. After his daily afternoon duty of painting fresh white lines around the plate and flicking off every pebble from the velvet-like turf, he to a snap took a field shift and listened there to tell any and all listening to the glory of the Giants and the misery of all other ball clubs. Fabian is willing to admit that Babe Ruth is the greatest hitter of the present day, but he said: "Id like to see Dellahatta in there hitting at that rabbit ball." "I'd like to see Delahanty in there hitting at that rabbit bill." Ruth, he maintains, can be stopped by pitch to him. It smart enough to pitch to him. "The trouble was, until the Giant pitcher showed 'om last fall, that all the pitchers tried to fool him and he killed bad balls. Brothers and all the sluggers told me they struck out most of the time on balls right in the middle. If those American League pitcheres would go out and pitch to him, he wouldn't hit so many home runs. "McGraw knew how to stop him and he did." Harry Kemp, Tramp, Adventurer Author, Poet, and K. U. Student Publishes the Story of His Life An auto-biographical narrative entitled "Tramping on Life," by Harry Kemp, noted as the trump poet of Kansas, has just been published by Liveright. Kemp was a familiar friend to many of his students from 1910 to 1913, and is well known to many of the faculty and alumni. For many years the newspapers have devoted space to stories of his escapes, but now he is relating his experiences as a trump, bumming freights, and advertising over he world. Besides starting a little theater in Minetta Lake, Greenwich Village, a few years ago, Kemp is the author of several plays and a novel. Among his works are "Judas," "The Cry of Youth," "The Thresher's Wife," "The Passing God," and "John Gregory." To some he is known by the fact that he trumpeted all over North America and made a trip around the world, starting with only a quarter in his pocket. Many incidents in his college career evidence his extreme eccentricity of disposition and unconventionality of manner. Kemp possessed an active mind, his thought jumping from one thing to another with such rapidity that the average person could not keep up with him. The story is told that after a conversation with him one day, William Allen White said: "He goes off to find some other person to listen o his views while I go to bed with nervous prostration." Although Kemp was enrolled in the University for several years at spasmoid periods, it is doubtful if he had credits enough to be ranked as more than a freshman. He hated the idea of filling a group. He took only those things that appealed to his fancy. If he did not fancy a course, he dropped it and took up one which seemed to be a superior opportunity to explain his theories to an audience. In studying Plato, he preferred to discuss his own theories rather than those of Plato. In A Latin poetry and harped so much on covered a new metrical system in Latin poetry and harped so much upon it that he made himself a nuance. Kemp was no respector of persons. He held the theories of Plato and other great men in no more cateen than he would those of a junitar. He was a newspaperman and for years editor of "Outlook," was delivering a series of lectures here. Kemp arose and criticized his views as he would those of one of his classmates. One could never tell whether or not Kemp was taking seriously or merely poking fun at the world. One evening after he had returned from a summer spent in the harvest fields, he together with a few friends, gathered in the office of what then the Lawrence World. Kemp was in WATKINS NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. SURPLUS $100,000.00 D. C. Asher, Cashier D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. DIRECTORS C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Ashner, L. V. Miller, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishop Pander's QUALITY JEWELRY Bowersock Shows 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Calls for railroad identification certificates have been more numerous than expected, according to a letter from the Railroad Commission, and the supply is almost ex- It is said of him that he knows human nature better than he knows himself. This Week Last Chance For Reduction on Fares one of his serious moods. Mr. Joseph Murray, now of the Lawrence Journal-World, says that evening Kemp gave one of the finest lectures on Shakespeare that could possibly be given. He often took long walks into the theater alone, to take a ride with it, to see rode a cattle ship to Australia, tramped about this country on foot, and bummed his way on the rods. It is said of him that he knows human nature better than he knows Those who are planning to attend the State Teachers' Convention at Topeka next week and have not yet paid membership fees, will have until the end of this week to do so. After that time, all unused vouchers must be returned with no reductions on tickets will be made. About fifty thus far have paid. The Dining Service Supreme 1922 Theatre WEDNESDAY 1889 tailored to fit guaranteed Shirts Crepe, (not to be ironed) in the newest shades Silk striped madras OVERSEAS SOLDIER SHOW Tea Room Service 33rd Anniversary Specials $2.33 H.R. SEEMAN OFFERS Geo. P. Ide & Co's. Madras and percale Hosiery, silk, 2 pair for $1.33, silk plate, silk and lisle and mercerized, per pair 33c hansted. The certificates are printed in Chicago and the time is now too short for more to be printed before the convention occurs. CLYDE 'RUBE' HOOPER $1.67 R D T" Wiedemann's AS PRESENTED IN FRANCE FOR THE 81ST DIVISION Pauline Frederick in The Glory of "Clementina." An Attack Of Laughing Gas PRIVATE C. C. PILL IN "OH YOU WILD CAT" by Clyde "Rube" Hooper and Company also Doris May in "THE UNDERSTUDY" SkofStadS ELLING SYSTEM LAWRENCE, KANS. Thursday "BOUGHT AND PAID FOR" Adults 50c FALL OUT' FOR THE BIGGEST SCREAM OF THE SEASON Children 25c EX-SERVICE MEN — DON'T MISS IT! BELLS FLOWER SHOP Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS 825 1-2 Mass Phone 139 They're a stylish motor or street coat; stylish coats for rainy weather; stylish coats for fine weather -they're weather proofed; wear them rain or shine. Don't miss it - The Big I. O. O. F. Parade Tonight Welcome Home - K. U. ! Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS Real Utility Topcoats BY SOCIETY BRAND A Have Tickets for Seventeen Hundred Students Basket Ball Only Three Hundred More Can Get Them STUDENT ENTERPRISE TICKETS will be on sale for a few days only at two places—The Athletic Office in the Gym and Dean Dyer's Office in Fraser Hall. They are now selling at the rate of thirty a day. They will not last long. If you are buying, buy now. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XX. NUMBER 25 GRID GRAPH TO FLASH DRAKE - KANSAS PLAYS Electric Scoreboard Will Give Detailed Report at Robinson Gymnasium Saturday WILL CHARGE ADMISSION Sport Editor of Daily Kansar Will Attend Game and Wire Account A play by play report of the Kansas-Drake game will be flashed on the Grid Graph board in Robinson gymnasium Saturday afternoon. The Athletic Association has completed arrangements whereby reports from all out of town games can be received here on the Grid Graph. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, OCT. 12 1990 Admission Charge 25 cents The admission charge to see the play by play report of the Drake game Saturday will be 25 cents. G. B. Patrick, instructor in physical education, has been placed in charge of the Grid Graph, according to an announcement From Dr. F. C. Alam. The Grid Graph board in the gymnasium will give the only complete report of the game, and the athletic department promises a more accurate report than was had on the West Point game. Promise Accurate Report Glick Schultz, editor of the Daily Kansan will attend the game Saturday and will personally take care of the Grid Graph wire. According to the schedule now, returns will start coming in about 2:30 oclock Saturday afternoon. Results of Federal Surveys on Display in Haworth Hall HAVE ACCURATE KANSAS MAP The Grid Graph seems to have made a hit with the K. U. student body, and the athletic department is reporting that the system, according to Doctor Allen, A new map of Kansas, which is of especial importance and interest because of its accuracy, is on display in the front of Haworth Hall. It is one of a group of scientific maps made by the Federal Government to aid the development to a plan agreed upon by representatives of other nations. Smith Urges Students To Get Vaccinations The Kansas map was started with the co-operation of the State Geologic Survey but as the state approves the map, the data have been U. S. G. S. has completed the map. The governments have agreed to the making of a standard world map drawn to the scale of one millionth, and mapped onto maps to those of the states is that the state maps are drawn on a scale twice that used in the world map and on the continent. "We advise every student who has been vaccinated within the last three years to be re-vaccinated at the present time," said Dr. Smith. The hospital records show that since the beginning of school, forty-nine students have been cared for by the University. All students who have not been vaccinated and inoculated for smallpox and typhoid fever should have it done immediately, according to Dr Edward Smith. So far this year few students have been treated to prevent the spread of the disease, and one student has the privilege of being treated against these diseases free of charge at the University Hospital. Rotary Clubs of Kansas To be Entertained Here Invitations to all Kansas Rotary Club members to attend an Intercity Meet at Lawrence on November 4, the day of the Kansas-Oklahoma football game, have been issued by the Lawrence Rotary Club. Mr. and Mrs. William Clay Mowr, of Elk City, Kana., announce the birth of a son, Duane Clay Mowr, at St. Joseph's Hospital in students in the University in 1916. The program includes a luncheon followed by a trip to the stadium to witness the football game. A special event was held in which been reserved for Rotary members. All members of Dean Kelley's sun- day school class will meet at the Meditadult Church at 5:46 ock up. You will go on a bike and wine roast. Parade to Be Feature Of Stadium Dedication The K. U. Stadium dedicatory exercises on the morning of November 11 will include a parade from the down-town district to the stadium, culminating at 11 o'clock, the hour at which firefighters must arrive and duties to be conducted at the Stadium under the State department of the American Legion. According to plans made by the committee, the parade will include the Lawrence Post of the American Legion, the K. U. organization of Disabled Veterans, and the K. U. and F. A. U. hands. QUILL EXTENDS SCOPE OF SUBMITTED PAPERS Recent Decision of Organization Makes Journalistic Productions Eligible For Try-Out Quill Club try-out manuscripts need not be limited as in former years to short stories, verse, and essays, but may embrace such journalistic forms as published in the editorial. This is the recent decision of the reading committee of that organization. This liberal measure has been inaugurated in the University Press of Chicago who might not otherwise be eligible to the club may be admitted. A further change is the decision to accept several shorter articles, veres, or journalistic productions in place of the former rule of one manuscript. The rules governing the scripts are to be marked by the name of the writer printed upon a sheet of paper which shall be attached to the manuscript. This has been decided upon to remedy the confusion with the use of a number on the manuscripts. The dead-line for manuscripts has been set for October 16. Manuscripts may be left at the Quill Club box in Fraser Hall, south of first door. Last year fourteen members were taken in during the year, and a possibly larger number may be pledged this year. GELTCH GIVES FIRST RECITAL The activities of this organization includes the publishing of the Orcad Magazine, a literary magazine of high quality, an annual hike and weiner roast, various social and business meetings throughout the year including lecture programs by prominent faculty members, and a play in the spring written and produced by the pledges. Beginning of the Series Given by Fine Arts Faculty Prof. Waldenar Geltch, of the department of violin in the School of Fine Arts, will give the first faculty recital of the year in Fraser Hall, Tuesday evening at 8:20 o'clock. Professor Geltch was for eleven years professor of violin at the University of Wisconsin, where he gave six hundred recitals for the extension division. During the past year he was the time of the annual under the management of Harry Culbertson. The Oklahoma critics in writing of Professor Gladey's play playing there, said, "Gelch charms his audience with his masterly playing of the violin and inspired his hearers with an admiration for his rare talent." The public is invited to attend the recital Tuesday evening. There will be no admission charges. Governor Allen Awards Commission to Studen The progress of the local unit is further shown by the fact that 28 members of the unit will receive commissions as second lieutenants in the Officers' Reserve Corps from 1934 to 1950 and that 65 members of the advanced course are now receiving commutation of rations at the rate of $9.00 per month. Guy May, M., junior in the University R. O. T. C., is been awarded a second lieutenant's commission in Co. H, 137th Infantry, Kansas National Guard, by Governor Allen. Lieutenant Gerald Gay, of the grant in Co. H, stationed at Lawrence, and has now been assigned for duty with that organization. Frank E. Dunkley, of the School of Engineering, has been promoted to fill the place in Co. C, of the local unit, vested by the appointment of Mr. Lila Canavan, A. B. '19, is coaching girl's athletics in the Endora High Varsity Squad Has Had Two Hard Practices on Stadium Field EIGHTEEN MEN LEAVE FOR DRAKE TONIGHT TEAM IS SLIGHTLY STALE Hence Coach Has Arranged For Full Day and Night's Rest Be at the train at 8:20 to night to give the team a royal send-off. — VIRG MILLER. After two hard practices at home, eighteen Jahayhawk football men, accompanied by Coach George "Potts" Clark, will leave at 8:20 o'clock this evening over the Santa Fe for three falters, howes to play in Iowa Saturday afternoon. The squad will arrive in Des Moines Friday morning. The team is slightly stale after the long eastwind trip and for this reason Coach Clark has arranged the Drake journey so as to allow the team a full day and night's rest in Des Moines before the game. The Jayhawkers will stay at the Hotel Randolph. They will work on the Drake field Friday afternoon, running signals. "Expect Hard Game"—Clark "We expect a hard game," said Drink Clark this morning. Drink has had a team and Kansas is a little worse for the Army trip. But we have an even chance to win." "Expect Hard Game"—Clark The eightteen men who will make the Drake journey are: Captain Higgins, Weildin, Davidson, Cave Ivy, Molean, Black, London, Blacksons, Wilson, Burt, Anderson Haley, Mosby, Boone, Burt, Anderson, Hodges. Long Practice Wednesday Long Practice Wednesday The Kansas squad took a long workout last evening, being on the field for practically no training. The defensive for about an hour and a half with the freshmen using the Drake shifts. Then the varsity took the offensive until darkness stoned the practice. Drake, according to all reports, *nasi sqi uweo $20193 $409 w suqe* *Devine, Bolter and Wilhelm, who* *were instrumental in the disastrous* *battle with the Bulldogs on Haskell* *field last year, are back this year and* *form a formidable trio in the back- field.* A record crowd is expected at the game. An athletic game with Kansas has always drawn large crowds in Des Moines and as the Jets fall to football there for several years, an unusually large crowd is predicted. R. O. T. C. MUSEUM OPENED Military Equipment on Display in Marvin Hall A housewarming of the new electrical laboratory will be the feature of the regular A. L. E. E. meeting, which will be held at 7:30 this evening. A museum has recently been completed in room 16 of Marvin Hall for the department of military science and tactics under the direction of Captain H. J. Casey, professor of military science and tactics. The museum is to be open during the day for the benefit of mentors and students interested in the R. O. T. C. work, according to Captain Casey. This will be the big meeting of the year. Speakers will come from Kansas City to talk. The talks that will be given are: History of the Telephone, by C. L. Warren and Telephone, by C. O., and an informal talk by G. O., Brown of the Kansas City Light and Power Company. The collection on display consists of the following: a model A. E. F. type treatte bridge, fire control apparatus for heavy artillery and coast defense artillery, fuses and sections of 75mm shells, shells, model trenches and trench traces, dug-outs and galleries to same, lithographic prints, an 8-inch flowzier and 15mm gun positioned behind the engineer building. A. I. E. E. Will Open Lab With a Housewarming Cainte Casey stated that he hoped to increase the enrollment in the department by attracting the students' interest in the work in the museum Must Exercise Greater Care in Addressing Mai It has been reported that there has been considerable trouble this year at the University postoffice station in regard to the proper addressing of The postoffice clerk in charge of the University postoffice wishes to call attention to students that all parcel post mail must bear name and address of the sender as well as the address. Initials or street number are not sufficient for return. Attention is also called to the matter of murder, only to the office on 5 o'clock, both at the office on the hill and the office down town. Mail is collected daily at the University office at 9 and 5 o'clock. REMARKS TO LAWS MISQUOTED—ARANT Spirit of Confidential Talk With His Men Is Misunder- Dean H. W. Arant, of the School of Law, declared today that yesterday's account of the School of Law convocation misquoted him in some instances. Dean Arant also maintained that several statements which he had made by Dr. W. L. Burick of the School of Law faculty. The following statement was issued this morning: "Wednesday's Kansan carried an account of a meeting of the faculty and students of the School of Law. The report is inaccurate enough to be misleading, particularly in those parts in which I am quoted. Only the professors who were in the教室 and it was then to say that certain things which they had been made to do during the past week as they passed in front of the law school was about to lend to further trouble between the laws and engineers. I did not say that "Freshman engineering tip the caps when they pass by the steps of Green Hall." What I did say was that men who are engaged in serious problems have a condescension to notice as trivial a thing as the absence of a freshman's cap or the failure of a freshman to tip his cap. Those things may be noticed by undergraduates but not by men engaged in preparation for a dignified profession. I did say that I regarded as unanimely correct that any having or horse-play on the part of a student who is enrolled in a department where he is never subjected to such treatment. In no way did I estimate that engineers or freshman engineers are to be looked down upon by the faculty. I do not view professions or callings as having differing degrees of dignity or importance. I am also quoted as saying that we didn't start this age-long enmity between the laws and engineers. I did not even refer to the beginning of our discussion about it and have no opinion to express. If I were to express any at all on the matter it would be that both crowds are perhaps to blame. The substance of the statement at hand is pressed by Dr Burdick as his opinion. I am concerned because an honest effort to improve the relations between the laws and the engineers has been so distorted that it may well be calculated to bring about the opposite effect." Lost Pocket Books Hold Few Shekels If the pocketshells which are turned in to the Lost and Found department are representative of students' pocketsbooks in general, we are facing a hill. The usual contents of this are a few pennies and street car checks. H. W. Arant. The article lost most, on the campus is the fountain pen. Other articles which go astray are furs, pinto, umbrellas, books and notebooks. The department says soon after it is found, so there is no storage problem in the office. The department reports that the number of things lost this fall has been small. Herbert A. Barmby, A. B.'20, is instructing in food analysis during the coming year and continuing with graduate work in chemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass. RESOLUTIONS LAUD GRADUATES' EX-DEAN Faculty Committee Draws Report Praising Work of Blackmar CITES SERVICE TO SCHOOL Commended For Progress Made Under His Leader- Resolutions relating to the retirement of Dr. Frank Wilson Blackmark the first dean of the Graduate School were submitted to Chancellor E. H Lindley and the faculty of the Graduate School in a recent meeting. Mr. Chancellor and the Faculty of the Graduate School: The committee provided for by action of the Faculty of the Graduate School at its meeting of June 3, 1922, to draft resolutions relating to the first Dean of the Graduate School he had leave to follow as follows: Began Graduate Work Early Graduate work in the University began in the early history of the institution and eighty-nine advanced degrees were granted up to the year 1896. This early work was conducted on a departmental basis without school organization. The Graduate School was organized during the academic year 1896-97 and Dr. Frank Wilson Blackmar, officially connected with the University since 1896, his resignation in 1922 completed an unbroken service in this office of a quartet of a century—a record as to more duration which probably has few if any equals in the graduate schools of the United States. The records of the University show an enrollment in the Graduate School for 1856-95 of thirty-eight students; for 1921-22, 381. During the period of Doctor Blackmar's administration, nearly 500 advanced degrees have been given. A note worthy conservation effort received 14 candidates received the degree, Doctor of Philosophy Faced. Some Opposition The real growth of the school cannot, of course, be fully expressed by mere figures. The Dean of the newly organized school found a certain amount of latent or outspoken opposition to the very establishment of such a school. It was probably inevitable, under the conditions obtaining here as in many other American universities, that some opposition or no less vexations indifference to the school would have continued for a number of years. The situation for a consider able tale called for the fightin' spirit, and this spirit was found in the first Dean. The faculty of the Graduate School is glad to recor dits high appreciation of the long, laborious, and successful service of Doctor Blackman as Dean of the School. He has led in the gradual shaping of an academiccosmos out of conditions in large measure chaotic. He has conceived the school curriculum state but to the nation and humanity at large. It is owing, in large part to his initiative and persistence that the school today has gained a reputable place among similar schools of the country. Among specific signs of progress, of which many other might be noted, are the enlargement and improvement of the system on fellowships, the establishment of a research committee, and the securing of primary importance in any real university, namely, the fostering of productive scholarship. Throughout this long term of service as Dean, the accomplishment of Doctor Blackmar in other lines of public activity has been of notable range and of high quality. In various capacities he has able represented the University and the state from coast to coast. As a member of Defense, and in other ways, he contributed his full share to the national cause in the World War. After years of teaching (continued on page 2) Gets Phi Beta Kappa Chapter The University of Oregon was granted a chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary scholastic, by the council of Phi Beta Kappa at a con- vention held in Cleveland the first of September. It has petitioned Phi Beta Kappa since 1916. Eunice Furney, A. B. '19, is teaching history in the Severance High Pre-Law Students Swell Latin Class This Yea The enrollment in the department of Latin shows a considerable increase over that of last year. The courses offered for Latin I students have twice the number of students that were enrolled last year. There are approximately two hundred students enrolled in the department of Latin. This increase seems to be due to the advisors for the pre-law students advising them to enroll in the Latin 1 classes. The law faculty also seems to believe that the student in the future should have a background of Latin. VIRGINIA SECRETARY COMPLIMENTS Y. M.C.A Problems of Cabinet Discussed by University Representatives Mr. Schulz was here for two days, looking over the Y. M. C. A. field at the University, and left this afternoon for Lexington to resume his work there. He has been football coach for Denver University, and for many years he was an alumnus is an alumna of the latter. Eastern universities almost unanimously gave "Pew people realize the wonderful possibilities of the Y. M. C. A. on the modern college campus," said E. Schulz, secretary of the Y. M. C. A., a university of Lexington, Vn. speaking before the Y. M. C. A. cabinet last night in Westminster Hall. "The K. U. Y. M. C. A. is to be complimented for the splendid showing they made of their hard-hired secretary to lead them," he said. him the place of left tack on the all-American teams of 1914-15-16. His last three years have been spent in M. Y. C. A. work in his alma mater. This morning at 7 o'clock, the W. Y. C. A. served breakfast at Henley Hall to the Y. W. C. A. a cabinet, Sachsen, student ministers, Chancellor Lindley, E. B. Schulenberg, a ringing, a good fellowship, and a fine breakfast added to the occasion, and a roaring open fire contributed a homelike spirit, overcoming the chill of the morning. Chancellor Lindley, arriving rather late, was greeted by the song: "Here comes the chanceller; he is late again," led by Dr. Lawson. Mr. Schultz also made a short tails at one of the freshman inner circle groups which met last night in Mccormick Hall. Ron Cherington, regional secretary of the Rocky Mountain Biome, was also present at the meeting. ALUMNI REUNIONS IN STATE Chancellor Lindley Will Speak at Pittsburg Luncheon next week will mark several University reunions over the state. These affairs are planned by the alumni of the University and are open to all graduates and forger students in or about the cities in which the entertainments will be held. Chancellor Lindley has consented to speak at a noonday buncen reunion at College Collins, A. B. 06, an instructor in Pittsburgh High School, will have charge of the meeting. The Topoka alumni plan a big reunion with a dinner under the direction of Grace Elmore, A. B'12, president of the association. Many Lawrence people are invited to the Secretary of the K. U. Alumni Association, will be the speaker at Hays. Roy Rankin '12, is manager of the Hays reunion. E. J. Sweeney, graduate student in the School of Engineering, is combining his scholastic work with commercial duties. Mr. Sweeney is employed by the Lawrence paper manufacturing Company to make tests to evaluate the efficiency of thebutton of the fuel oil in use by the company. Engineer Working With Fuel Oil Combustion Fuel oil combustion is the line a work on which Mr. Sweeney is doing his graduate work. He uses the plant of the paper company as a test device, this time does work for the company. Mr. Sweeney is president of the Cosmopolitan Club here. UNIVERSITY IS HOST TO I.O. O.F. DELEGATES Nellie M. Young, A.B. 21, is teaching mathematics in the Seneca High School this year. Held Open House Last Night to Acquaint Visitors With K. U. CROWD VISITS BUILDINGS Dyche Museum Most Popular Spot on the Campus A program was given in Robinson Gymmianum to 2,200 of the delegates. The visitors began to arrive shortly after the parade was down over town and by 9 oclock the building was filled with spectators. There was a few numbers and Chancellor E. H., Hindley and Lucian J. Eastin, Granddress of I. O., F. O., gave talks. The University held open house last night in honor of the I. O. O. F. delegates who are attending the state convention being held in Lawrence this week. All buildings were open during the evening to give the visitors an opportunity to get acquainted with K. U. Dramatic Club Gives Plays Chancellor Lindley told of the closer relation of the people of the state to those who were in it that the people would take still more int rest in the coming years. He spoke of the young people who were sent out of the state to go to school and, after they had finished their education away from home, returned and were lost to the state. Marcelle Private sang a so- priose solo, "My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice" by Saint Saens. The Gymnasium was not large enough to hold all of the visitors. It was estimated that 1500 visited the Museum after 8 o'clock. Because of this, the building was held open until 12 o'clock instead of 10 noon. The museum contained no lights in the south room on the third floor of the Museum so it was necessary to show the visitors around by match-light. Chancellor Lindley Speaks The Dramatic Club gave two short plays, "Fourteen" and "The Flower Shop," in *little Theatre* in the basement of Green Hall. There were 150 present at each play. Many were turned away as the room was filled to its capacity. A great many visited the top floor of East Administration Building to see the work that the Fine Arts students are doing. WOMEN SEEK OFFICE WORK Self-Supporters Turn Down Housework, Which Is Plentiful "More University women are applying for office work this year than there are positions offered, and not enough applicants want to do housework," said Mrs. R. D. Bryant, of the Housing Committee, in speaking of the problem of finding places for office work to work their way through school. The general sources of work are, office positions, housekeeping, taking care of children and work at the school, providing requests that all women desire to work fill out schedules of their vacant hours, as she receives many calls specifying certain hours which are required, corresponding spare time may work. There are a great number of girls working their way through the University this year, according to Mrs. Bryant, although the proposition in comparison with that of last year is yet unknown. Allison Goes Home For Operation E. J. "Woodie" Allison, e24, has gone to his home. In Charuto, as the result of a reaction due to an automobile accident last January. Allison is suffering from internal injuries received when the Dodge car he was driving smashed into a concrete bridge 5 miles east of Topka, on the Fort to Fort Highway, from which the vehicle collapsed. Allison is well known to the University students, through his athletic career, having played on the football team of 1920. If his condition will permit, he expects to return to the University later in the semester. Loulie Cleveland, Taughther, A. B. 21, who is now living in Tulsa, Oklahoma, had an article recently in Editor and Published on "How Kansas Editors Help Their Communities." The article is a report on research work done while Mrs. Traugher was a senior in journalism. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University orphanage Subscription price $5.00 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.00 for one semester; 6 cents a month; 15 cents a week entertained an second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kanas, 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 Texas at Austin or the Department of Journalism. Phones, K. U. 25 and 66 - Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phone: 818.655.4444 Editorial Staff The Daily Kansan aims to plea for the university of Kansas to go forward, brushing off the plateau for the desire of its students to be clearer; to be cheerful; to be more creative Editor-in-chief Editor - Ben Hibbs Glass Editorial Director Raymond Dyer News Editor Sport Editor Glik Schubat Editor Alumni Editor Rust Catherine Alumni Editor Rust Catherine Business Manager _Lloyd Ruppentha Astas, Bus. Mgr. _John Montgomery, Astas, Bus. Mgr. _Clyde Burnsaid Board Members Cheater Shaw Dennis Bongos White Mary Hart Caroline Harbrander Devaughn Francis Carlton Powers Lottie Ted Hudson Indiana Blande THURSDAY, OCT. 12, 1922 THAT SIX-DAY SCHEDULE A thirty man is he who does not lick his stamps until he is sure that the address on the envelope is all right. Two influential organizations here have already taken stands against Saturday school, and a number of fraternal organizations have expressed their disapproval of the plan "There's no guess work about it. It would simply mean that I could not be in school the second semester." This remark was elicited from one of the many who are earning either all or part of their living by working Saturdays and at old hour through the week, when approached concerning the proposed shake-up o classes. In taking a stand against the proposed six-day class schedule at the University, the Kansas has maintained that it has back of it the sentiment of the student body. That this contention is true is being demonstrated daily by the action of student organizations and by investigations being carried on among the students. A number of men and women have been interviewed in the attempt to arrive at a fair statement regarding the student feeling about the six-day schedule. Some of the working people have testified that they would "have to make other arrangements," while some have said that remaining in school would be impossible in case the rule goes into effect at the beginning of the second semester. Of twelve working students who were asked point-blank for their opinions, not one could see the advantage of such a ruling, and with eight it meant leaving school. One or two called attention to the fact that the situation here is hardly analogous to other schools where the plan has been put into effect. One man characterized it as a "ruling for a rich man's school." But the objection to the proposed ruling does not end with the students. The sentiment among the faculty is not unanimous for the plan. One faculty member said, "It would scarcely raise the scholastic standing of the University as a whole. Six days of uninterrupted work would pall on most of the students, the evident result being a loss of interest. Aside from the question of work hours for those who are self-supporting, there would be the prevalent danger of overdoing the routine business." Sentiment is against war. Look at all the divorce cases. "OLD STUFF" If Sir Walter Raleigh should offer one of our campus queens the privilege of tripping across a muddle on his expensive embroidered cloak, the Hill "cakes" would remark "old stuff" and the recipient of his galantry would probably giggle and characterize him as a "erazy poor 69ob." Every day on the campus we see an increasing disregard of what we used to call good manners. there is little stopping aside to let ladies pass first; "pardon men" and "excuse men" are not often as heard as occaions demand; recognition of a lady on the street is sometimes confined to the poling of a furtive finger in the general direction of the hat. But the men are not the only ones who forget the little niceties of behavior. Some of the women are just as thoughtless; they rush in "where angels fear to tread," and then wonder why their recension is cool. This slackening in the code of manners is partly the result of the movement for equality of sex and the demands of women that men accept them upon terms of companionship. And being accepted as companions, can they still expect all those serapages and bowings that were the homage due to the maiden of the days of crinoline? The campus is not infested with a bunch of boors. There are few men who would kick the crutches from under a cripple; there are few girls who would forget to thank the chancellor if he should open a door for them. But in our daily rubbing of shoulders with each other there is bounty room for meandering our man Market reports say silver is advancing. If it comes this direction it won't get any farther than the campus! THAT MIX-UP IN TEXAS Texas is in a big political turmoil at the present time, all caused by the question as to whether the name of Earle B. Mayfield, Democratic candidate for the United States senator, shall appear on the official ballot. Mayfield, who is known to have the backing of the Ku Klux Klan, is charged with spending too much money during his cannage. Opponents of the Ku Khux Klan now declare that this organization is responsible for the disruption of the Democratic party in the state. If the district court at Corcigna rules that Mayfield's name cannot appear on the ballot, it will mean that the Democrats will have no official candidate in the senatorial race. The bitter controversy between the Klan and anti-Klan factions in Texas started early last summer when the two semiarbitrary candidates lined up for and against the secret organization. James E. Ferguson, the anti-Klan candidate, was beaten by Mayfield in the run-off. Now it appears rather doubtful whether Mayfield is eligible for the office, for he is accused of having spent more money during his campaign than the Texas laws allow. The outcome of the Mayfield controversy will be watched with much interest for it may reveal just how much power the Ku Kux Klan wields in the affairs of the Lone Star state. Bellie: "Yeh, I'd hate to wear it when I danced with that flat tire. I met the other night. He'd knock off $20 every step he took." Plain Tales From The Hill May: "Did you see that $1800 skipper at that shoe store down town?" In a short time he reappeared, very much out of breath, and proudly displayed a deposit slip from a local bank, leaving a deposit of twenty-five dollars. During the rush of late registration a freshman approached the business office to pay his chemistry laboratory fee. To pay this fee it is necessary to present a deposit card, a credit card, or an insurance card; the embarrassed freshman said that he had failed to bring it, but that he would immediately get it. Innocence Abroad Slander Johhnie bought his little cap, The button on it, white. He loved his little cap so much. He wore it day and night. Kidder (over telephone): "Hello!' is this the Weather Observatory?" W. O.: "Yes." H. L. D Kidder: "How about a little shower his afternoon?" W. O.: "Sure! Take one if you need it." After having taken part in the work done on Campus Day to the extent of swinging an ax for some time in Marvin Grove, I want to say that I think the tradition will be a fine thing. I'm for it! Campus Opinion Bad Feature of Campus Day To the Kansan Editor: But there is one thing to which I want to call attention which seems to me to constitute a serious oversight. On arriving at the grove I apparently orders had been given to deprive nature of underbrush except a small isolated area further to the west. All the luxurious growth of shrubbery, briers and vines in the main part of grove was quickly dis- In past years this has been one of the best bird nesting sites in the vicinity of the campus. It was likewise a very useful refuge for some of them in winter. Of course, much of it was totally unless but a little judicious selection would have made it possible to save some of the best nesting sites and facilitate interfering with the general plan of improvement and so to preserve most of the shelter and seclusion that the birds love so well. The birds are not attracted to many of the bushes on the campus proper and clearing it out destroys the best bird ground near the main part* of the University. The birds must be beyond Potter's and the enquiry. We are told that the feathered creatures are valuable aids in fighting insects that attack trees and vegetation in general and yet we drive them farther away and make life harder for them in this short-sighted fashion. I sincerely hope that if a similar activity occurs in the future, someone will be given authority to make a wise selection of ground that may be preserved for these friends of ours that cannot plead their own cause. Respectfully, Jayhawks Flown C. I. Reed George Body, A. B.'22, is working in the offices of the Missouri-Pacific Railway at St. Joseph, Mo. Laura Harkrader, A. B.22, is now teaching in the El Dorado schools. Maurine Firestone, A. B.'21, is teaching in the department of English of the Anthony High School. William B. Wells, B. S. 22," is with S. A. Sultenie as assistant in rebuilding the water supply system at Ellsworth. Earl Miner, B. S. '22, is working for the Southwestern Bell Telephone Company at Topkka. M. F. Sinnard, B. S. '22, is working in Kansas City for the Independent Stove and Furnace Company, as heating and ventilating engineer. John Wahledet, B. S. 21, is instructor in mechanical drawing in Northwest High School, Kansas City, Mo. Fred Butcher, A. B.'21, a graduate of the Department of Entomology, holds the position of extension state entomologist of Iowa. Although his office is in Ames, Mr. Butcher spends his time throughout the state, aiding the farmers in carrying out a campaign of extermination against such pests as the Hessian fly and chinch bug. Howard Fransworth, B. S. '22, is in Washington, D. C., in government employ. Carl Simons, A. B. '21, is principal of the Philips County rural high school number 1, of Agra. Virginia Haines, c22, manager of the K. U. Follies of 1921 is teaching physical education in the Aitchison high school. Elsie Freisie, who was a speci student here last year, announces her engagement of J. C. Norman, of Kansas City, Mo. Waldkell, a student in the School of Engineering last year, is now employed by the Chicago, Milwaukee, and is stationed at Dear Lake, Mont. Ralph Knoade, B. S. 21, is running a garage in California. Jennie Glendenning, c22, is teaching in the Ottawa High School. Harold J. McKeever, B. S. '22, is now employed on road work in Oklahoma. Howard M. Naylor, B. S. "22, is with the Longrin Airplane Company, at Topeka. Herbert Olson, B. S. '22, is assistant city engineer at Emporia. Official Daily University Bulletin IMPORTANT CONFERENCE ON "RADIO NIGHT." All who have been notified of the conference at 7:30 tonight in the Chancellor's office to discuss plans for K. U. Radio night are asked to report promptly as a number are obliged to leave early to attend other meetings. Copy received by Florence E. Blaes, Editor, Chancellor's Office until 11/00 a.m. Vol.* 11 E. H. LINDLEY, Chancellor. COMMITTEE ON LECTURES AND CONVOCATIONS: A meeting of the Committee on Lectures and Convocations is called for 3:30 Friday afternoon in Room 119 Frunster Hall. For 300 also Friday afternoon in Room 119 Fraser Hall. R. A. KENT, Chairman. ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE, SCHOOL OF EDUCATION: A meeting of the Administrative Committee of the School of Edu- cation is called for 4:30 Friday afternoon in Room 119 Fraser Hall. RHADAMANTHI MEETING TONIGHT; An important business meeting of Ridamanthi is called for 8 o'clock outline in English. DAISY MARITA BISHOP, President, Mrs. HERRERT FRIEls, Critic. On Other Hills Athletic officials of the University of Pittsburgh announce that they have accepted an invitation for a post-season football game with Leeland Stanford University, at Palo Alto, Calif., on December 30. Forty per cent of the student body of Washington University is either entirely or partly self-supporting, according to the survey made by the committee on recommendations of the school. Emporia's contribution to the College of Emporia's million dollar movement campaign will be a gift of a new dormitory for women, to be erected at a cost of $100,000. A campaign for that amount will be included in the budget. The new building will be the third dormitory for the school. The two buildings now in use are filled. The third dormitory will be erected next spring. Funds for the first dormitory erected were contributed largely by H.J. H肺 & Co. of Kansas City, Mo., designed the proposed building. Fairmount College, Wichita, has started a million dollar endowment campaign. Ernest M. Hopkins President of Dartmouth College says that too many people come to school. He would restrict the enrollment to the capable. An "aristocracy of brains," he says, "intellectuals of all classes, rich and proud alike is necessary to save America, according to Presidency Hopkins." ANNOUNCEMENTS Black Helm meeting which was to be held tonight has been postponed indefinitely—Bob Jenkins, President. The mechanical engineers will hold their regular meeting at the Theta Tau house, 1345 Vermont, Thursday evening, October 12, at 7:30 o'clock. Scarab, honorary architectural fraternity, will hold its third annual smoker at Eagle's Hall Saturday October 14. A number of graduates of the department of architecture and Kansas City architects will be there. Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St "SuitingYou" THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULTZ 917 Mass. St. Thomas Shoe Electric Shop Phone 335 PROTCH The College TAILOR The quality of our workmanship and the service rendered is of the very best. The only Barber Shop with a manicurist. PALACE BARBER SHOP PALACE BARBER SHOP 730 Mass. St Frank Vaughan, Prop. Hotpoint Hed-lite Heater Just the thing for these cool mornings when the furnace isn't going. Has gravity switch—no fires if tipped over. Kansas Electric Power Co. 719 Massachusetts St. "GIFTS THAT LAST" Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING ARE YOU THE STUDENT WE ARE LOOKING FOR? To handle our seal and crest stationery; dance programs; banners, pennants, pillows; Xmas cards. 200 Student Representatives. YOUNG COLLEGE & FRATERNITY SUPPLIES REPUBLIC BUILDING, CHICAGO Will the Suit you Buy Stand this Test? Paint being poured into a bucket. Our window display tells the story. You COULD, if it was a Clobberraft Suit—f for a Clobbercraft Suit sur un chapot. Very very test unchanged. PECKHAMS Could you soak your suit in water and then after it had been soaked, dried and preswould be as good as new? Serge Suits $27 Bowersock Theatre Clyde "Rube" Hooper with his company of 12 people presents THURSDAY Shows—7 and 9 p. m. "BOUGHT AND PAID FOR" That Broadway success given with a new twist Doris May in "THE UNDERSTUDY" Also FRIDAY & SATURDAY Shows—3, 7, and 9 A story that every student enjoys football and a laugh should see. "BILLY" Also A Special Feature "IN THE NAME OF THE LAW" ADULTS 50c BOWERSOCK THEATRE Curtain 8:15 Promptly Curtain 81.34% Prompt One N Air Sale Open 16 Box Office Sale Open Thursday, Oct. 11 MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTED NEW 75c; $1.00, $1.00, $2.50, $5.00, Plus Tax $75c William Harris Jr. present John Drinkwater's ABRAHAM LINCOLN WITH FRANK McGLYNN "I I wore a millionaire I would buy a seat for every child in New York City." William L. Ettinger, Supt. Schools, N. Y. C. "No finer play was ever presented in American schools." "One of the great plays of this century is 'The Phantom of the Opera' by Senator Henry Cadot Glose." "never enjoyed a play more in my life." Senator Hoover. "beautiful and stirring things." You sit enthralled, N. Y. Times. The Only and Original Company of 39 People Largest Dramatic Organization Extant THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN E. H. S. BAILEY WRITES FOOD PRODUCTS BOOK Imported Foodstuffs and Cus toms of Tropical Natives Discussed in Detail PUBLISHED THIS SUMMER H. S. Bailey of Savannah Oil Co. Associate Author With Father Caterpillars, ants, and snakes are used as food by the natives of some countries and islands. Prof. E. H. S. Bailey, of the department of chemistry, tells us in his new book, "Foo Products from Afar." The books was written in collaboration with his son, H. S. Halley, B.S. '02, now head chemist for the Southern Cotton Oil Company, of Savannah, Georgia. The books was published summer by the Century Company. Is Pure Food Worker Professor Bailey was a pioneer in one pure food movement and much of his investigation for Kansas was later utilized when the federal government passed its pure food laws. H. S. Bailey was for ten years concerned with the health of our food burden and has made an extensive study of American foods. They set forth in the book many interesting facts regarding the foods that are imported from foreign climes for use in this country. Our foods come from all over the world. The authors state that "variety of foods is an indication of higher civilization." **Names a Variety of Foods** Some idea of the variety of foods that must be imported to satisfy the American palate may be gained from the following sources: coconut, caurant currants, litchi nuts, Brazil nuts, filibertes, bananas, pineapples, pomegranates, rapeced oil, soya bean oil, coconut油 and other nut oils, olive oil, palm oil, oil of tea, tea, coffee, cocoa and chocolate. The numerous uses to which all these products are put are thoroughly discussed in the chapters of this book. Women Display Hopi "Man Wanted" Signs The men of K. U. should take warning. The maidens of the University are on the warpath. One by one they are accepting the challenge. Each day some new Amazon takes up the sword of battle. One day some inspired maiden introduced a new mode of hair-dress on the campus, that of combing her hair in twirls over each car, and she was not the first to custom and the style is spreading fast. But, alas, she was not the first to start this fashion, for the style is old. Years ago the girls of the coni Indian tribal town of Mughalabad when they decided to go on the warmth for a man. So, men of the University, beware! Many of the women are on the trail of a husband, if the preponderance of haircutting is of any significance. The girl who combed her hair thus declared herself about to choose a husband, and immediately chose one from among the village braves. But she did not have much choice, for at the first appearance of this吓tall, all the braves took to the woods; the braves remained until the danger was over. Great Bend Asks Bureau to Study Local Schools The city administration of Great Bend has invited the Bureau of School Service to make a survey and study of the school situation for the district. The Bureau will be the structure of a new high school building, according to Prof. F. B. O'Brien. This is the first time the University has had a chance to do any work section, although they have had surveys in other parts of the state. W. A. A. Freshman Party Postponed The party for freshman women and new women of the University, which the W. A. A. was planning for the evening of October 12, has been postponed indefinitely, according to the announcement of the social committee, this morning. The plans of the committee include a "get-together," with a "get-together," and at the same time meet all of the W. A. A. women, besides getting ingested in athletics and the W. A. A. A. G. ALRICH "How Do They Do It?" Asks the Molihini; Oh, But It's Simple the Native Replys Engraving, Printing, Binding Robber Stamps, Office Supplies Stationery Printing by any process 736 Masts, St surfing — on the beach at Walkiki, borne in on the crest of a huge wave at fifty miles an hour on a surf- board! Does that sound inviting to you? It's an all the year round sport in the Hawaiian Islands, and one of the most beautiful places to visit. Months are required to learn the art; but there's great sport in tlh learning. The white-skinned molinih, lying under the coconut palm, idly dreaming and watching the Hawaiis and other kamainas as they brent the brookers and come to shore in the foam of a wave from ten feet down the coast. In the Sport of Kings getting under his skin and attempts the surf-board. How do they do it? the mollihin asks. And the kamaina explains: After paddling the seven-foot board out beyond the breakers to where the "big ones" form, he is in wait for the forming far off of an extra large wave. When he sights it he starts to paddle with all his strength shoreward. Then the wave overtakes him, he rises on his knees, then to his foot, the "nose" of the board has dipped by this time to an angle of thirty degrees, and in he comes at first, he lifts the board. Soonsthe he takes a "rooper" and does a pierdale, down among the coral, but he comes up smiling, paddles out again and tries it over. Sometimes, from the Queen's surf one can come to shore on one wave, a distance of a quarter of a mile. Body surfing is based on the same principle, but is accomplished without a board. It lacks some of the excitement of the surfboard and is harder to learn. Peculiarly, the larger the board the easier it is to "catch" a wave. The big seven-foot boards are all a strong man can carry, but the waves bring them to shore like a piece of paper. They are shellcaked to preserve them against the sun and salt water. A Hawaiian will make one for about fifteen dollars. Koa wood, used as the construction of best boards and will last for years. This is the same wood of which the ukulele (jumping flea) is made. Deap Blackmar Lauded by Faculty Resolutions No place in the world is there a finer place to surf than at Wakiki. It has been attempted at other beaches, but has not been successful to any extent. A Hawaiian will teach a mollihini for a nominal sum, or will steer an outrigger by the hour. Based on the same principle as the surf-board, is the outrigger canoe, a regular shaped canoe with an outrigger attachment, consisting of a small log about two-thirds the length of the canoe fastened to the canoe with smaller pieces of wood at right angles to it. (Continued from Page 1) (Continued from Page 1) In several allied humilian subjects, he has long been head of a department with his own initiative and organizing ability. In this field he has won extensive recognition as a pioneer and as an authority, and he has served as President of the American Sociological Society. He has had a long career as public speaker, as a leading member of national societies, and as a writer of essays. These results have been gained without neglect of the necessary routine of the Dean's office. The wave is caught in an outrigger the same as on a surfboard and is steered from the rear by an experienced man. It is great sport for surfers, but they are safe from tipping over due to the outrigger attachment. The University, in general and the members of this Faculty in particular are glad that Doctor Blackmar is to remain in active service in the institution. They hope that his freedom from the burdens of the Dean's permit even richer fuller of his life purposes as scholar and publicist. Respectfully submitted, (Signed) W. S. Hunter F. B. Dains S. L. Whitechb Oread Shining Parlor CHARLIE'S Best Shines in Town Suits $40 Protch, the College Tailor OVERCOATS AND SUITS © 1908 Ed. V. Price & Co. Tailored distinctly to your individual measure for $25.00 and up. S. G. CLARKE 1033 Mass. St. F. A. U Hall Varsity Dance! Saturday Night October 14,1922 Blanc's 5-piece Orchestra FOR RENT - One large room at 901 Maine, for boys; also garage for rent. 1668 Black. O-12 WANT ADS FOR RENT TO BOYS--Large double front room with two study tables and two light in modern house. Call Oster 0, p. m. 1793. White, 945 oil2 012 WANTED—Drummer and Piano player immediately. Call 1658. SITUATION WANTED—Cook or Houseman. C. Todd, 932 New Jersey St. O-12 IF YOU want good laundry work doe call Mr. Perry, 1116 N. J. J Phone 2551. Work called for and delivered. O-12. LOST—Ring with three locker keys. Return to Kansan office. O-12 Chicken dinner Sundays. West door entrance. Same building, University Book Store Annex. Roommates for two boys. 1524 Red. 0-13 WANTED—Roommate for man student at 1323 Kentucky. O-13 LOST—Cap at F. A. U. check stana Saturday evening. Phone 2557 Blue. O12 WANTED—Boarders. Best home cooking in town. Eat all you want. LOST—Dunhill pipe, in Gymnasium, Saturday. Call 603. Reward. O-13 FOR RENT—Two large rooms for girls, 1116 Mississippi; strictly modern. O-14 FOR RENT—Large front room for two boys. Fine location. Call 2564. O-17 ROOOMMATE wanted by man student. 927 Indiana St. Close to Hill and town. All modern conveniences. Phone 1709 Black. SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire to earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Please work, in the school hours. Write I, F. Stunner; 345 Wayne Ave., Ames - S72 - PROFESSIONAL CARD DR.J.W. OBRYON (Dartt) Special attention to prevention and treatment of pyrohern. 304 Perkins Building. Tel. 507. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Ex- clusive Optometrist) Eyes examen glasses made, Office 1025 Mass. 0 JJJ Just Received New Silk-and-wool Hosiery $1.65 to $2.50 WELCOME STUDENTS All popular shades in plain and fancy checked designs. Announcing Miss Lucile King will assist you with prompt, intelligent intelligence at our Hosiery department. Oufo Fischer's GINES AIRY GOOD STRESSES WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods Visit the United Army Stores Co 708 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Army Goods Ladies who desire expert Hair-Bobbing Patronize the STADIUM BARBER SHOP "The Shop of Service" First Door South of Von's VARSITY THEATRE Thursday Only Shows-2:30-4:00-7:30-9:00 p.m. Kindred of the Dust By Peter B. Kynn Kindred of the Dust By Peter B. Kynn THE WEEKLY BLOOMING BOOKS 12 A drama of man's undying faith in the woman he loves. An epic of the great Northwest, fired with the thrill and drama of the famous story. Adults 33c MIRIAM COOPER aa Nan of Sawdust Pile; with Ralph Graves, Lionel Belmore and a magnificent cast. Also Sport Review Children 10c Friday and Saturday Bebe Daniels and James Kirkwood in "Pink Gods" Basket Ball Have Tickets for Seventeen Hundred Students Only Three Hundred More Can Get Them STUDENT ENTERPRISE TICKETS will be on sale for a few days only at two places—The Athletic Office in the Gym and Dean Dyer's Office in Fraser Hall. They are now selling at the rate of thirty a day. They will not last long. If you are buying, buy now. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN DR. MOORE MAKES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Professor and Party Examine and Make Map of Colorado and Utah Territory Most of the older deposits have been burned naturally. All the rocks in this locality have a red color by reason of the natural burning. At one place in particular, known as "Smoky Mountain," actual fires were seen burning, and smoke came from a number of other places. In spite of the large amounts of coal remaining there, it is not probable that this will ever be of great value to the nation, as it is more than 175 miles from the nearest railway. Dr. R. C. Moore, with four others, working for the U. S. Geological Survey last summer, undertook the survey of a section of little known country in southern Utah and part of the plateau regions of northern Colorado. Pack muds and horses were the only men living on the plains over an area equaling in size almost a dozen counties in northeastern Kansas. Gridiron Gossip Glick Schultz The older maps of this region were very inaccurate, even the main canyons were only guess work. Doctor Moore's party made the first accurate map of this section, covering approximately 2500 square miles. The geology of this country was mapped in detail. In this section are found some very fine beds of coal. One instance, a section of coal, eliminating some sand partings, had as much as forty feet total thickness in the two or three beds. It had been just nine days since the Jayhawk supporters had seen the Kansas队 in action when the squad trotted on the field last night. There were a good number of loyal roots out. While Coach Clark's proteges were on the road, the long grass on the Stadium field was cut and the men now practice on a short thick skin. It makes a faster field and one of the best in the Valley. "I won't all wet it ball" Wetts cried once last night after several variety fumibles. Potsy was angry with the team, and the trifle team was a trifle trile after the trip. The varsity took the defense for the most of the time and the freshmen usually found a stone wall. After a particularly good defensive play Poty crieed. "The trouble with poty," it says, "that it fights only every other time." Captain Severt Higgins received more than one compliment on his play last evening. Higgins isn't as heavy as the other linemen but he fights on every play. "Proxy" Wilson carries two cuts on his forehead as a result of the Army missile. Five stitches were taken in the cuts and he will probably be able to play in the Drake game although he still has stitches. Proxy also got a kick in the side which is handicapping him some. One thing the learned on the Army trip was to all fall on the man with the ball. A fresh back muffed a pass on a play last evening and as he recovered and started to run, five varsity men hit at once. Cave was riled up last evening. For about five minutes afterwards every play that came on Cave's side was imprinted in front of the line of scrimmage. McAdams and Krueger were showing drive in gaining through the freshman line. And with about five yards to go for a touchdown, Potay enriched Spurgeon to take the ball over center. He did. The practice this evening will be the last hard work before the Drake game. The squand leaves on the 8:20 Santa Fe tonight and arrives in Des Moines Friday morning. After the West Point trip, however, the men will need all the rest they can get. Another K. U. graduate has been added to the school of the School of Engineering, G. W. Bradshaw, C.E. Jane is now an instructor in civil engineering here. Mr. Bradshaw had a year's experience in the county engineer's office at Lavenworth County and has been doing road and construction work at Wimemuca, Nev., for the past year. New Instructor for Engineers Justin A. Blount, M. D. 22, practicing medicine at Burdett. Hockey Teams Prepare For Coming Tournament About 100 women are coming out for hockey practice, in anticipation of the tournament which is to be held some time in November. The juniors and seniors will elect candidates this evening. Olive Ashley was elected captain of the sophomore teams Wednesday evening. Volley ball practice, which comes between the hockey and basketball seasons, will begin in earnest immediately after Thanksgiving. There will be two weeks of practice and one week of tournaments. The women in the class of recreation will play volleyball and run off the tournaments. Fifty points will be given by meets the W. A. to all those who make the teams and twenty-five extra points, to the champion team. NATIONAL SECRETARY SPEAKS AT Y. W. C. A. Haskell Girls Are Progressiv and Very Susceptible to Outside Influence Miss Ella Deloria, national W. Y. C. A. secretary to the Indians, who is now giving a normal training course in Physical Education to the Women at Haskell, spikes at the regular Y. W. A. C. meeting Tuesday afternoon for the women's baseball team, the possibility and need of workers among the Indian women. Although she is a Sioux Indian, Miss Deloria says her education has been such that she did not come in contact with Indian girls until she took up her present work, and never realized how responsive they are and ready to take up all things which tend toward progress. The girls at Haskell under the direction of Miss Deloria are collecting Indian folk games from all the various tribes and hope some day to have them compiled into book form. A Health Month will soon be conducted at Haskell under the direction of Doctor Ellison and Miss Deloria, in which all the girls will have physical examinations. "The Indian girls at Haskell today are the leaders among the women in their tribes tomorrow and the work that is done for them is tremendously worth while," said Miss Delorin, in closing. "They are very susceptible to outside influence and the University Y. W. C, A. which sends Sunday School teachers to Haskell is doing a great deal of good." Disabled Vets meet tonight Japchae Post of the Disabled American Veterans of the World War will meet tonight in the new Chamber of Commerce rooms in the city Y. M. C. A. building at 7:30 o'clock. Important business is to send all officers, and all members are requested to be present. Fame Never Dies, K. U. Student Finds He Still Belongs to Mo. Valley Champs After 11 Years. How a gold-engraved basketball, awarded to a member of the 1910 K. U. basketball team, which won the Missouri Valley championship, lay in the mountains near Eastes Park, Colo., for more than ten years, was found and returned to the owner through the medium of the K. U. alumni office, was related by D. C. Martindell, 112, owner of the basketball, to ALM, a charity that supports alumni association, in a letter received by Mr. Hill this week. According to the letter, Mr. Martindell, having been elected president of the University Y. M. C. A., headed a delegation of K. U. students in conference grounds in Estes Park in 1911. In the course of the conference the party climbed Green Mountain, located just back of the conference grounds. On the trip Mr. Martindell lost his gold basketball, which he had worn as a fob, and despite extensive searching by all members, the party the fob was not found. Eleven years passed. On September 19 Mr. Martindell received a letter from Olive Saunders of Springfield, III. She told him of finding the basketball near the foot of the eastern end of the court. Her only clue was the inscription on the ball: "1910 D. C. Martindell Mo. Valley Champions." A member of her party, Dr. William C. Covert, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, Chicago, wrote to a friend, President Black of Missouri Valley College, for information concerning the person whose name appeared on the basketball in front of the K. U. alumni office, and obtained the owner's address. On October 2, Mr. Martindell received his gold basketball, in almost as good condition as it was eleven years ago when lost. "Keep in touch with your alumina association," writes Mr. Martindell in a moral attached to his letter, "and see that it has your right address at all times, as you never know when someone may write to the association." The Kansas chapter of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers will hold its regular meeting in the new Electrical laboratory, Thursday evening, at 7:30. J. C. Larson, equipment engineer for the Kansas City Telephone Company and chairman of the Kansas City District of the A. I. E. E. to talk on the G. O. History of telephone work. G. O. Brown, assistant chief engineer for the Kansas City Light and Power Company, and president of the Kansas City District of the A. I. E. E., will also talk at the meeting. A. I. E. E. to Meet Thursday The Ice Creams of All Ice Creams WIEDEMANN'S For This Week:— Strawberry—with the fruit Caramel-almond nut Chocolate Vanilla Brown Bread Brick or Bulk Ices :— Pineapple Lemon WINTER COATS Innes, Bulline & Hackman Special Sunday Brick:— Caramel-Almond Nut and Vanilla Phone 182 34 Luxurious Materials, Etc. Silk and Wool Sports Hose $2.00 quality $25.00 up to $59.50 These coats are of Normandi, Armendale, Panvelane and Genora in straight lines, blouse or wrap effects, the new large sleeve and set of straps. The woven Hawaiian Blue and Navy. Collars and cuffs of the same material. $25 to $59.50 Black and Silver Brown and Gold Navy and Gold Delft and Gold Not in years have we been able to offer such exquisite cloths at such reasonable prices. Every advantage is offered the early buyer, choice selections in fabrics, style and range of colors are here for your inspection. $1.50 A remarkable bargain in the newest Hose for women and Misses, beautiful quality, correct color combinations, perfect fitting. Regular $2.00 values, for Friday and Saturday, pair $1.50 Mr. Martindell is now practicing law in Hutchinson. Kimball Inspections Alumni Office Senator Paul Kimball, L.B. '07, of Parsons, president of the Alumni Association, spent yesterday afternoon here, inspecting the Alumni football team. He brought the football team did well at West Point, expressing gratification at the results of the game. Evelyn M. Hughes, A.B. 22, is teaching English in the Augusta Senior High School. Miss LaLantr to Leave for Baker Miss Lou LaLantr has handed in her resignation as secretary to Dean Kelly, to accept a similar position in the office of Dean Baldwin. University of Baldwin. Her resignation will take effect as soon as Dean Kelly can choose her successor. The Tea Room Service Food 3 to 9 P. M. Shop Fireside Dinners by App'tt Phone 1467 1126 Tenn. A Overcoats—Marvelous Values Must be seen to be appreciated. In the newest styles and shades including plaid back uplists with raglan sleeves full belt and box pleated or plain back. $27.33 and $22.33 Seeing Is Believing So Look Them Over. SKOF STADS BELLS FLOWER SHOP Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS 825 1-2 Mass Phone 139 Kansas City's all right for Shows and Hose, but Obers the place for Clothes! --- Sporting Goods and Radio 2nd Floor Ober's and Kansas City carry the same kind of clothes—Society Brand—but Ober's ask less for them. The point is this— It means a substantial saving on every garment at Ober's; with the same range of variety in models, materials and making that you find in the better Kansas City Shops. Now that ought to be sufficient inducement to buy at Ober's at any time; tremendously so now, when the demands on your pocket book are extraordinarily high. CLOTHES for all WEATHERS CLOTHES for all OCCASIONS --- Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS Headquarters for Kirschbaum and Hickey Freeman Clothes CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00 WATKINS NATIONAL BANK C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. DIRECTORS D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Asher, L. V. Miller, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishop Ostericht 1898 A. B. Krugbahn Ös. Pander's QUALITY JEWELRY Saturday Will Be Overcoat Day at Carls -We will have on display a real assortment of All-Wool hand tailored Coats, in foreign and Domestic Woolens. Now Showing New Fall Suits New Fall Caps New Fall Sweaters New Wool Hose New Bath Robes New Pajamas New Flannel Shirts New Corduroy Knickers New Whip Cord Knickers Conservative Models for Men Loose Back Belt Around Models for Young Men The Prices $25 $30 $35 to $50. Glad to show you CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES New Sporster Hats arrived Today— New Flat Wool Sweaters arrived Today— New Soft Collar Shirts arrived Today— THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1. NEXT ALL-UNIVERSITY PARTY IN TWO WEEKS Hallowe'en Games and Stunts Dancing and Refreshments Will Be Featured GALA AFFAIR IS PROMISED Success Both Councils Are Co-Operating to Make Occasion Great A regular old-fashioned Halloween party with lots of games and stunts dancing and refreshments, is promised in Robinson Gymnasium, Friday, October 27, at 8 o'clock. This party is for everybody in the University, and no admission will be charged. A joint committee of the Men's Student Council and Women's Student Government Association met Wednesday to make plans for the occasion, and the hints they have dropped show that it is going to be a gala affair, a typical Halloween party. Use Both Floors of Gym Both floors of the gymnasium will be used. On the first floor there will be all kinds of games and stunts given by students from the eight Congressional Districts, each putting on a stunt characteristic of the dis The refreshments will be typically Halloween, and are sure to be good. The latter part of the evening will be given over to dancing. Will Be Closed Date This is a closed date, and the various organizations on the Campus have signified their willingness to co-operate in any plans made. The three will be between two and three thousand persons at the party. There will be two more sucharies this year, according to Dean Anne Dudley Blitz. One will be in celebration of Washington's birthday on May 4th and another party. The other one will be a spring party and will be given on May 4. HOME ECONOMICS INITIATES Miss Sprague Gives Talk to New Members NUMBER 26. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, OCT. 13, 1922. Home Economics Club held initiation services hast evening at 7:30 oclock in Room 10, Fraser Hall, for the delivery of home economics to the department of home economics. Miss Sprague also set forth the different vocational opportunities offered in the field of home economics. Miss Elizabeth Sprague, head of the department of home economics spoke on the subject of "What home economics is and what it means to the girls." In her talk to the young women, she said, "The prime interest of the home economics course is to teach the students possible, to be home makers and to dignify the position of the women in the home." Following Miss Sprague's talk, initiation was held for these women. Phyllis Reynolds, Bonnie Ramey, Marie Walker, Opal Lynn, Milmed Brown, Doris Childs, Alice Godsey, Edwina Warner, Berrice Graester, Otte-Hickles, Mildred Hughes, Eudrin Ernest, Blanche BECKles, Gladys Cronenberg, Margaret Walker, Josephine Hellman, Janette Wagstaff, and Anne Park. After initiation services and games, refreshments were served. Psychology References Are Now in Spoone Most of the reference reading books for students in elementary psychology courses have been moved from the east wing of the Administration Building to the reserves at Spooner Library. In mentioning the shift, Mr. Manchester, chief librarian, pointed to it as any other one who could be involved in renting housing facilities in proportion to the size of the University library. The combination of the psychology and mathematics libraries has been only a makeshift for room and this fall the increased number of psychology students has caused great congestion in the small library room. While Spooner library is itself crowded there is somewhat more room and the fourteen hour day gives more opportunities for the use of books than the shorter hours of de departmental libraries. Kappa Sigma fraternity announces the pledging of William Mullins, c26. of Kansas City. Reduced Fare Authorized For the K. U.-Aggie Game A cut rate from Lawrence to the K. U-Aggie football game at Manhattan, October 28, was granted the Union Pacific Railway Company by the Public Utilities Commission at Toneka Monday. STUDENTS TURN OUT FOR TEAM SEND-OFF The round trip fare to Manhattan from Lawrence will be $3.75. The regular fare is $5.62. No announcement of reduced fares to the game from towns other than Lawrence is made. Optimism Is Displayed For Out come of First Game in Missouri Valley A large portion of the "thundering four thousand" turned out last night at 8:30 o'clock to see the team off for Des Moines, where they will battle the Drake Bulldogs tomorrow. Although the band was not in evidence last night, there was a considerable crowd and chest displayed by the crowd. The cheerleaders were on hand to lead in the Rock Chalk and other yells, and the whole "ganz" seemed to have the old fight to send the team off to their first game in the Missouri Valley. The crowd surged to and fro in anxious anticipation, and between eloquent outbursts from Cheerleader Miller, who had mounted a baggage truck to explain "what was what," and whose performance ventional members of the gang rent the air with unearthly "y-e-o-w's" and "Kaz-oe-o's." The team arrived in Des Moines this morning and will rest today and tonight so that they may recover from the fatigue of the long trip. The team seemed to be in high spirits, and when the 8:20 pulled out for the north the general opinion was that we were meeting a fighting mob of Jayhawkers. Cheerleader "Virg" Miller announced this morning that everyone is expected to be at the Santa Fe station at noon Sunday, to welcome the men when they are arranged for the hand to be on hand, and also for speeches from the coaches about the game. There will be a tallyho or some other conveyance there in which to haul the team up the "nain drag" in honor of their first victory of the season. Everyone's first time to join in the parade, and make it a real old-time Kansas rally. COMMONS TO TRY NEW PLAN Patrons May Secure Sunday Dinner With Service Because of the continued request for a dinner with service, the K. U Commons will try out a new plan beginning Sunday, October 15. According to Miss Anna Barnum, manager of the Commons, many people wish to be served, especially at Sunday noon, and it is in response to their demands that one-half of the cafeteria will be turned over on Sundays to served dinners. Those who wish to take advantage of the plan may get a four-course chicken dinner, or enjoy a dinner with beef dinner in the evening will be served for 50 cents. The other side of the Commons will serve cafeteria style, as usual. "It is hoped," said Miss Barnum, "that the experiment may prove successful, for we want to give the students the kind of meals they desire. This is what I am asking for anything new for we have been too busy getting started. "this plan does work in other schools. In fact, in many places the commons has come to serve as a meeting place for the entire town, an I cannot see why the project should not meet with success at K. U." Tau Sigma Will Dance in American Fashion Now Tau Sigma, honorary dancing sorcer- intends to take up the American type of dancing as is being used by Hard Doubler of the University Wilton. Anyone who is interested in men's bursary in Tau Sigma can make an rangeings for a tryout at any time. The following women have recently been pledged: Agnes Schnear, Benice Delia, Margaret Armstrong, Fern Hollingberry, Helen Sumptor and Jean Kunz. Day of Kansas-Oklahoma Clash Has Been Set Aside For Them FATHERS GET CENTER OF STAGE 'DAD'S DAY BANQUET IS SUGGESTED Lawrence Rotary Club Will Co Operate With Committee Appointed by Chancellor Fathers of University students will have the center of the stage at the annual Dad's Day to be bequeathed to a grandchild in the class of the Kansas-Oldahoma clan. For many years an annual Mothers' Day has been observed in the spring at K. L. and the Dads have been left out altogether, but through the efforts of the department of athletics, the day of one of our big home games has been set aside for the entertainment of Dad. Will Gather on Campus On the day of the Oklahoma game Dads from all over the state will gather and celebrate with their sons and daughter and encourage it. It has been suggested that after the game there be a Father and Son and Daughter Banquet. The Lawrence Rotary Club has chosen this day for the entertainment of nearby Rotary Clubs and with its support committee appointed by the Chancellor in carrying out the program of the day. It is hoped that Dad's Day will become an annual affair and will make for better understanding and goodwill towards the University at State. Hope for Annual Affair The special committee appointe by Chancellor E. H., Lindley to pla the entertainment will meet at 4:30 o'clock Monday and draw up a program. The committee are as follows Dean John R. Dyer, Dr. F. C. Allel Karl Finn, Stainn Learned,Francis Gerain, Geraldine Pettit, Mary J kirson, Mark Waggener, Elmer Kem pen, Ben Hilbs, Milton Cummings Lillian Mayer, May Ireland, Agne Brady. Sudden silence in the midst of a conversation means that an angel is passing through the room. Don't boast without knocking, or wood. Out of the wrong side of the bee And then as you hurried to the "Dirty Spoon" for breakfast you stumbled and almost dropped you books. Then after the "stack and" he been finished the good friend offer the morning fag and you started t having one third one of the match—well, look out. Friday the Thirteenth! Is there anyone who doesn't have at least a little of the sneaky feeling when that day appears? Not so many. Let the wiser crackers scoff if they want to. They won't be seen taking any chances with good fortune and all that ones with it. On Friday the thirteenth wear odd shoes for good luck. But that is only a starter; for as you labored up the Fourteenth street incline you passed under a ladder which was helping one of the various trees grow straight, and immediately after a nice, dark, very dark, even black kitty crossed the highway in vent of your. What a day! Friday the Thirteenth is Day When Fools Play With Hazel Switches in Dark Graveyards Time to get out the old rabbits' foot which was obtained in a graveyard during the dark of the moon, or the light of sunrise, form of a horsehoe or maybe the cigarette had a gold band on it—if so, cross your fingers and glide along, for you may live through the day in spite of its being the witches' holl- If your ear burns, someone is talking about you and if your nose itches there is someone coming—we all believe these things, sure. But—we can surely testify that finding a pin doesn't bring good luck and when the breaks have all gone the other way the luck does not return because we walk around the chair three times. Not if the man across the table continues to draw the better hands. Associated Journalists To Plan For Conference The superstition of that day is, perhaps, more deeply rooted in the beliefs of the great unwashed than any other. Hoodoos, vootoms, totems and witches, and hundred of aids of various kinds have helped religions—and other things—to get their hold up the mindal mind. And they are with us yet. Some of them, more or less familiar, are: To touch a street car brings good luck. To Plan For Conference The Associated Journalists will meet in the lecture room in the Journalism Building at d'clock Wednesday afternoon. Ted Hudson, president of the Associated Journalists, has called the meeting so that plans for the entertainment of the state editors of the high school newspapers may be made and officers elected for the coming year. Refreshments will be served immediately afterward in the rest room upstairs. All students taking work in'the department of journalism are required to attend journalist's organization and are urged to attend the meetings. LIBRARY ASSOCIATIONS OF AMERICA TO MEET "My Summer in Europe" is to be an interesting talk by Julius Lucht, of Wichita. Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska Will Have Charge of Program Kansas, Missouri, and Nebras... Library Associations will conduct the official regional meeting of the American Library Association to be held at St. Joseph, Mo., October 17-19. "The Library and the Community," "The Library of the Future," and "The Library in the Country" are subjects for other interesting talks. Gamma Epsilon Pi, honorary commerce security, held initiation services for the following last night Ruth Lennen, Ruth Ohmer, Anna McCracken, Mary Henry, Mary Sparks Daisy Bishop, and Beatrice Abrams E. N. Manchester, director of libraries at the University of Kansas, will talk at the library round table on the general problems of libraries, reserve books, student assistants, etc. Willis H. Kerr, librarian at the Kansas State Normal School at Emporia, will tell "As It Is in Kansas." His assistant librarian, Anita Hostetter, sister of Marie Hostetter, classifier at Spooner, will also be at the conference. The old wood pile out back by the barn has produced a lot of queer instruments of pleasure and pain. But neither from there or from the forest primeval could we produce a forked peach or hazel switch that would lead to weathnt from oil wells or to weathnt from a decent spring of drinking water. Maybe a cat has nine lives. But none has reported that the full number had ever been counted. But when kiky crosses the path you can bet that year's shoes lace that grief in great gals will arrive, pronto! Maybe. (For ladies only) After you may counted a hundred boys with red neckties, the first boy you see with a blue tie on is the one you will marry, and the first boy you see with a black tie is the one you will count. A hundred gray baggies, you The hills of the south are rich in folk lore and superstition. A few of the lower ones are: But here's the limit: At 2:00 o'clock on the first Thursday in July todds turn pink in color. At 2:10 they reheat themselves in the oven. But then remember, that one (News for the men). It brings bad luck to comb your hair on Sunday. will marry on the day you count the last one. If you look in a coffee pot, you will be an old maid. comes from the home and origin of the world famous mountain dew. The day is over. If you have survived all the pitfalls of an institution for higher learning and have escaped saved all the pitfalls of an institution for higher learning and have escaped the grasping clitics of the few remaining friends, it's your turn to be merry. But, if you feel a bit uninterested you may withdle with the date and get yourself out there. As they say here, there and everywhere: A fool for luck. GYMNASIUM OPENS AT ONE FOR DRAKE GAME Twenty-Five Cents Admission Charge to Cover Cost of Grid Graph IS ONLY REPORT OF GAME Missouri and Other Schools Are Installing the Apparatus Now The doors to Robinson Gymnasium will open Saturday afternoon at 1 o'clock for the crowd to watch the Drake game on the Grid Graph, according to an announcement from the Athletic office this morning. The reason for the charge of 25 cents to the electric score-board was also explained by the office. The board is the property of Potter Harbor and its revenue is only loaned to the University and run on a commission basis. Charges for leased wires, putting up and taking down the board, and express charges are some of the expenses incurred in the showing of the Grid Graph. Operate Nine Grid-Graphs Potter and Howtenstein are a Columbus, Ohio, firm, and now have Grid Graphics operating in nine schools, according to Mr. Howtenstein, who is the chair of the grid graphics department operated the Grid Graph for the West Point game, and instructed the two members of the department to provide education who will work it tomorrow. From here Mr. Howenstein went to Columbia, Mo., and later to South Bend Ind., to see about putting up Bend Ind., to see about putting up boards at the University of Missouri and Notre Dame. The delay and inaccuracies shown in the operation of the board last Saturday are largely due to the unfavorable weather conditions, according to "Phog Allen," who transmitted the plays. The board was set up on a typewriter in a drizzling rain, and consonantly blurred. Reports Start at 2:30 **Report** It is time for the large crowd will turn out for the scoreboard showing tomorrow. The plays will start coming in a few minutes after they are actually run off on the field at Des Moines, and should show the first one a little after 2:30, accorded by the whistle blows to the kick-off. No Calls Taken at Gym The gymnasium will be the only place that a complete report of the games can be obtained, and no reports will be sent out from there till after the end of the season. No telephone calls to the gymnasium will be taken care of as in the case of a court injunction with the Grid-Graph. The stores down town cannot procure but menger reports until after all reports and plays have been given in the gymnasium. SOUR OWL CALLS FOR COPY "Who's,Who" Edition Will Fly Homecoming Day More material is needed at once for the "Who's Who" edition of the Sour Owl, due to fly November 11, according to a statement this morning by the editors. November 1 is set as the deadline for copy. placed on the campus walk Monday. All who desire to contribute either cartoons, editorials, jokes, or anything else of a printable nature are encouraged to attend early. A few excellent cartoons are already in the hands of the editors. From all indications the forthcoming "Sour Owl" will be a veritable knockout. The plan being followed is to take them from the freshman and sophomore classes as possible, so far they have contributed some "hot" stuff. New Room for Home Economics A store-room is being fitted up in the basement of FraserHall for use by the Textile Department of the apparel room has undergone a fresh coat of paint and enamel and cupboards, a work table, sink, and a large cabinet of drawers have been installed. All carpenter work has been completed and everything is in readiness for installation. The other mechanical devices used in the manufacture of clothing materials. Attention! "We thundering thousands"~Watch next Monday's Kansas for dope on the "Rooters Section." Room for one thousand on the fifty yard line, so be on your toes.—Vrg Miller. Pi Kappa Alpha Will Broadcast From Atlanta The first radio concert ever given by a fraternity will be broadcasted from W. S. B., The Atlanta Journal, Atlanta, Ga., tonight. Two chapters of PI Kappa Alpha will furnish the music. But the most probably consist of musical numbers. Announcements of the concert have been sent to all chapters of the fraternity and the program will be heard by many, as the W. S. B. station at Atlanta is one of the most powerful in the United States. SENIOR WOMEN SPREAD PLANNED FOR OCT. 1: All Are Invited to Be Present at Gymnasium For Real Mixer All senior women will be entertained at a senior women spread in Robinson Gymnasium, October 19 at 6:15 o'clock. It will be a real mix for fourth year women and a social event will be elected for the F.L. lowering year. Tickets will be on sale at the Frazer Hall check stand Monday and Tuesday. "We request every one to buy their tickets early," said Marion McDonald who has charged of the ticket sales. "We must get an idea of what women to be present so that plans may be made accordingly." "We invite and expect every senior woman to be present," said Elva M. Mulen, chairman of the present social committees. Following the spread a yell-rule will be led by Mary Helen Hamilton, cheeredleader. After Tuesday tickets may be procured from the following persons: Geraldine Pettit, Neator Moore, Francis, and Mya Linga Felter. First Faculty Recital Will Be by Violinist GELTCH TO GIVE PROGRAM Prof. Waldemar Geltch, at the School of Fine Arts, will give a violin recital in Fraser Chapel, Tuesday evening, October 17, at 8:20 o'clock. This will be the first faculty recital of the year. The public is invited to attend and no admission will be charged. Professor Geltch will be accompanied by Mrs. Geltch at the piano. The program which Professor Geltch will give is as follows: Converto. Gininger. Brüsch Allegro Energico corto, G-minor ... Bruce Allegro Moderato leading into ... Ajegiro Energio Nocturne, E-minor ... Chopin-Auer Dire Nussbaum ... Schammann-Auer La Gitania (Arabo Spanish Gypsy Song of Century) ... Kreisler Value Blütte ... Droger-Aru- Hymn to the Sun ... Kunaky-Kormakoff-Pranko By the Brook ... Boiseffde Dreams ... Wagner-Aru- Prelude and Allegro, Pugnani-Kreisler Graduate Visits K. U. on Way From Mexico City Mr. and Mrs. Glenn L. Allen of Mexico City, Mexico were visitors at the University Thursday morning, where they will meet and are visiting relatives in Topka. Mr. Allen received his B. S. in 1915 in Mining engineering, specializing in mining; he went to the University of Utah and took work in metalurgy, and now is engaged in mill design and process developing. Of the Mrs. Allen is a graduate of the University of Utah. Contract Let to Complete Kansas to Tulsa Paving Wichita, Kansas, Oct. 13 (U.P.) Hard painting from Lyons, in Rice County, to the Oklahoma line, a distance of more than 150 miles, will be a reality within the next year. The letting of a contract by the commissioner County for twenty-six miles of concrete paving completes the chain. With proposed paving projects in Grant County, Okla., this new nawing will virtually connect Kansas and Oklahoma together by a paved high-grade road that would complete the paved road to Tulsa, Okla., from the Kansas line. V. S. Harding, student at the University of California, was arrested for speeding. He was given the ticket and took a one day in jail. He took the jail. KANSAS TEAM RESTING FOR FRACAS--SCHULTZ Sport Editor Wires Condition of Team in Special to Daily Kansan DRAKE SQUAD IS CRIPPLED K. U. Line-Up Different Due to Injuries of Spurgeon and Wilson By Glick Schultz) Dest Moines, 18, attended *13* (Special for the Kansan).—With only one casualty, Dr. F. C. Allen, who was left in Kansas City, the Kansas Jayhawks arrived here at 7:30 o'clock this morning, and after a good breakfast arranged by "Dae Bailey," followed by a coach George "Pete" Clark. The players got little sleep last night and they are tired from the trip. After resting all morning, the team will run a short signal practice in Drake Field this afternoon. The squad is staying at the Hotel Randolph. Drake Squad Is Ready Coach "Ossissi" Soiten put the finishing touches on his Drake Bulldogs last night. The Drake squad will run a short signal practice this afternoon in the final practice before the game here tomorrow. According to a report given out this morning, two Drake men, Blanchard, at back, and Heath, at end, will not be able to fracas because of injuries. The fracas, two men will not weaken the Drake team materially, however. All Des Moines is talking football today. Three valley teams are in the city, Kansas, Missouri and Drake. The Tigers are stopping at the Hotel Fort Des Moines, and after a signal practice on the Drake field today, will be tonight for Ames where they meet the Cyclones tomorrow afternoon. Lonborg Will Start The lineup for tomorrow's game will probably be changed a little from that of last Saturday. Lonborg will start the game at center; and McAuliffe will play back, but McAuliffe will play halves; Burt, fullback, and Kruger, quarter. Wilson, Spurgeon and Weildein of the first string squad are all on the injured list and will not be used unless needed. Wilson is suffering from a wrenched back received in practice this week in addition to the injuries which he received in the West Point game. Veldelin, varsity centered at a bad hole, and is also suffering from a charley-horse. Spurgeon had his leg hurt in last night's practice and while the injury is not serious, Coach Clark feels that it is not best to use him except in an emergency. The game tomorrow is scheduled to start at 2:30 o'clock. MacDOWELL ELECTS TWENTY Thirty-Three Candidates Try Out For Membership At the tryouts for admittance to the MacDowell club, twenty new members were elected into the club. The tryouts depend upon ability in any one of the branches of the department of fine arts. The following were successful among thirty-three applicants: Elizabeth McLauren, Frances Robinson, Anna Pedersen, Margaret Butcher, Monita Caldwell, Catherine Crissman, Clyde Lucas, Kenneth Millem, Mable Mauber, Hugh Brown, Ethel Vernon, Melissa Parker, Doris Chapman, Normile O'Brien, Yula Jean Bennett, Verda Weyer, Kenneth Alexander, Hazel Knaus, Gladys Fitzgerald, and Myrt乳Mart. The initiation of these new members will take place Thursday, October 26, in the German room on the balcony. The students will be filled out will be held until next semester. In the tryst held yesterday admittance was sought by saxophone players, vocal solosists, impersonators, and various instrumental performers. IN APPRECIATION It has come to the attention of the Kansan that a large number of local dealers who co-operated with the committee on Campus Day have not met the deadlines and have furnished samples below the regular wholesale rates, and in some cases charged actual cost only. were Hunter Brothers, Weldemanns a woman named Dolls the san is glad to thank the dealers in behalf of the students. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas Subscription price $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.00 for one semester; 6 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 at the University of Alabama, the press of the Department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Editorial Staff The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate at the University of Chicago for further than merely printing the news in newspapers. The University holds, to play no far off write; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courageous; to be wise; to learn to wiser heads; in all to embrace the students of the University. Editor-in-chief Ben Bliba Editor-in-chief Glaser News Editor Raymond Dawyer Spotlight Editor Spotlight Editor Glick Schubla Editor-in-chief Glick Schubla Alumni Editor Ruth Carrger Alumni Editor Business Staff Business Manager ___ Lloyd Ruppenthal Asst. Bus. Mgr. John Montgomery, Jr. Asst. Bus. Mgr. ___ Clyde Burnish Board Members Chester Shaw Dani Boggs Lievelyn White Perry Johns Caroline Hirrsker Devaughn Francis Carlon Powers Roland Blanc FRIDAY, OCT. 13, 1922. English are preparing to clean Turkey. Local poultry dealers say this won't affect Thanksgiving even if they do clean her. OUR LITTLE GAME Each year in the fall and again in the spring for a short period 3500 average students at the University forget love, love, and studies. They forget gospass, "Pi" and "Van." Society sinks to a low ebb under a political full moon. The student body "tees off" for an eighthe hole course on the political green—and many are the hazards. This game is called "Hill Politics," and Hill e ought to be shot for inventing it. Everybody is "It." The chief "Its" are either Black Mask or Pachacamac. The rules of the contest are simple. You mount your chair and appeal for the "spirit of the thing," while a brother politician looks on with unstinted admiration. You are now an accomplished "It." You can, without strained conscience, cut three classes in the morning and throw cardboard at your admiring friends on their way to the poll. This, done, if you are patient and clever, enough, you may vote twice. If you are both patient and clever, you may vote three times. If you are patient, unseruptions, and very, very clever, you ma vote an number of times. If you are only a plain "It," you can wear a tag, talk free of charge, and hand out cards between classes. Whatever you are, at the end of four hard days the University's crew of political posters are harvested, and the administration officers still eat three meals a day, just as though the University heart beat had neither slackened nor quickened. Yes, each year "the BEST man" is decided upon, stands before us, addresses us, is wildly applauded, and finally sinks back as one of the four thousand. Modern writers on etiquette say it is all right to eat chicken on the cob with the fingers. What about boarding house beefsteak? A. POOR START Federal Judge Wilkerson in his court in Chicago the other day signed the naturalization papers for an Italian, even though he answered the judge's questions from alps of paper concealed in his hat. Judge Wilkerson felt that the Italian showed great dexterity in trying to get by. It is the same old story of to little responsibility in the men who hold the future of America in their hands. Naturally it must have been an amusing situation to find the can-didate reading the names of government officials out of his hat. But could there have been a worse beginning for an American citizen? Is it not likely that Mr. Italian will feel enough elated at the deceitful pursuit of the serious tests and qualifications of a United States citizen that he will in the future operate his business in a similar manner? WHY CROWD THE STAIRS? It is to be regretted that a number of students who have morning classes in Fraser Hall take it upon themselves to loiter on the stairs of mining between the ten minutes allowed between classes is for the purpose of giving the students time in which to change from one building to another. Many students have to rush in order to get to the Administration Building from the third floor of Fraser in the ten minutes alloted to them, and if the stairs are congested by groups of gossiping loiterers they are delayed sometimes three or four minutes before reaching the lower entrance. Then, too, there are several crippled students attending the University who find it imperative to use the stair ballasture for support when going from one floor to another, and when the railing is lined by certain thoughtless persons, as is usually the case, they are forced to seek a less popular throughfare or else run chances of serious injury. The congesting of the Fraser stairs is, no doubt, the result of thoughtlessness on the part of those who choose the stairway rather than the landing for their lounging place. Nevertheless, it is very bad conduct and shows a lack of consideration for the welfare of others. Isadora Duncan, the American dancer, has married a Russian poet, Serge Yvesenin, and neither speaks the language of the other. What an asset to the maintenance of combivalace! Campus Opinion Doesn't Believe in Chivalry To the Kansan Editor; I have a few thoughts which I believe would be of interest to you readers on the "campus manner" controversy. Once upon a time iron-clad and plumed, knights of the kings did homage upon bended knee to Woman. Time was when men sought only to one of a bowed head and an obvious reverence. History has seen episodes when men would risk their lives for a woman's whim—that was chivalry. With the passing of old campus landmarks, old campus traditions, and old campus ideas of medieval chivalry, have gone out the e-bob-wiki campus notions about deference to womankind. Some say the manners of the men of the University have grown in cost of this consideration for women. Within the past ten years has occurred a change in the man's attitude toward the fairer sex, a change marked by a disregard for the ordinary little marks of respect, insignificant though they may be. Before the Great War man's defence for woman could not be rebuked. He was attentive and respectful. And, too, she was demure and pretty. What did the doughboy come home to, after the war? His erstwhile sweetheart had crammed through a hole in her office and office shoes of his chum who had responded to the call of the colors! His kid sister had taken up business law and was now chiming with the vice-president of one of the local Woman is filling a new niche in the world—the business world. She is striving desperately, by one means or another, to place her hands on the earth. What can she expect in return? Bowing, scrapping, complete deference? Over in England the returned Tommy mounted a street car, conducted by an unhashed bold-faced young woman who admonished his startled feet to "snap into it." Over in the locomotive "round-house the girl he had hoped to make his wife was climbing all over an engine, garnishing its exterior. Her face was amirched and smeared with oil. Those were the women to whom they were to graziously tip their hats! No! Courtesies and manners are not innate. They are acquired. And just as easily are they abolished Woman has seen fit to enter man's court. Man can insects more than to be treated like one man treats another. To bring it down to campus manners, woman ought to consider it a compliment when a man tips his hat to her! W. R. H. Habert Shiedley of Kansas City, a former student at the University, is to be married October 18. Jayhawk Jargon Since they've taken to giving menta tests to freshmen, it is no wonder the yearling enrollment is decreasing. Eating rains furnishes the body with iron. Will too many make the joints rusty? We wonder what the Aggies want with a stadium. What they need is a stable-um. Scientists have discovered that the sky is fifty million light years bigger than they thought. That will give more room for air castles. "The dullest books have the thickest covers," said the bald-headed man. Now that the Professor Cady and others of the Hill faculty have broken into Wha's Who they are almost on top of, and who they know in Littleton and other great Americans. A good many of the "sacred cows" of journalism are merely sick calves. Mirror worship is more popular than church worship. The University student has been taught at least one thing by the student hospital. It is that throat gargles will cure anything. If the D. A. R. who are collecting clothes for the Near East Relief will drop a rug or two at the Kansas office, we will donate them to certain K. U. frails who are not aware that the styles have changed. Miss Herberta Towner, A. B. '22, is teaching Spanish and French in Cottey College, a school for young women, at Nevada, Mo. We read that the telephone companies are complaining of finding lead coins in their pay boxes. What appropriate place for a "phone" box? WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods United Army Stores Co 706 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Army Goods Visit the Ladies who desire expert Hair-Bobbing Patronizs the STADIUM BARBER SHOP "The Shop of Service" Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. First Door South of Von's Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 "Suiting You" THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULTZ 917 Mass. St. Thomas Shoe Shop Electric Oread Shining Parlor CHARLIE'S Best Shines in Town PROTCH The College TAILOR The Food Shop Tea Room Service 3 to 9 P.M. Fireside Dinners by App't. Phone 1467 1126 Tenn. Official Daily University Bulletin TABLE SERVICE AT UNIVERSITY COMMONS: Many requests have come to the Commons to give some form of table service, and the experiment will be tried on Sundays and evenings until further notice, beginning Sunday October 15th. The west side of the room will be reserved for such service at the following rates: Copyright received by Phi Delta Theta until 11:50 a.m. Vol II Oct. 13, 1922 No Vol. II Sunday dinner .75 Sunday supper .50 Week days, supper .50 A la carte service from counter 10 cents per person above total amount of check The usual cafeteria form of service will continue on east side of room. ANNA H. BARNUM, Director. COLLEGE ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE: The Administrative Committee of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will meet at 02:30 o'clock Saturday morning, in the Office of the President. J. G. BRANDT, Dean. BAND PRACTICE: BAND TRAIN Band practice is scheduled for Saturday afternoon at 2:30 in Fraser Church. Practice necessary. EDUCATION SEMINAR: There will be a meeting of the Education Seminar at 3:45 o'clock Monday afternoon, in Room 209 Fraser Hall. ay afternoon in Room 205 Fraser Hall R. A. KENT, Dean. DAD'S DAY COMMITTEE: A meeting of the Executive Committee on Arrangements and Program for Dad's Day is called for 4:30 Monday afternoon in Room 113 Fraser Hall. GIRLS Last fall's dresses dyed black look better than new ones. Phone 442—Kirby Cleaners 1109 Mass. Are you going to step out tonight without having that suit pressed? Ye Tanerne Dissatisfied With your board? Buy a meal ticket at Ye Taverne $5.50 for $5.00 Bowersock Theatre Friday and Saturday Shows -- 3 - 7 - 9 p.m. Clyde "RUBE" HOOPER and his company of 12 people in "BILLLY" also A football hero that had a bit of hard luck and makes laughs recuperating. Special Feature Picture Special Feature Picture "In the Name of the Law" Adults 50c Children 25c TAKE HER TO BRICKS K. U.'s eating place for Sunday evening dinner. Where the food is always of the best quality—choice meats and vegetables cooked by skilled chefs who add just the right zest and flavor to make your meal appetizing and delightful. Phone us now----592—so we can reserve a table for you for Sunday night. THE OREAD CAFE E. C. BRICKEN, Prop. Just a Step from the Campus Fred Bobrekha, c. e. c. 22, is assis- tendent of federal aid project at Gar- rant county engineer and superin- nett. "GIFTS THAT LAST" Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DL LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING Clever Styles—Practical and Attractive Popular Oxfords for Fall Ton and Brown, Sand er Black Suede and patent trimming, black calf and potent—unusually popular and chic NEW YORK $5.00 THE SPOT CASH SHOE STORE Varsity Dance! F. A. U Hall Saturday Night October 14,1922 Blanc's 5-piece Orchestra BOWERSOCK THEATRE Curtail $15 Promo Credit One Night Gallery October 16 One Night Gallery Box Office Sale Opens Thursday, Oct. 11 MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTED NOW Prices: 75c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50, Plus Tax William Harris Jr. present John Drinkwater's ABRAHAM LINCOLN WITH FRANK MCGLYNN "I were a millionaire I would buy a seat for every child in New York City." William L. Ettinger, Bupt School, N. Y. "No fine play was ever presented in Annette's room." One of the great plays of this century, William Allen White, sent to Senator Henry Cabot Lodge. "I never enjoyed a play more in my life." Herbert Hoover. "A beautiful and stirring thing. You sit enthralled. N. Y. Times." The Only and Original Company of 39 People Largest Dramatic Organization Extant THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas Subscription price $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.50 for one semester; $6.25 a month; 15 cents a week Entered as second-class mail marten September 17, 1916, 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 De- partment of Journalism, from the press of University of Kansas, from the press of the Department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phones. K. U. 25 and 66 Editorial Staff The Daily Kannan aims to picture the students of the University of Kansas to go for university standing for the doles the vines to be cleaned, the wives to be cleaned, to be cheerful; to leave more serious problems to those who want to be students at the University. Business Staff Editor-in-chief Bern Hilbs Editor-in-chief Clarence Davis Raymond Daydow News Editor Robert A. Farris Sport Editor Glick Schubert Editor-in-chief Glck Schubert Alumni Editor Hillary Bauer Alumni Editor Ruth Carrer Business Manager Lloyd Ruppenthal Assst. Bus. Mgr. John Montgomery, J Assst. Bus. Mgr. Clyde Burnside Chester Shaw Dean Boggs Lievelyn White Perry Joneys Miyi Hart Caroline Harkerdrick Franklin Francis Carlon Power's Orland Blank FRIDAY, OCT. 13, 1922. English are preparing to clean Turkey. Local poultry dealers say this won't affect Thanksgiving even if they do clean her. OUR LITTLE GAME Each year in the fall and again in the spring for a short period 3500 average students at the University forget home, love, and studies. They forget gipi, "GiPi" and "Van." Society sinks to a low ebb under a political full moon. The student body "tees off" for an eightth hole course on the political green—and many are the hazards. This game is called "Hill Politics" and Hill ought to be shot for inventing it. Everybody is "It." The chief "Its" are either Black Mask or Pachacamac. The rules of the contest are simple. You mount your chair and appeal for the "spirit of the thing," while a brother politician looks on with unattested admiration. You are now an accomplished "I." You can, without strained conscience, cut three classes in the morning and throw cardboard at your admiring friends on their way to the poll. This, done, if you are patient and clever, enough, you may vote twice. If you are both patient and clever, you may vote three times. If you are patient, unscrupulous, and very, very clever, you ma vote an number of times. If you are only a plain "I," you can wear a tug, talk free of charge, and hand out cards between classes. Whatever you are, at the end of four hard days the University's proof of political posters are harvested, and the administration officers still eat three meals a day, just as though the university heart beat had neither slackered nor quickened. Yes, each year "the BEST man" is decided upon, stands upon us, addresses us, is wildly applauded, and finally sinks back as one of the four thousand. Modern writers on etiquette say it is all right to eat chicken on the cob with the fingers. What about boarding house beefsteak? A POOR START Federal Judge Wilkerson in his court in Chicago the other day signed the naturalization papers for an Italian, even though he answered the Judge's questions from slips of paper concealed in his hat. Judge Wilkerson felt that the Italian showed great dexterity in trying to get by. It is the same old story of too little responsibility in the men who hold the future of America in their hands. Naturally it must have been an amusing situation to find the candidate reading the names of government officials out of his hat. But could there be a worse beginning for an American citizen? Is it not likely that Mr. Italian will feel enough elated at the dacitious passage of the serious tests and qualifications of a United States citizen, that he will in the future operate his business in a similar manner? WHY CROWD THE STAIRS? It is to be regretted that a number of students who have morning classes in Fraser Hall take it upon themselves to lotter on the stairs of of that building between class periods. The ten minutes allowed between classes is for the purpose of giving the students time in which to change from one building to another. Many students have to rush in order to get to the Administration Building from the third floor of Fraser in the ten minutes allotted to them, and if the stairs are congested by groups of gossiping loiterers they are delayed sometimes three or four minutes before reaching the lower entrance. Then, too, there are several crippled students attending the University who find it imperative to use the stair hall篮架 for support when going from one floor to another, and when the railing is lined by certain thoughtless persons, as is usually the case, they are forced to seek a less popular thoroughfare or else run chances of serious injury. The congesting of the Fraser stairs is, no doubt, the result of thoughtlessness on the part of those who choose the stairway rather than the landing for their lounging place. Nevertheless, it is very bad conduct and shows a lack of consideration for the welfare of others. Iandora Duncan, the American dancer, has married a Russian poet, Serge Yasenin, and neither speaks the language of the other. What an asset to the maintenance of conubia' beace! Campus Opinion Doesn't Believe in Chivalry I have a few thoughts which I believe would be of interest to your leaders in the "campus manner" converse. Once upon a time iron-chad and plumed, knights of the keys did homeread upon bended knee to Woman Time was when men sought only to gain favor from a pretty face by virtue of a bowed head and an obvious reverence. History has seen episodes when men would risk their lives for a woman's whim—that was chivalry. But that was "once upon a time." With the passing of old campaniamarks, old campus traditions, and ancient ideals of mutual chivalry, have gone out the col-whiby campus notions about deference to womankind. Some say the manners of the men of the University have suffered in the loss of this consideration for woman. Within the past ten years has occurred a change in the man's attitude toward the fairer sex, a change marked by a disregard for the ordinary little marks of respect, insignificant though they may be. Before the Great War man's defence for woman could not be rebelled. He was attentive and respectful. And, too, she was demure and pretty. What did the doughboy come home to, after the war? His erstwhile sweetheart had crammed through a window in her office shoes of his chum who had responded to the call of the colors! His kid sister had taken up business law and was now chinning with the vice-president of one of the local No! Courtesses and manners are not innate. They are acquired. And just as easily as they abolished Woman has seen fit to enter man's courtroom to exact in more than to be treated like one man treats another. To bring it down to campus manners, woman ought to consider it a compliment when a man tips his hat to her! W. R. H. Hubert Shiedley of Kansas City, a former student at the University, is to be married October 18. Over in England the returned Tommy mounted a street car, conducted by an unashed bold-faced young woman who admonished his started feet to "snap into it." Over in the locomotive "round-house the girl he had hoped to make his wife was climbing all over an engine, garnishing its exterior. Her face was amirched and smeared with oil. Those were the women to whom they used to gracciously tip their hats! Woman is filling a new niche in the world—the business world. She is striving desperately, by one means or another, to place herself on an equal footing with man. What can the expect in return? Bowing, scrap- We wonder what the Aggies want with a stadium. What they need is a stable-um. Eating raisins furnishes the body with iron. Will too many make the joints rusty? Jayhawk Jargon Since they've taken to giving mental tests to freshmen, it is no wonder the yearling enrollment is decreasing. Scientists have discovered that the sky is fifty million light years bigger than they thought. That will give more room for air castles. "The dullest books have the thickest covers," said the bald-headed man. Now that Professor Cady and others of the Hill faculty have broken into Who's Who they are almost on an equal footing with Charles Chapman. A good many of the "sacred cows" of journalism are merely sick calves. Mirror worship is more popular than church worship. We read that the telephone companies are complaining of finding lead coins in their pay boxes. What appropriate place for a "pony coin" is there? If the D. A. R. who are collecting clothes for the Near East Relief will drop a rug or two at the Kansas office, we will donate them to certain K. U. frails who are not aware that the styles have changed. The University student has been taught at least one thing by the student hospital. It is that threat gargles will cure anything. Miss Herberta Towner, A. B., '22, is teaching Spanish and French in Cotte College, a school for young women, at Nevada, Mo. Army Goods Army Goods WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods Visit the United Army Stores Co 700 Muscle Stors. St. LAWRENCE, KANAS Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Ladies who desire expert Hair-Bobbing Patronize the STADIUM BARBER SHOP "The Shop of Service" First Door South of Von's Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 "Suiting You" THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULTZ 917 Mass. St. Oread Shining Parlor CHARLIE'S Thomas Shoe Shop Electric Best Shines in Town PROTCH The College TAILOR The Tea Room Service 3 to 9 P. M. Food Shop Fireside Dinners by App't. Phone 1467 1126 Tenn. Official Daily University Bulletin Vol. II. Oct. 13. 1922. No. 26. Copy received by Florence E. Bliss, Editor, Chancellor's Office until 11:00 a.m. TABLE SERVICE AT UNIVERSITY COMMONS; Copy received by Florence E. Bliss, Editor, Chancellor's Office Many requests have come to the Commons to give some form of table service, and the experiment will be tried on Sundays and evenings until further notice, beginning Sunday October 15th. The west side of the room will be reserved for such service at the following rates: Sunday dinner .75 Sunday supper .50 Week days, supper .50 A la carte service from counter 10 cents per person above total amount of check. The usual cafeteria form of service will continue on east side of room. ANNA H. BARNUM, Director. COLLEGE ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE: The Administrative Committee of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will meet at 6:30 o'clock Saturday morning, in the Office of the Dean. J. G. BRANDT, Dean. BAND PRACTICE: Band practice is scheduled for Saturday afternoon at 2:30 in Fraser Chapel. No uniforms necessary. EDUCATION SEMINAR: There will be a meeting of the Education Seminar at 345 o'clock Mon day afternoon in Room 209 Fraser Hall. DAD'S DAY COMMITTEE: R. A. KENT, Dean. A meeting of the Executive Committee on Arrangements and Program for Dad's Day is called for 4:30 PM afternoon in Room 113 Fraser Hall. GIRLS Last fall's dresses dyed black look better than new ones. Phone 442-Kirby Cleaners 1100 Mass. Are you going to step out tonight without having that suit pressed? Ye Tannerne Dissatisfied With your board? Buy a meal ticket at Ye Taverne $5.50 for $5.00 Bowersock Theatre Friday and Saturday Shows -- 3 - 7 - 9 p.m. Clyde "RUBE" HOOPER and his company of 12 people in "BULL LY" A football hero that had a bit of hard luck and makes laughs recuperating. also Special Feature Picture "In the Name of the Law" "In the Name of the Law" Adults 50c Children 25c TAKE HER TO BRICKS K. U.'s eating place for Sunday evening dinner. Where the food is always of the best quality—choice meats and vegetables cooked by skilled chefs who add just the right zest and flavor to make your meal appetizing and delightful. Phone us now—592—so we can reserve a table for you for Sunday night. THE OREAD CAFE E. C. BRICKEN, Prop. Just a Step from the Campus Fred Bonebrake, c. e. 22.3, is assa- tendent of federal aid project at Garnt- tance county engineer and superin- nett. "GIFTS THAT LAST" Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING Popular Oxfords for Fall Clever Styles—Practical and Attractive Ton and Brown, Sand or Black Suede and patent trimming, black calf and potent—usually popular and chic METROPOLITAN $5.00 THE SPOT CASH SHOE STORE Varsity Dance! F. A. U Hall Saturday Night October 14,1922 Blanc's 5-piece Orchestra BOWERSOCK THEATRE Curtain 8:15 Promptly One Night, One Promptly Oct. 16 Box Office Sale Offers Thursday, Oct. MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTED NOW Prices: 75c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50, Plus Tax William Harris Jr. presents John Drinkwater's ABRAHAM LINCOLN WITH FRANK M'GLYNN "I were a millionaire I would buy a seat for every child in New York City." William L. Ettinger, Supt. Schools, N.Y.C. "No noir play was ever presented in Ann Arbor," Champ Clark. "One of the great plays," William Allen White. "The movie was actually acted." Senator Henry Cabot Lagos. "I never enjoyed a play more in my life," Herbert Howen. "A beautiful and stirring thing. You sit enthralled. N. Y. Times." The Only and Original Company of 39 People Largest Dramatic Organization Extant STUDENTS IN EUROPE LOOK TO U.S. FOR AII Walter Morrison Tells Women's Forum of Summer's Research in Foreign Countries THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LIVING CONDITIONS BAI Dorothy Higgins Talks of Esperiences While Working in a Denver Restaurant "Students of European countries and the United States need to get into closer touch with each other," she added. "A little afternoon to the Women's Forum." Mr. Morrison was one of a group of forty students from twenty-three colleges in the United States who traveled three months through Holland, Germany and Austria-Hungary and used them for the purpose of industrial research. In speaking of student relief, Mr. Morrison said that students in Germany were managing to live and that was about all. He visited a refugee camp and reported that conditions there are unbelievable bad. "Things that we would be ashamed to have survived in those tables," was the way he espanted "but it was the best they c-oId with the funds available." "Scientists over there are just now recovering from the war, and want to know what other countries have done in the meanwhile. They desire and need exchange of scientists' journals from letters in letters from foreign students." Mr. Morrison gave the opinion that France is demanding an indemnity twenty-fold too much and that the variable German mark will not become stabilized until the indemnity was definitely decided upon. In concluding Mr. Morrison said, "We have come back enthusiastic for the League of Nations. We feel that it is the only hope for returning to normal." Miss Dorothy Higgins, c24, talked for the Women's Forum of her experiences while working in a restaurant in Denver, Colo., for the purpose of studying the conditions of work and the working girl from the inside. "It was a valuable experience, in that it taught me sympathy with labor," said Miss Higgins. "I feel that although labor should have a headache to understand capital, capital needs a backbone to understand labor, and the reformer needs a hair cut." Fred Zoellner, of Tonganoxia, a former student of the University, who is attending Manhattan this year, has been boarded at the Alba Tan Omega house. Campaign For One Million Will Be Launched Soon C. OF E. TO BUILD DORMITORY Emporia is to have a new women's lormitory, the gift of Emporia to be the College of Emporia million mov- ement. The second and third floors are to be used entirely for rooming purposes. Eighten rooms will be uilt on each floor, each room open- ing in a bathroom. There will be ix individual and twelve double rooms on each floor. Prominent features of the rooms will be the large, roomy cloets, two in each double room and large enough to accommodate a steamer trunk and leave plenty of room beside; and small porches, opening out from each room. The plains are made so that every room will be an outside one. A wall or partition extends the length of the building and there will be an elevator at each end. The dormitory will cost $100,000. The citizens of Emporia will launch a campaign 20 to raise this sum. If the weather permits, work on the building will begin about January 1. The dormitory will be ready for the fall term 1923 and will accommodate ninety-six women. The Zoology Club, which was to have met last night, has been postponed until next Wednesday evening, when the same program will be carried out. The meeting was postponed because Dr. Robertson, who was to have talked, was in charge of the eugenics exhibit given by the department for the benefit of the visiting U. O. F. ANNOUNCEMENTS Pen and Scroll will accept no manuscripts from new candidates who are seeking admission later than November 1. Tryout manuscripts may only be instructed by an instructor at the department of English—Walker Means, president. The W. A. A. party which was scheduled for tonight, has been postponed indefinitely, according to Nestor Moore, president, who says that on account of there being so many other parties and meetings at present, the W. A. A. will have theirs at a later date. All Presbyterian women are in invited to a tea to be given Saturday afternoon at 4 o'clock at Westminster, where those who can are urged to come. The Jewell County Club will meet for organization Sunday afternoon at 2:30 w/look at 844 Louisiana Street. The Jewell County is expected to be present. The Sociology Club will hold its regular meeting tonight. STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT, CIRCULATION, ETFs, OR SOLUTIONS FOR DEVELOPMENT OF REAL ESTATE IN THE STATE OF KANSAS of the state of Kansas. Russian published a week a week at Kansas, Kansas State of Kansas: Powell of Douglas Before we see, Natory Public in and for the State and county aforementioned, please contact us to discuss your request. We are open to law, clerkship and desire that be in the Business Manager of the University College. Our staff is a statement of the ownership, management and circulation, stewardship of the property, and all related documents. Art of Congress of August 24, 1912, embodied in section 434, Point Law and Ac Fidanoff, University of Kansas board, Lawrence, Kansas. Editor, University Daily Kansas Board, Lawrence, Kansas. Publisher, University Daily Kansas Board, Lawrence, Kansas Editor, University Daily Kansas Board, Lawrence, Kansas 1. That the names and addresses of the publisher, editor, managing editor, and business managers are; Managing Editors, University Daily Kansas Board, Lawrence, Kansas Business Manager Mauzer H. Dlund H Lawrence, Kansas That the owners are: (Gives names and addresses of individual owners, or if a corporation, gives its name and the names and addresses of stockholders or stockholders. The University Daily Kansas is maintained by the department of Journalism of the University of Kansas as a laboratory for classes 3. That the known bankholders, mortgages, and other security holders have never collapsed or been involved in any other securities. None. 4. The number of copies of each issue of this publication is not more than 100. owning an existing website is not necessary. None of the contents contained in copies of each issue of this publication sold or distributed through the mails or other means to paid subscribers during publication. sold or distributed through the mail or otherwise, to paid subscribers due the six months preceding the date shown above. LOYD H. RUPPENTHAL (Signed) S Sworn to and adjourned before me this 11th day of the year. (SEAL) (Signed) International expires late 1986. KAHL, KLOOZ BELLS FLOWER SHOP Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS 825 1-2 Mass Phone 139 Suits $40 Pander's QUALITY JEWELRY Protch, the College Tailor WATKINS NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President A. Hinn, Vice President Chairman of the Board. C. H. Tucker, President A. A. Hall, Vice-President and D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick' Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. DIRECTORS C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Ashler, L. V. Miller, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishon Chairman of the Board. Alumi Board to Meet Nov. 10 The regular fall meeting of the Alumi board of directors will be held on the evening of Friday, November 10, just before the Homecoming celebration. J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishop FOR RENT - Room in modern home for two boys. New furnace, close to hill. 1216 Tennessee. 2531 White. LOST—Tortoise shell glasses in case, Thursday morning. Return to Kansan office. Phyllis Reynolds. WANT ADS WANTED—Girl roommate, comfortable room, moderate rent. 1204 Kentucky. Call 1050. LOST—Pearl earring, one large pearl, silver chain, nine pearls on pendant. Reward. Phone 2205. ROOMMATE WANTed by man student. 927 Indiana St. Close to Hill and town. All modern conveniences. Phone 1709 Black. DOWN arrow without being shirt would be THINK how soiled a washed for a month. NICELY furnished room for one or two men in strictly modern home. Phone 2621. 1037 Tenn. St. O-13 Think of your outside clothing, FOR RENT—Two large rooms for girls, 1116 Mississippi; strictly modern. O-14 run to the phone and call SEVEN FIVE NEW YORK CLEANERS FOR RENT—Large front room for two boys. Fine location. Call 2064. O-17 836 Mass. St. o earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Please work; after school hours. Write I, F, St. do: 244 Wayz Ave, Room 600. do: 549 Wayz Ave, Room 600. - S73 iPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire DR. J. W. ORYON, (Denist) Specia- tation to attention to prevention and treat- ment of pyrrhrea. 304 Perkins Building. Tel. 507. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive Optometrists) eyes examn glasses made. Office 1025 Mass PROFESSIONAL CARD We like to do little jobs of repairing GRUEN 12 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Whether you have a watch to clean and repair or a broken part to be replaced. 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 in the shortest possible time. Expert Workmen to Do Your Work And All Work Is Guaranteed THE COLLEGE JEWELER Gustafson Ye Shon of Fine Quality Luther Gustafson, Mgr., Repair Dept. CHURCH OF THE SACRED HEART RALLY! SUNDAY IS RALLY DAY at the FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH SUNDAY SCHOOL NINE FORTY-FIVE Start the Habit Sunday "NO MAN IS FULLY DEVELOPED WHO STARVES HIS SPIRITUAL NATURE." Forsythe Waists Gordon Hosiery A Specially Selected Group of SATURDAY SPECIAL Silk and Wool Dresses $24.75 Chiffon Velvet Dresses $34.75 Just Received Handkerchiefs Drescher's Correct Apparel for Women & Misses Silk Underwear 10 Sweater The quality of our workmanship and the service rendered is of the very best. The only Barber Shop with a manicurist. PALACE BARBER SHOP Frank Vaughan, Prop. 730 Mass. St. VARSITY THEATRE Friday and Saturday Shows—2:30—4:00—7:30—9:00 p. m. Bebe Daniels and James Kirkwood in "PINK GODS" Pathe News Fun from the Press Adults 28cts Children 10cts also The lure of diamonds—a heritage of the ages! See how it caught three lives in its glittering mesh and plunged into a wild adventure. 6 In selecting this store for your clothes needs it means that you feel we can give you better value than you get elsewhere. A special showing of Suits and Overcoats for Saturday. Thank you—for the purchase you made here today. But our thanks cover more than the mere purchase. $25.00—$30.00—$35.00 Houk-Green Clo. Co. The House of Kuppenheimer Good Clothes J. F. B. M. KODAK He insists on plucking discords and borrowing your clothes—yet you wouldn't trade him for any other room-mate or part with the Kodak pictures you make of him. Kodak pictures—time exposures, snap shots—are clean-cut stories that grow priceless in value as the years speed by. And they are easy to make. Our Kodi's counter is complete. Come in and look it over. Autographic Kodaks $6.50 up ROUND CORNER DRUG COMPANY 801 Mass. Lawrence, Kan. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN CROSS COUNTRY TEAM IS MAKING FAST TIME Course Has Been Altered So Spectators May Better View Workouts Fast time was made by the cross-country candidates in a trial run held yesterday afternoon. "Ace" Wilson fleet-footed captain, led the field, finishing more than a minute ahead of the second man. The order of the finish was: Wilson, 26:30; Schab, 27:48; Grady, 27:8-2; Merrill, 27:57; Pratt, 28:12; Coghill, 27:17-1; Kenderson, 30:35; Treal, 30:53. Lewis, one last year's freshman runners, finished second but was disqualified on account of 'nellegibility. The course has been somewhat altered in order to give the spectators a better chance to see the start and the finish of the race. The runners now start in the hundred-yard dash and go around to the south end of the track, up on the hill past the tennis courts, up on Mt. Orland east of Administration. From there they follow the usual route and finish in the Stadium, coming in on Illinois Street, under the truck to the starting point. Coach Schalademm is pleased at the showing of the men and says they are in better condition now than the women we have at this time in previous years. The first meet will be held with the Aggies on October 28. Ascending to advance dope, the K. U. runners should win over the Aggies, as the latter have only one man back, Henry, who has ever made much of a showing. Price is a fair runner, and Willey, who won the mile and the half mile, both in fast last year in the Missouri Valley freshman telegraphic meet, is making an impressive showing. HOCKE / CAPTAINS ELECTED Great Enthusiasm Shown by Sophomore Teams The following captains have been elected for this year's football teams; senior captain, Mary Helen Hamilton; junior captain, Gladys Snyder; sophomore captain, Olive Ashley; junior captain has not yet been elected. Much enthusiasm is shown by the sophomore team this year, probably due to their having won, as freshmen in basketball in a tournament by a total score of 14 to 0. The games will be arranged the same as last year with freshmen against freshmen; sophomores against sophomores; juniors against seniors; and each class's team play. Each team will until every team has clashed. Missouri Bonus Fund Low and Claims Still Come In The average claim has amounted to $133.20, the largest claim to be paid is $250, and the smallest, $10. Jefferson City, Mo., Oct. 13 (United Press)—Soldier bonds claims approved and paid by the state of Missouri now total 97,850. The amount paid on the claims stands at $13,613,560. Of the $15,000,000 of bonds issued for the fund, $1,822,190 remains. The bonus fund will soon be exhausted and the commission has already made arrangements with a committee of the state constitutional assembly to credit an amendment carrying $7,000,000 so that all alimony may be paid. Cerele Francais Hears "Le Cid" The Corcie Francais held a meeting yesterday afternoon at which Prof. J. L. Salvan told the story of "Le Cid", a play of the 17th Century. The most important scenes were played on the Victoria as they acted by "The Comedie Francais," a famous cast in Paris. Fred McEihinney, of Manhattan, will spend this week end at the Alpha Tau Omega house. E.Z. E.Z. TRADE MARK REG. U. E. PAY, OFF. THE ORIGINAL WIDE GARTER You wouldn't wear a back brace. Way blind vine and muscles with a garter that depends on ad- justed tightness. No adjustments on the back. QA CIL emba E. to B. E. She to B. everywhere, in single-crip and the F. Z. grip, and the F. Z. Sport Garter. Made solely by The Thue. P. Taylor Co., Bridgesport, Conn. Featured by All Leading Merchants American Legion to Hold Aviation Meet in Salina Salim, Kans., Oct. 13 (U. P.)—An aircraft taxi meet on track with prices totaling $1,500 will open here tomorrow. The meeting will continue three days under the direction of the Salim boat of the American eligion. Ten airplanes from Kansas City and entries from Detroit, Denver and a number of towns in Missouri and Kansas are expected. Six events are scheduled for the meet—two races, parachute jumping, wing walking and acrobatic feets. LEAVE FOR RIFLE RANGE R. O. T. C. Unit Will Practice at Six Corners Rifle practice by the University R. O. T. C. unit will begin tomorrow morning at the K. N. G. rifle range at Six Corners. All second, third and fourth year men who want to go should be at the corner of Ninth and Massachusetts at 8:30 o'clock prepare to take the truck for the range. The government furnishes all supplies and ammunition. Capt. H, J. Casey states that this is a genuine opportunity for the men to get some real experience on a well developed range, since there are firing corners at 200, 300, 500, and 600 yards. Each shot fired by the men coat the government in order to be permitted to make the trips until they have completed the elementary training with the 22 caliber rifle in indoor practice. The University rife team will be picked from the men making the best showing on the range trips. The men will be chosen, given sweaters with the rife队 insignia, and will compete with nearby university rifle Freshmen will be eligible for membership on the rifle team when they have completed the indoor target practice. Y. M. Sophs Use Course of Study The Sophomore Inner Circle group of the Y. M. C. A. met tuesday night in myer's Hall and decided upon its course of study for the coming winter. It covers internal and industrial problems of foreign countries, and will begin with Japan. Alpha Omricon Pi announces the pledging of Frances Pringle of LeRoy The Ice Creams of All Ice Creams WIEDEMANN'S For This Week:— Strawberry—with the fruit Caramel-almond nut Chocolate Vanilla Brown Bread Brick or Bulk ELEANOR HANSON WINS TITLE Ices:- lces:— Pineapple Lemon Special Sunday Brick:— Caramel-Almond Nut and Vanilla Pl. 109 Phone 182 Eleanor Hanson, 'c25', is the champion in the K. U. girls' tennis tournament. The tournament began last spring with twenty-four entrants, but was not completed until yesterday afternoon. Is Champion in Girls' Singles Tennis Tournament In the semi-finals between Eleanor Hanson and Lela Duna, Eleanor Hanson won the two required sets, 6-5, 6-2. She was champion in the finals against Vera Krebbiel, 6-4, and 6-4. Miss Hannon has spent most of her life in China where she says tennis is played a great deal. She remarked that it was interesting to note the difference between the strokes of the English with whom she played in China, and the strokes of Americans. The English were the originators of the game and have an individual way of playing. Tennis doubles will be played off next week. Lela Duncan and Vera Krishelbison will play the sophomore upper classes for the final championship. The junior and senior Hockey team elected captains yesterday afternoon. The Seniors elected Mary Helen Hamilton; the Juniors elected Gladys Hawkins; and the Seniors getting in for a month and are getting anxious to play off the games. A WALKING DOG SWEATER COAT TIME— —a wonderful bunch of Coats for your choosing in Flat Sweater Coats in 4 Colors $4 Pure Worsted Coats in 7 Colors $7.50, $8.50, $10 Camels' Hair Coats $10, $12.50 all sizes LAWRENCE STEAM LAUNDRY Glad to Show You CARLS GOOD CLOTHES Headquarters for Hickey Freeman and Kirschbaum Clothes in every way possible. In addition to our up-to-date laundry and dry cleaning service we also have an expert tailor for alterations and repairs. We appreciate your patronage. WE TRY TO SERVE YOU Phone 383 TO **Book Exchange Now Open** The Book Exchange in Fraser Hall was opened Thursday, according to the Times. The book exchange open hereafter on Tuesdays only, and closing at 3:30. Those who left books at the exchange are asked to come and make settlement as soon as possible. Altogether over 8000 worth of books were sold but very few of those who had purchased a claim settlement. Miss Pugh hoped to have all claims settled within three weeks. Expect 1500 to Attend Oklahoma Homecoming Norman, Okla., Oct. 13 (Ul- Press)-Fifteen thousand persons are expected here November 11, for the annual fall "Homecoming" and the Missouri-Oklahoma football game. The game will be the main feature of the homecoming program, although a gigantic reception is being planned. A pole game between the alumni and faculty will also feature the day. 1889 BEAT DRAKE! 33rd Anniversary Specials for one more day only. 1922 IT isn't the men-folk alone who appreciate this splendidly made garment. The women-folk like it because it means just so much less mending to be done on the family laundry every week. For the one master button of the HATCH ONE BUTTON. UNION SUIT does more than insure a smooth, perfect fit and save time and trouble in dressing and undressing. It eliminates the whole row of nine or more buttons and buttonholes—buttons that fall off and buttonholes that rip and tear. Ever if this one securely fastened button should work loose, there is an extra buttonhole in to which an ordinary collar button can be and nlt of id hat that slipped as a temporary or even permanent areas This splendidly made garment comes in a wide variety of weights, materials and prices. We'd like to have you come in to-day and see our stock. A good winter weight for $1.33 Squires Photographers for K. U. Students Phone 517 SkofStadS ELLING SYSTEM LAWRENCE, KANS. BUILT on VALUE : *GROWING* on VALUE $6 "Top-Kick"- It's a Bear! The style hit of the year, Men! With an new crimped vamp, showing a permanent crease. Tan or black Scotch grain—solid leather throughout. Gable edge sole, very Popular with college men and the up-and-growing business crowd. Royal's ability to give style and class with genuine economy. An unusual value at an unusual price, $6. At All Five Stores Royal ShoeStores 837 Mass. Inc. O. L. Newby, Mgr. SENIOR TUXEDO MAN Distinctive Apparel for SOCIAL FUNCTIONS This store is headquarters for the finest ready-for-service garments for formal and informal occasions. Our store and our advice are at your service—in order that you may be attired correctly. Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS Go on a hike! Just the thing now. Always get your food at Ray's X Cafe Right next to the Varsity Everything for the steak roast GIRLS! An electric curling iron and comb— Brush It will marcel without burning your hair. Kansas Electric Power Co. 719 Massachusetts St. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XX. NUMBER 2' RHADAMANTHI SETS MANUSCRIPT DEADLINE Tryout Contribution to Poets Club Must Be Submitted by October 26. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, MONDAY, OCT. 16, 1922. ALL CLASSES ELIGIBLE Formal Constitution Written Entirely in Blank Verse Has Been Ratified Deadline for manuscripts submitted to Rhadamanthi, K. U. oeets' club, for membership admission is been set for October 26. This is the announcement of the membship committee of our office. Such manuscripts may be left in the Club box which is located on the first floor of Fraser, south end. Have Novel Constitution In order to avoid confusion, candidates are requested to place their manuscripts in a sealed envelope with "Rhadamanthi Try-out" written across the face of the envelope. All classes are eligible, and any number of them may be submitted while a minimum of twenty lines has been placed upon contributions. At the Thursday evening regular meeting the first steps toward formal organization of the fraternity were taken in the ratification of the constitution. A novel feature of this constitution is that it is written entirely in blank verse. The constitution committee consists of Daisy McMullen, president; Helen Jaka, secretary-treasurer; and Harvey Walker. The colors selected are berge and small, and the club flower, the periwinkle. Plans were also laid for the forthcoming initiation ceremonials. Mrs. Herbert Feis, who has been president of the program gave out the program plans for this semester. It has been decided that only every third meeting will be devoted to the reading and criticism of the verse of members, while the other meetings will be devoted to the study of modern American诗. The program committee consists of Ms. George Struble, and Meha Parker. Adopt_Insignia W. D. Hackney is the designer of the insignia recently adopted, the Greek letter Rho in copper with a regalus in black enamel. The pin committee consists of Melba Parker, W. D. Hackney, and George Strible. Professor Robertson Speaks on Development of the Individual The members are planning to carry on the meetings in an informal spirit of enjoyment and good fellowship, and chatting dish suppers and weiner roasts have been included in the schedule for this year. FORUM DISCUSSES HEREDITY After emphasizing the influence of heredity upon the individual, Professor Robertson described several experiments which had been conducted in recent years with the purpose of changing hereditary characteristics in animals. The most notable of these was that of Dr. Gueroy of the University of Wisconsin, with rabbits as a subject. In conclusion he said that with the present information on the subject, science agrees that both heredity and environment play an important part in the development of Prof. William Rees B. Robertson of the department of law, spoket on "The Development of the Individual in Education" by Uta尔特arian Church, Sunday morning. portant part in the development of the individual. "Chemistry and the Next War" will be the subject of an address next Sunday by Prof. Henry Werner, director of the forum. This will also include the question of whether there it to a "next war" or not. Free-for-all discussions follow all forum talks. Senior Engineers Annual Inspection Trip Planned Plans are being made for the annual inspection trip of the senior engineers of the University, according to Dean P. F. Walker. Every senior engineer in the school, except those in mechanical engineering, will make the trip. The inspection will probably be made in the industrial plants at St. Louis. The date will be set so that engineers can be on board. The football game at Columbia, Mo., either going to or coming from St. Louis. Law Seniors Elect New Officers In Close Race Election of officers for the senior class of the School of Law of the University, held October 13, was featured by close contest among the candidates. The following officers were elected: President. Bardman Bucher; secretary, Elmer T. Kemper; and treasurer, N. O. Moore. Other candidates for these offices were, respectively, David Sheffey, Russell Stevens, and B. C. Woodward. Those students elected to senior class offices automatically assume the same official capacities in the School of Law. INTERTAINERS PLEASE AUDIENCES IN KANSAS Extension Division Gets Many Compliments on Work of Talent "Our lecture course programs now being given in various Kansas towns are being well received everywhere, and according to reports coming in, the programs are highly pleasing in every way," said Miss Joe Henderson, secretary of the Lecture Course Extension Division. Excellent reports always follow the University talent, according to Miss Henderson. As a rule, she says, the demand for this talent far exceeds the amount which can be supplied, due to the fact that most of the artists must keep up their University work. The Little Theater Company, mad up of Mr. and Mrs. Cooper MacMurray and Miss Margaret Larkin, all former University people, are playing almost full schedule now, and are highly complimented on their work according to reports sent in to the Extending Committee, in bringing in the following Kansas towns: Mildred, Moran, Uniontown, Stark and Walmut. "In many towns this company gives a matinee at the school houses," reports Miss Henderson, "and it gives the pupils a chance to get a closer contact with the artists. Miss Larkin entertains with Spanish songs and readings, and usually a short one-act play is given." The University Concert Company, made up of Dean and H. M. L. Butter, and an accompanist, returned last week from having given a week's entertainment at Morganville, Long- ford, Simpson, Jewell City, and Waterville. "Their work always pleased", commented Miss Henderson. TEST STATE HIGH SCHOOLS Other University talent which is used by the Extension Division on their concert course includes; Waldear Marcel Golin, violinist, accompanied by his wife; Dr. H. P. Cady, with his lecture on Liquid Air; the University Dramatic Company; and the University Glee Club. Bureau of School Service Investigates Results of Instruction The K. U. Bureau of School Service as undertaken a study of the results of instruction in the high school f the state. The proposal for making such a study was sent out to all of he cities of the second and third classes on September 25. Replies have been received from 150 cities f the third class and from 40 cities f the second class indicating their desire to participate in such a study entraining to the high schools. Coach Clark announced this morning that the varsity squad would hold secret practice Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of this week. No admittance. * * * * * * * * . Each school participating is expected to provide the tests and follow directions carefully in the giving of them. The Bureau will provide complete and specific directions for the administration of all tests employed and will assume responsibility for the work of scoring and tabulating results for the completed tests which are sent n to the office. Only the standardized type of test will be used in this study. One group mental test and several subject achievement tests were regarded as desirable by the schools which have replied. Tests in algebra, reading and English area are required; favorite subjects will extend over or three years before the various subjects of the high school curriculum can be covered. Those Who Signed Cards Should Report at Athletic Office TWO ROOTER SECTIONS RESERVED WEDNESDAY 000 SEATS AVAILABLE Cheering Fans Will Occupy Sections F and G on the Kansas Side Kansas takes the second step toward a solid two sections of cheering fans for the football games when the Cincinnati vs. the coveted seats opened Wednesday. More than 1,000 seats are available. The signing of the cards does not entitle one to a seat. This was only done so that the cheerleaders would know how many seats to ask for. However anyone who wishes to Cheerleader "Virg" Miller announced this morning that all men who signed for seats in the "heman rooting section" should report some time Wednesday to reserve seats. The three Kansahs are held for the rooms. These are the only seats on the fifty-yard and forty-five yard lines. Must Have Tickets Thousand," may reserve seats. Enterprise books or individual tickets are necessary before the seats can be checked out. The biggest and best unit of yell- mad men ever seen on a football field is promised by the cheerleaders if all the seats are subscribed. No Women Allowed No women will be allowed, in the two sections. If they care to organize a cheering section next to F or G they may, but the he-mans section is to be his men's section in fact as well as name. It was emphasized by Cheerleader Miller that these seats are not being reserved today or tomorrow, but that the rush starts Wednesday, and continues all day. Seats are to be reserved for the whole season, insuring a well-coached unit for the last games. OFFICERS' RESERVE TO MEET Lawrence Association Will Celebrate Third Anniversary The third anniversary meeting of the Officers' Reserve Association of Lawrence will be held Tuesday evening, October 17, at 7:30 o'clock, at the home of Colonel P. F. Walker, 1314 Louisiana Street. The general program for the year and plans relative to the community will be discussed. Major Dinnmore Alter will introduce the military problems to be studied. The first meeting was held October 17, 1919, at the Eldridge Hotel; Colonel Walker presided. The constitution had two twenty-five officers of the army who became charter members. This was the first organization of the kind ever established. Among those which followed were Seattle, Pittsburgh, Pa. In the beginning it was hoped to make the association national, but the War Department objected. The policy has been changed now so that the organizations are becoming national; the Nebraska organization was the first to do so. At a ten given by Miss Lulu Gardner, for the members of the rhetoric staff Thursday, Miss Helen Rhoda Hoops and Mr. Victor Soberg gave interesting accounts of the war in the summer. Mr. Solberg, who took a walking trip, told of the many places he visited, especially those where he had been stationed during the war. Miss Hoops showed a collection of Alnori photographs, some of which would be used in connection with the English Literature courses. Rhetoric Teachers Tell of Journey in Europe Among the pictures are busts of Homer and Virgil from the Hall of Philosophers in the Vatican, Bernini's statue of Aeneas fleeing from Troy, the Grotto portrait of Dante, views of the houses of Pompeii and of the Roman amphitheatre, a small baz-isel relief of the Siege of Troy, and photographs of medieval armor from the Poldi-Pozzo Gallery in Milan. - Kappa Phil will hold pledge services at: 6:45 o'clock Wednesday, October 18, in Myers Hall. Notice change of time. Alibi Is Not The Object When Kansan Correspondent Writes Column of What He Witnessed Nothing in this column is to be considered as an alibi. For Kansas lost and the game wasn't stolen, either. But this is what we saw. The first big laugh of the trip came at the expense of Doctor Allen, and it's too good to keep. After arriving in Kansas City and locating the special car, "Phog" went up in the hills on his way back to wake up in Des Moines the next morning "Doe" Bailey announced that Phog had been left in Kansas City. After resting Friday morning, a alimbing up on the Drake field, and a good sleep Friday night, the men were in good spirits. But if the game had been played Friday the score would probably have been 28 to "Doc," Bailey didn't get much sleep on the way to Drake town. On the Kansas squire there were numerous bullies and several bosses, burglar the men down. Well, there wasn't much sleep that night for anyone. Each man on the trip swipes he didn't get over four hours' sleep. It was a rough ride he had to contend with, constantly he always stopped in a hurry and started more quickly. Here's Doctor Allen's version of the affair: In the Union dept he met "Red" Brown. While talking he looked at his ticket to see what time the train left. Forgetting that he had already given in his ticket for the journey to Des Moines he read 11:40 clock on the return ticket. Now for the game. And the big question on every one's lips is: "How did it happen?" At exactly 11:33, Doctor Allen started for the train. But alas, it was too late, for the train left at 11:30. In the first place, the Jayhawkers lacked a final punch. Time after when it seemed certain that Kansas would score, the Jayhawkers endure penetrate the skirt, the Drake ends, not complete a forward pass. O against us. After the fit in Des 'Monies, they felt better, but they didn't have the money. They can't step on to the season is a mistake. It just cost us the game. Another thing that counted against the Kansans war the Army trip. The men were train sick and low in spirits. Right here and now let it be known that the Drake team is not to be scuffed at. For the Des Moines school has a good team, exceptionally strong on the defense, when pressed, with long flashes of offensive strength. The two Drake tackles each weighed over 200 pounds, one tipping the scales at 233 and the other at 208. They were fairly good players, too. One was the fumble on the Drake six-inch line. Both Prexy and a Drake man fell on the ball, Prex over Game. The opponent must that should win against breaks or anything else. There were several disputed plays, however. This is not crabbing, but the referee had something to do with the game. The Jawhakers have a team K. U. Chapter A. S. M. E. Elect Officers For Year The mechanical engineers of the School of Engineering held their annual election at a meeting at the Theta Tau house Thursday night. The following officers were elected to head the Kansas chapter of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, S.W. Swieyeney, president; Bob Sharp, vicepresident; Elvin Lifn, treasurer; and R. L. Hinch, secretary. Plans were made to entertain the Kannas City section of the A. S.M.E. at a future date. Plans were also created by students who will occur October 25. El Ateneo Selects New Members the ball and the Bulldog man with his arms around the oval. The referee had the guess, however, and he said, "Drake's ball." El Ateneo, Spanish Club, announces the following new members: John Griffith, Eula Bozell, Frances Keith, Julian Wakeham, Ena Least, Goldin Stevenson, Carollia C. Cheney, Louise MLCourth, Dory Connerv, Valbarger Swenson, Georgia Stubbs, Irene Pearce, Narcisse Abella, Robert Facht, Albert Culpeper, Wayne Smith, Maria L. Jewett, Constance Stanley. Another time was when Kansas again had the ball inside the Drake 10-yard line. The Jayhawkers had a few inches to go for the first down. Krueger made a line buck on the fourth down and gained a few inches. "My ball," shouted the referee, and he placed it on the ground. The linemen were called out to measure and it was hard to tell whether Kansas had made the distance or not. But Drake took the ball on downs. It was an intercepted forward pass that cost the Jayhawkers their first chance to score. McAdams did some pretty putting. He did not make a single bad kick, and on exchange of punts Kansas gained every time. When Spurgeon went in during the last half, on every play for a few times he called time out and limped out. "Don't hurt much. Orders are orders." Drake drew several penalties during the final quarter for killing, time out and for exceeding her limit of times out. The Builds battled on every play in the latter period but there's no there. They were playing football. No football game is won until it is played. In Des Moines Saturday Yale and Kansas were both favorites among local sport followers. They were wagering 3 to 1 that Kansas would beat Drake and 3 to 1 that Kawai would be Iowa. Yale lost 6 to 0, and Kansas lost 6 to 0. Just a few statistics collected at the end of the first half. Kansas had made eight first downs to Drake's three. The Jayhawkers had completed three forward passes, the Bulldogs none. Each team had fumbled once, Drake recovering both times. Drake had intercepted one pass. The ball had been in Drake tercree fourths of the time. Line Coach Karl Schlademann did not accompany the team_to Des Moins because of the illness of his wife. Orchard. Drake quarter, made a pretty run. It was the fourth down and 25 yards to go. He dropped back into the end zone, taking on the ball he ran 24 yards before fore being downed, falling short of making the distance by only a yard. It was a great piece of open field running. Football is an activity just as politics; in fact it is one of the greatest activities. No man can enter too many fields. But if a man is genuinely interested in both football and politics there should be no reason why a football man should not run for office. Now comes the annual fail question of football men running for office. But he should not be asked to camp paign, and the election must not in any way hinder his training. The Kansas team has a hard fight ahead and an election week should not disrupt practice. K. U. Graduate Delegate to I. I. of A. Convention Asher Hobson, A. B., 13, has been appointed American delegate to the International Institute of Agriculture at Rome. Mr. Hobson was formerly agricultural economist of United Department of Agriculture, Assistant Professor, American at Columbia University, in Marketing at Columbia University. Mr. Habbson was a member of the Acacia fraternity, was on the Varsity Soccer team, was a member of the K. U. Debating Society, Quill Club, Men's Student Council, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, Skull and K. was vice-president of the junior class, and manager of the 1913 Jawahker. K. U. Receives Collection Mrs. A. Henley has given the University a collection of about three hundred birds' eggs. This announcement was made this morning by C. D. Bunker, assistant instructor in charge of the Museum of Birds and Mammals, of the museum for eggs and birds days ago. They were taken from the vicinity of Lawrence, and have been in Mrs. Henley's possession for a number of years. Jay House Discovers New Feature of Army Game Jay E. House, former Kansan and paragrapher on Kansas papers, attended the Kansas-Army game at West Point and writes concerning it in his column in the Philadelphia Public Ledger: Occasionally, our search for the unusual discloses a specimen of free milling ore. On Saturday we were permitted to view a spectacle of some public interest to which no admission fee was exacted or accepted. We refer to the Army-K. U. football game at West Point. LUMNI WILL BANQUET AT TEACHERS' MEETING Kansas State Teachers' Association Convention Will Start in Topeka Thursday Also, contained in the general information of the program book. "Only those who pay the enrollment fee will receive the coverage." Sites covering a year's subscription "All K. U. alumani will have a get-together banquet Friday evening, Oct. 20, at 6 o'clock, at the Chamber of Commerce, 7th and Quince streets, Tickets are on sale for $1.00 at the State House near the registration desk," was the information received by Dean Kent from the Topeka head教师 Association convention, which will start Thursday. formation of the program book, "Only those who pay the enrollment fee will be admitted to the meetings. Be sure to refer to "The Kansas Teacher" and Western School Journal, the payment of this fee entitles the member to the service of the Kansas Teachers' Placement Bureau for one year, on the basis of the teams under which the Bureau is operated. The fees may be paid at enrollment headquarters, the ground floor, east side of the north corridor, next to the office of the Adjutant General. Enrollment fees may be paid at the box office of the city auditor preceding and during each general session. No duplicate enrollment receipt will be issued." The Topica Chamber of Commerce will maintain an information bureau HASKELL TO HEAR DUGGINS University Extension Entertainers to Give Special Program The Duggin Artists, a company of entertainers on the University Extension Division Lecture Course, will give a special entertainment at Haskell next Thursday for 10am at Miss Jodie Henderson secretary of the Lecture Course. "The Duggers are composed of individual artists," said Miss Henderson, "and favorable reports come in from every place they play." The company is made up of David Duggs, Scotten teenager; Elizabeth Hamilton, prima domo soprano; and Ernest Dudos, Athenian pianist. The program at Haskell is not a number of the regular concert program, but is given as a special program. There will be a small admission charge of 15 cents for adults and the program is open to all. "I am sure University people will enjoy the work of these artists immensely," said Miss Henderson, "and I look for a large number of students to attend." The latter part of the program will be given in Scotch coursework, and will be found in places in which these artists have played this year, each one carries a strong part, and Mr. Dudos, the pianist, is exceptionally clever. Arkansas Students to Build New Gymnasium Fayetteville, Oct. 16 (U.P. —Work on the new $20,000 gym- sium of the State Agricultural School of Education). The school, official schools announced. The gymnasium, which will be the largest of its kind in the state, will be completed in time for the opening of the 1923 term, according to plants. Students, under direction of university carpenters, will do a major part of the construction work this fall, it was said. Phi Gamma Finished by Feb. 1. February 1 is the date set for the completion of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house which, is being built on the hill at the corner of Sixteenth and Louisiana streets. T. J. Constant, contractor, is building the house, the cost of which is expected to be near $75,000. When completed the building will accommodate forty students. THURSDAY IS DAY SET FOR FALL ELECTIONS Voting Hours Are Announced For Annual Selection of Class Officers POLLING PLACES NAMED All Candidates Must Be Pronounced Eligible Before Ballots Are Cast Announce Polls Lists of the candidates for offices will be printed in the Kanaan and circulated about the Hill by the indi- cidant. Those who are elected to a candidacy, must be submitted at the office of the dean of men by 5 o'clock this afternoon, and every candidate must be adjudged eligible to run at least once on ballots cast by the student body. Fall elections of class officers for the University, to be supervised by an election committee composed of Hilary Mahn, Adolph Rupp and Coy Patterson, will be held Thursday, October 19, the election hours being from 9 o'clock in the morning until 4:30 in the afternoon. The polling places for the four classes of University students have been announced as follows: seniors, Green Hall; junior, Fraser Hall; sophomores, Snow Hall; and freshmen, lower floor of Robinson Gymnasium. In addition to the regular officers chosen for each class, other candidates will be: for the freshmen, a manager of the Freshman Foley; for the sophomores, a manager of the Soph Boph; for the graduate, a manager of the Junior Prom. One Ticket in Field The Black Mask ticket has announced candidates for offices as follows: Seniors: President, Joe Bloomer; Vice-President, Marion Collins; Secretary, Marion McDonald; Treasurer, Milton Cummins. Juniors: President, "Davy" Davison; Vice President, "Red" Lutz; Secretary, C. I. Frize; Treasurer, Keith Junior, Premium, Clyde Lucas. Sohomores: President, Emerson Norton; Vice President, Walter Means; Secretary, Mary Lois Ripau Means; Secretary, Mary Hooler; Soph Hon. Earl Allvin Freshmen: President, Wilder Dresser; Vice President, Bill Harrison; Secretary, Eulaiah Richardson; Treasurer, Ronald Hall. WOMAN LEGISLATOR ACTIVE May Establish Court of Domestic Relations at Dallas Dallas, Tex., Oct. 16 (U. P.)—of domestic relations to devote its time entirely to keeping the home clean and burning a possibility at Dallas. Legislation providing for such a court will be presented to the state legislature at its next term by Mrs. Edith Williams, democratic nominee from Dallas County, first woman to enter the chamber of the state senate. Other legislative plans being worked out by the first Texas "legislature" include enactment of a law requiring a certificate of physical fitness for issuance of marriage licenses, compulsory schooling, lighter taxation, and state assistance in the care of children whose parents are incarcerated, or whose mother is compelled to care for them alone. Teachers Will Discuss School Code Commission Topkea, Oct. 16 (U. P.)—One of the biggest questions to be discussed by the 15,000 Kansas teachers who will meet in state convention in Topkea, Pittsburg, Hatchinson and Hayes, is how schools should code commission being prepared for the next legislature. A member of the code commission will talk at each of the four conventions. Recommendations of the commission, which has been at work for the past two years, are officially made public, but are understood to contain three important school law changes. Y. W. C. A. To Hear Student Pastor "The Bible in Every Day Living" will be the subject of the talk by Elofort Lofton, student-pastor of the Presbyterian Church, and member of the faculty in the School of Religion, Y. W. C. A. a meeting in Mayo Hall, Tuesday afternoon, at 4:50 o'clock. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University Subscription price $2.00 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.00 for one amester; 56 cents a month; 15 cents a week. Entered an 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 Chicago. Published in the department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phones, K. U, 25 and 66 Editorial Staff The Daily Kansan aims to please the students of the University of Kansan to go further by standing for the claims she deals with. For the ojites, to be clean; to be cheerful; to leave more serious pasts; to leave more virtuous pasts; to authenticate the university's students of the University Business Staff Editor-in-chief Ben Hibbs News Editor Glass News Editor Raymond Dawny Sport Editor Glick Schultz Sport Editor Glick Schultz Alumni Editor Rust Carter Alumni Editor Rust Carter Business Manager ___Lloyd Ruppenthal Asst. Bus. Mgr. ___Montgomery, J. Asst. Bus. Mgr. ___Clyde Burnside Board Members Chester Shaw Don Bogggs Lieuwelwyn White Perry Johns Caroline Harkraer Carlton Powers DeVaughn Francis Roland Blaine MONDAY, OCT. 16. 1922. WHO ARE THE POLITICIANS? WHO ARE THE POLITICIANS? With student elections only three days away, politics on the Hill are under full swing once more. Two political parties of secret membership will start soliciting your vote tomorrow—asking you to vote for candidates which they have selected in secret session. For those who have been at the University of Kansas for a year or more, the Kansan is voicing a more latitude when it points out that the political situation here is not what it should be. Please do not misunderstand this discussion; politics are necessary at the University just as political organization is necessary in any electorate as large as the student body here. Politics at K. U. there must be, but that does not mean that there is no help for the rather complex and highly undemocratic system which exists on our campus today. Many men and women who have been at the University for several years have come to have a very cynical attitude toward student elections. And why? Simply because they feel that they have no real voice in afairs! What, they ask, are these two organizations of secret membership which ask us for our votes each year? The politicians of the Hill point to the candidates of national parties in this country, who are often selected at party concessions. They liken the system here to our national system; but they forget one thing. The membership of the Republican and Democratic parties is not secret! The national parties are definitely and tangibly represented by the national committees and by the nonnaming conventions—institutions which are at least partly representative of the followers of the respective parties throughout the country. To be a national committee member is considered a great honor, for the National Committee in either case is the core of the party. There is nothing clandestine about it. To be sure, our national parties are far from perfect, but our Hill political organizations would do well to copy their methods in this one respect—that of letting the electorate know what and who they are. Again let it be emphasized that the Kanaan is not advocating the abolition of politics, nor is it finding fault with the type of candidates chosen by Black Mask and Pachaeamac. But it does believe that a great element of distrust and cynical feeling might be avoided if the parties would come out into the open. TAKE 'EM OFF Do we wear too many clothes? Some doctors and hygienists say we do. They claim that we burden our bodies with heavy, superfluous clothing from force of habit and from dictates of custom and fashion. rney maintain that the rest of the body is no more susceptible to exposure than the face or the hands. The face and hands are seldom covered except in cases of extreme incam and yet we do not notice their exposure; they have become hardened. These authorities claim that the rest of the body can be hardened in the same way. They do not advocate nakedness, but they do maintain that the best health may be maintained through the wearing of fewer, looser and thinner garments. The body thus hardened is a stronger body and can do more and better work. Tendencies in dress indicate that this conception is gaining foothold. A decade or so ago, heavy red flannels as thick as quills are the accepted winter undergarments of men. Now the light X. Y. Z.'s are worn all winter. Suits were heavy and lined with heavy material; cots were padded and stuffed until every anemic fellow had a pair of shoulders like an ox. Today suits are of light materials, skeleton or half lined. Changes in women's clothing have been just as marked. Their apparel has recently been the butt of the jocks of the wit and the witless, but who can deny that it is more sensible than that of grandma's days when women wore padded waists, knit underskirts, and an ocean of billows want-nots? The question of Who Won the War probably never will be answered for all time, but we must not forget the 712,510 sets of spur straps that the government purchased "for officers" use only." WOMEN'S ATHLETICS This summer there was held, in Paris, an international athletic meet for women, in which college women from all over the world competed for supremacy. In costuming, judging, and general organization, the events were carried off much in the same manner as the men's Olympics. Such an innovation as this ten years ago would have merited a banner head to the conservative New York Times. A woman has attempted to swim the English Channel. A New York girl has won the international swimming championship for women. Munamoiselle Lenglen and Molla Mallory excited as much press comment with their contest as does any men's tennis tournament. The 17-year-old California tennis wonder is a wonderful sample of the modern tendency toward national athletics for women. All these athletic achievements are an index of the strides forward women are taking into domains previously occupied solely by men. They show the development and broadening of women's lives to include more than the single desire to be married Athletes have opened to their wives of clean competition and good sportsmanship which have previously been closed to women. With the introduction of the Intercollegiate Women's Athletic Association, the point system has been standardized, and women here can get the sweaters with as much肩袋 attached to them as those received by the men. They work for their sweaters, go into training, and faithfully report for practices, showing an intense loyalty to their respective teams. In addition to this, the W. A. A. stands unreservedly for the support of the men's athletics, and favors a 100 per cent purchase of activity tickets. The gymnasium is the melting pot for the University women. It is here that a true sentiment of democracy and independence reigns for every girl meets upon the same basis and is judged impartially for her ability and her good sportmanship. The W. A. A. is an institution which localizes the international movement for the broader development of women. It may be an institution of which K. U. may well be proud. How many Gullivers there are among us in the world; how many of us bound by trifles, but securely fastened! Our Liliput captors are the petty worries men are heir to; our bonds are the little disappointments which we are not big enough to push aside. MODERN GULLIVERS Would not even Gulliver himself have smiled to see a stalwart man pinned down by lack of confidence? And yet we meet them every day—men who would like to go on, but are Official Daily University Bulletin Vol. II. COLLEGE FACULTY MEETING; Copyright by Florence E. Bliss, Editor, Chancellor's Office until 11:00 a. m. Oct. 16, 1922 No. 9 Oct. 16, 1922. There will be a meeting of the Faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at 4:30 Tuesday afternoon in Blake Hall Lecture Room. E.H. LINDLEY, President. afraid to place their hopes so high. And Gulliver might have scorned the man who is bound by complacent self-satisfaction. He is the one who finds himself in a rut so deep that he cannot see over the sides. Were the thongs of the Lilliputs ever more strong than that which binds him to the ground? PUBLIC RECITAL BY PROFESSOR WALDEMAR GELTCH; Professor Waldemar Geltch, of the Violin Department of the School of Fine Arts, will give a recital in Fraser Hall at 8:20 Tuesday evening. The public is invited. Everywhere we see these modern Gullivars, sometimes struggling feebly and at other times lying apathetically under their fetters. Plain Tales From The Hill More Verdancy Ding: "Are you going to get your Jayhawk now so you can get your name on the cover in gold letters?" Dong: "Naw. What's the use? Jayhawk?" You answer, "No, cover a fellow's name would be so small it couldn't be read, anyway." Miss Ida Tudor, A. B.'22, is teaching Home Economics at Holton. Javhawks Flown Change Usual Program This year the Oral Interpretation program uses an unusual program of committing poems to memory, and are working on readings instead. The readings are taken from the prose writings of well known authors and developed into ten to twelve minute recitals. The reader is then on short uninterrupted plays as soon as they have finished with this work. No.27. Miss Frances Eleanor Martin, a former student of the University, was married Sunday, October 1, to Mr. Frank Sylvester Denison of Coffeville. Mrs. Denison is a member of the Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Henry J. Albach, B. S. "22, is with the Western Union Telegraph Company, at Denver. Chuck Fratcher, Arch Richards, and Gordon Saunders, all former students of the University, were visitors to the University. They also live in Kansas City, Mo. Word has been received from Lyle Campbell, A. B. 22, who is now taking a course in business administration at Harvard. Lyle says that he has met several K. U. men. He is not on the list of candidates for A. B. 22. He says that it is going to take some time for him to catch on to eastern civilization. Change Usual Program George Ruddy, c'25, and Donald Lyons, c'26, were in Kansas City over the week-end. Theodore Roosevelt was in the home of Donald Lyons. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Fuger of Watha announce the engagement of their daughter, Golda, to Mr. Charles Freeman of Memphis, Tennessee. Miss Fuger was graduated from the University in 1918. George Lennington, a former student, returned to his home in Marysville where he is touching this year, along with friends for the past week. Winifred Shannon, A. M.' 22, head of the department of modern language at Women's College, Montgomerie, Ala. Sidonia Schaeffer, A., B. '22, is teaching mathematics in the Iola High School. Arvin Lefevre, e25, will return to school after an absence of a week. Mr. Lefevre was called to his home because of the illness of his father. Frank Bracken, a former student of the University, was a guest at the Phi Mu Alpha house Sunday. Mr. Bracken will be in school the second semester. Fred Van Delinda, c'25, spent the week-end at his home in Kansas City, Kansas. Phu Mu Alpha announces the pledging of Andrew McKinley, e'26, of Pawhuska, Oklahoma. Charles Wyatt, c25, spent the week-end at his home in Kansas City, Mo. H. L. BUTLER, Dean. On Other Hills The University of Mississippi has made quite extensive improvements on its campus this year. New dormitories have been opened, the older ones have been rebuilt and new chemistry and pharmacy buildings are nearly completed. The University of Denver is planning to organize a pep organization similar to that of the University of Kansas, according to the Denver Clarion. The D. U. cheerleader, in speaking of the Ku Klan, said: "The men there (at the University of Kansas) are not women-haters but football-lovers. Systematic cheating are the results obtainable." The slogan of the organization is to be "Rooting without fussing." The little green skull cap, badge of the humble freshman, has been abolished at the University of Wisconsin. The new hat is like that work by enlisted men in the U. S. navy. However, it is green in color with six red ribs running to the center of the crown and a red "wrink" on the front of the hat. It also features buttons on top of the crown show which school the man belongs. Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. PROTCH The College TAILOR "SuitingYou' THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULTZ 917 Mass. St. Ladies who desire expert Hair-Bobbing Patronize the STADIUM BARBER SHOP "The Shop of Service" First Door South of Von's WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods Visit the United Army Stores Co 706 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS A Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Army Goods Z THE ORIGINAL WIDE GARTER MARK REG. 0, 8, PAY, OPP. Me to 31, everywhere, in single-grip and the E. Z. B grip, and the E. Z. Sport Center. Made by The Tha. P. Taylor Co., Bridgesport, Conn. Look for the name "E. Z." when you buy a wide-web garter. It identifies the genuine—the patented garter that has no socks, buckles or bothersome adjustments. Real luxury and solid comfort. the hide, lives on. Featured by All Leading Merchants Candidates for the football team at Washington State College passed a voluntary resolution that all members of the squad should strictly re-enter school uniforms, except on Saturday evening till 10 o'clock and on Sunday afternoons. The Kansas City, Kans., night schools offer the complete university extension course this year with credits to be awarded by the University of Kansas. A detailed audit is expected to reach twelve hundred by the end of this week. A. G. ALRICH Engraving, Printing, Binding Rubber Stamps, Office Supplies Stationery Printing by any process 736 Mass. St Buy Popular Priced Tailoring A POTTER IN TIME See the Goods in the Latest Patterns from A. E. Anderson & Co. Tailors- Chicago TAIFRING YOU NEED KIRBY CLEANERS 1109 Mass. St. PHONE 442 Local Representative Victoria Wade Cuts Not Allowed with an Ingersoll Pencil This hands-on, efficient writing implement is always on the job. It never takes any cuts. Works so simply that there is nothing to get out of order — the leads will not clog at the point. Ye Tanerne THE INGERSOLL DOLLAR—shown here—of Rolled Silver $1.00. See this and other models at your stationery or storefront. Ingersoll Redpoint Co., Inc. Wm. H. Ingersoll, Prog. 461 Fourth Ave., New York City Next to the Standpipe So close to the campus— Only a minute's walk—and what delicious food! Our Special Lunch for 40 Cents YE TAVERNE Next to the Standpipe Williamette University, of Salem, of the Knights to greet all visiting Oregon, has a pep organization sim-athletic teams, and to see that they flair to our Ku Klu Klan, which they are properly taken care of during the "Knights." It is the duty their stay in the city. "GIFTS THAT LAST" Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING Phone 139 BELLS FLOWER SHOP Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS 825 1-2 Mass SURPLUS $100,000.00 Protch, the College Tailor CAPITAL $100,000.00 CAPITAL $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and WATKINS NATIONAL BANK DIRECTORS C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. D. C. Asher, Cashier D. C. Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Asher, L. V. Müller, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishop "When a Feller needs a Friend" Did you ever start to review your lecture notes for the "mid-years" and find you couldn't read half of them? Then is the time you will wish you had written on a + 10 Remington Portable Standard Keyboard—the most complete portable typewriter—fits in case only four inches high. Price, complete with case, $60. The Lawrence Typewriter Exch. 737 Mass. Lawrence, Kas. A few minutes spent in typing after each lecture hour will do the trick. And don't overlook the time this machine will save in typing your themes, theses, papers, and all your writing. Remington Typewriter Co., Inc. 107 W. 7th St. Topeka, Kas. Remington Typewriter Co., Inc. 1021-23 Grand Ave., K. C., Mo Paragon ribbons for Remington Portable Typewriters 500 each - $5 a dozen com- BOWERSOCK THEATRE Curtain 8:15 Promptly One Night, Monday, October 16 Box Office Sale Opens Thursday, Oct. 11 MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTED NOW Prices: $75, $100, $1.00, $2.00, $2.50, Plus Tax William Harris Jr present John Drinkwater's ABRAHAM LINCOLN WITH FRANK MCGLYNN "I I were a millionaire I would buy a toy for every child in New York City." William L. Ettings, Supt. Schoola, N.Y. "Noiner play was ever presented in America." Champ Clark. "One of the greatest children's books," William Allen White. "I wonder Wonderfully noted." Senator Henry Cabot Lague. "I never enjoyed a play more in my life." Henry Hooven. "A beautiful and stirring thing. You sit enthralled. N. Y. Times." The Only and Original Company of 39 People Largest Dramatic Organization Extant K. U. IN REVIEW 19 The library of the University of Kansas was not organized until long after the University opened. At first each professor gave the students in his department access to his private reference books. Later these books were collected into one library, and different volumes were brought out. No one person was employed for full time and there is no complete record of the number of books in the library until 1874, when there were less than 1,000 volumes. In the years that followed, more books were taken from THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1874, For the years 1877-1920, the following numbers have been taken from the table below. Vol.s. Vol.s. Vol.s. 7 2519 1881 4500 1885 7000 1899 11,050 8 2750 1883 6430 1887 7750 1890 12,528 9 2100 1883 6200 1887 8035 1891 14,826 8 2844 1884 6500 1888 9207 Volumes 1895 ... 22,735 1900 ... 33,135 1905 ... 43.5 Begining with the year 1895, the records for each five years shows Beginning with following increases: Pamphlets Classical Museum The Classical Museum is situate on the second floor of the south wing of Fraser Hall. It contains a number of artworks, models of architecture, relief maps, facile multi reproductions of early Roman sculptures, Roman texts, many specimens of Roman household objects, and a large number of framed photographs and colored plates of ancient architecture. Prof. A. M Wilcox is the curator. Geology Occupying the entire second floor of the museum, the specimens representing the economic, petrographic, mineralogic, and pathological characteristics of mineral formations, where almost every important mineral in the earth is systematically according to chemical analysis and geographic location. The other series of fossil representing the different geologic formations. Kansas fossils are especially well represented. A large number of biological classification and geologic sequence. The Geologic Museum is the kind of museum that is famous for its system of labeling. It is in charge of Prof. C. J. Patterson. Fine Arts At present, (1922), the library contains 144,429 volumes Fine Arts collections are confined chiefly to the Thayer Art Museum, in St. Louis, and Mrs. William B. Trayer of Kansas City. Paintings from the American West are a series of textiles, ceramics, glassware and costumes, with a number of art novelties including old shirts, dresses, and shoes; in bronze, make up the 9,000 or more items the collection. A number of European painters are represented. The Brymwood Collection of paintings by James W. B. Thayer, is in the Woodward of Lawrence, which contains a number of oil paintings, pastels, and water colors, has been loaned to the University of Virginia. The two collections, now under the care of the University of Virginia, are valued at $25,000. W. B. Thayer, are valued at $25,000. Botany The herbarium, housed in Snow Hall, is representative of the flora of North America. It is especially rich in herbs such as those found in the mountain regions of Colorado and New Mexico. Aside from the type specimens there is much additional information that can be obtained for the purposes. Dr. Craig M. Charles is in charge of the herbarium. Museum of Natural History Volumes Pamphlets 1910 68,345 40,000 1915 100,000 43,200 1920 132,638 44,000 More than 300,000 specimens comprising 27,000 species and 1,000 types, representing more than 50,000 species are in the south section of the top floor of the Dyche Museum, and also on the second floor. The museum has a large collection of the original displays, is one of the most complete, and contains more than 100,000 specimens. It alone is valued at $4 million. It is one of the largest connected with any educational institution in the United States, Prof. S. J. Hunter department holding the collection. Museum of Natural History The Dyke Museum has a natural history. It is the finest collections of mounted animal and bird specimens and valuable fossil remains, of any university museum. It is the University Museum of Natural History and H. T. Martin, curators respectfully, memorials, birds, fishes, and reptiles and those included in the vertebrate paleontology, paleobotany, and ethnological groups. Inventory of the first animals of North America, Panorama displays of animals com-ming with America, mounted in life-like postures in background resembling their natural surroundings, shows about three thousand species on ground floor. Photographs and histories explain the different groups. After Every Meal WRIGLEY'S P.K. CHEWING SWEET The Flavor Lasts hibition, more than four thousand mammal skeletons and skins, catalogued and available for research, are waiting display space. Ornithological collections occupy the entire second floor. Birds from the tropics as well as those common to temperate climates are housed and in bird groups designed to show breeding habits or life zones. Nearly two thousand birds are mounted in the glass cases, while more than eight of them may be been arranged for study purposes. On the first floor or basement are the collections, preserved in liquid, of about 100,000 items and about three hundred, and are complete for the state of Kansas, with many objects from Greenland and Alaska, not now open to the public for lack of display spaces, also is on the first floor. Monumental beetles, deer, and fishing tackle and hunting carparchalmir, cover the western hills of the country. Other specimens common to foreign countries, with no special classification, are kept in the work room of a museum. in paleontology and paleobotany the collection found on the third floor of the museum is one of the most representative from all the chief geological areas from Kansas rank especially One of the three collections of Patagonian specimens are the collection on display. Reptile and bird specimens on display are both rare and valuable. In the collection of paleobotany thousands of fossil reptiles and birds are The series of fossil horse material containing specimens of skulls, feet and teeth, show well the evolution from the small three-toed variety to our present horse. Arrangements are based on the evidence that complete as possible through exchanges. The flying reptiles (Pleurodactyls), from the chakk of beds Western Kansas, are exceptionally fine, and are neglected in the migration of rare forms in the country. The fossil fishes from the Cretaceous of Kansas is by far the most complete known from this formation. a valuable stitch exhibition is being made of a block four feet square and fifteen inches thick, containing several skulls, lower jaws, and limb bones of a small land rhinoceros (Diceraterm) from the Agate Springs fossil quarry of Sloux County, Neb. Recently an ethnological study was begun. Collections from the Belgian Congo were added, and Americas, and especially Kansas. Thousands of other specimens, including weapons, domestic utensils, garments and household effects, are on display. A series of modern war material is now on exhibit. George Lymn, M. A. 23, entered Yale University this fall. Mr. Lymn has been working in the research Electric Co. at Schenectady, N. Y. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY LOST—Bill fold at or near the Gym last Sat. Call 1748. Reward. -023 LOST - A jeweled Phi Gamma Delta pin with E. C. Schultz' name on the back of it. Reward. Call 441—420 LOST—Gabedine top coat at Gamma Phi Bhi open house, Reward. Return to Boggs, phone 285. —020 All together— Let's "Wash" all the "BURN" out of Wash- burn—Saturday. Also— for the frosty mornings for the cool evenings— —Slip into a Carl Sweater—Warm and Comfortable— Flat wool Sweater Coats $4 WANT ADS Pure worsted Sweater Coats $7.50 Camel's Hair Sweater Coats 850 WANTED—Girl roommate, comfort- able room, moderate rent. 1204 Kentucky. Call 1059. BOROMATE wanted by man student. 927 Indiana St. Close to Hill and town. All modern conveniences. Phone 1760 Black. $8.50 LOST--Tortoise shell glasses in case; Thursday morning. Return to Kansan office. Phyllis Reynolds. LOST—Pearl earring, one large pearl, silver chain, nine pearls on pendant. Reward. Phone 2205. Brush wool Sweater Coats NICELY furnished room for one or two men in strictly modern home. Phone 2621. 1037 Tenn. St. O-13 FOR RENT—Room in modern home for two boys. New furnace, close to hill. 1216 Tennessee. 2351 White. FOR RENT—Two large rooms for girls, 1116 Mississippi; strictly modern. O-14 Are you needing a hard faced worsted suit? FOR RENT—Large front room for two boys. Fine location. Call 2564. O-17 REDUCTION $10 Headquarters for Kirschbaum & Hickey Freeman Suits and Overoats C. W. H. L. C. CARLS GOOD CLOTHES Ed. V. Price & Company have made a reduction of $6.00 to $11.00 on 19 worset suits in their Fall and Winter line. Orders should be placed at once to reserve material. SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire Deliveries to suit. S. G. CLARKE 1033 Mass. St. Otto Fischer's WONDERFUL GIFTS GOOD SINES Walk-Over LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive optometrists). Eyes examined; glasses made. Office 1023 Mass. Ober's MARSHALOUTITERS to earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Pleasant work, after school hours. J. F. Stammer. After school. Wayne Ave., Kansas Mo. 346. Wayne Ave., Kansas Mo. -S72 DR. J. W. OWYONN. (Dentist) Special attention to prevention and treatment of pyorrhea. 304 Perkins Building. Tel. 507. Otto STORES PROFESSIONAL CARD Of Black or Tan Hunter Calf, Soft tipless toe, Broad flat leather heels. Pander's QUALITY JEWELRY with --buy a new overcoat, when we can overhaul your old one for a trifle? MEN'S NEW HILL CLIMBERS LOOK 'EM OVER New Winter OBERCOATS at Ober's STARRY NIGHTS "The Face in the Fog" Thomas Shoe Shop Electric $8.50 When Crook Meets Crook with Broadway's gay lights and underworld as a setting —then you have a whale of a love-melodrama like this. One Lowell Sherman heads the exceptional supporting cast. Shows-2:30-4:00-7:30-9:00 p.m. LIONEL BARRYMORE and Seena Owen A Paramount Picture Presented by Cosmopolitan Christy Comedy . . . "LET'ER RUN" Adults 28 cts Children 10 cts VARSITY THEATRE Monday and Tuesday WHY Phone SEVEN FIVE NEW YORK CLEANERS 836 Mass. St. YOU ARE A PACHACAMAC If you believe "It is the Candidate that Counts" A political party always selects an emblem which best expresses its purpose! The emblem of the Pachacamac party is the rising sun! Wear the yellow round tag! The Class elections will be held Thursday! "I Say, Can You Tell Me What The Date Is?" Tuesday, October 31 BOWERSOCK Annual Y.W.JC.A. Benefit Play Adam and Eva A modern comedy with a successful run in New York Popular Prices - $1.00, .75 and .50 Mail Orders to Elizabeth Dunkle at Henley House THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1 DRAKE DEFENSE WINS CONTEST Kansas Carries Ball Inside the Bulldog Ten-Yard Line on Three Successive Drives PASSES WORKED WELL Lack of Punch at Critical Mo ments and Costly Fumbles Fatal to Jay- hawkers Carrying the ball three times to within the Drake ten-yard line, but lacking the final punch necessary to carry the ball over for a touchdown, the Kansas Jayhawks bowed to the Drake eleven in the Drake stadium Saturday at 10 a.m. to 9 o'clock. A powerful attack at the opening of the third quarter gave the Des Moines men a lone touchdown and the game. Exhibit strong defense It was an unlooked for strong Drake defense and the one display of offensive skill gave the game to the Bulldogs. Time after time when it seemed almost certain that Kansas would score, the Drake defense stiffened and the Jayhawkers were unable to count. Practically all the game was played with the ball in Drake territory with the exception of the first part of the third quarter. Higgins opened the second half by kicking to the Drake five-yard line. Orebraby, by a single throw, returned the ball to the fifty-yard line. Then started the Drake drive. Boeller, Drake half, skirted right end for seven yards and two line plunges netted downs. Boalter again went around right end for five yards and Orebaugh clipped the left wing for five more yards and another first downs. The ball was on the Kansas thirty-airline yard. Find Weak Link Drake seemingly had found the Jahewhawk weak link and on the next run Orebaugh again carried the ball, this time around left end, for ten yards and another first down. A five-yard penalty on Kansas placed the ball on the Kansas fifteen-yard line in Drake possession. Orebaugh drew the assignment on the next play. He again tried left end and gained twelve wheels. With it but three yards to go in four downs, Orebaugh made two line plunges for the counter. Ivy blocked the kick. Kansas Fights Hard During the other parts of the game, Coach Clark's men clearly had the advantage—Taking the ball on the Kansas twenty-three yard line soon the ball was going twenty-three yards around right end. Down the field Kansas carried the ball to the Drake twenty-two-yard line. Then Peterson, Drake center, intercepted a Kansas pass and the first Jayhawker offensive was ruined. Up and down the field the ball was carried, first by Drake and then by Kansas. McAdams gaining almost every time he passed it in the second quarter Kansas took the ball on downs on the fifty-yard line. Penalties on Drake, forward passes and line bucks placed the ball in Kansas possession on the Drake twenty-yard line. Krueger and Burt made a first down and the ball was on the ten-yard line. On an open formation Wilson gained four yards through center. The defense of the game, made over yards through the line, and Krueger added two more yards, placing the球 within six inches of the goal line. With two downs in which to make the distance, Wilson and Krueger fumbled the ball on the next play, Wilson and a Drake man falling on the spheroid, but the referee giving the ball to Drake. Drake then With the start of the second half came the Drake drive and the lone touchdown of the game. But the old Kansas tight remained. Towards the end of the third quarter, line plunges to McAdams' and Burt and a forward pass for twelve yards, Wilson to McAdams, placed the ball within the Bulldog ten yard line. With open formation Wilson made four yards and Kruger gained four yards and Kruger gained four downs, the Jaguars tried two forward passes which were knocked down by the vigilant Drake secondary defense and the second Kansas chance to core was over. Final Drive Falls Short At the start of the fourth quarter the Jayhawks started on their third furtile drive. Taking the ball on the fifty-yard line, several line backs and two forward passes, Wilson to McAdams, and Wilson to Black, once more situated the ball on the Drake 8 yard line, a forceful flap was attempted, the pass being incomplete over the Drake goal line and the Bulldogs took the ball on the twenty-yard line. The game ended with the ball in Drake's possession on the Kansas 14-yard line. MOORE'S STUDIO The line-up: The line-up: Kansas Pos. Drake Bake e. Devine Cave t. A. Kruger Davidson g. Marsh (Capt.) Welidin e. Peterson Higgins g. Stocking Ivy t. Denton McLean e. Lingerfelter Willion q. Ovechkin Dillans h. McLane Krueger h. Boeller Burt f. Armstrong Substitutions: Kansas, Mosby for vy, Boone for McLean, and Spurre for Burt. Drake, Heath for Doria Kansas City, Mo. Lawrence, Kansas 719 Massachusetts St., Phone 964 We are now making glasses for the 1923 Jayhawker. Call 964 at once for appointment. We are equipped to give all the latest lighting effects. Student-Faculty Dinner Being Planned by Ames Ames is making plans for a second student-faculty dinner, as the first was very successful. They have already sent out eighty invitations to faculty and one hundred and forty to the principal officers of the student organizations on the campus. The entire dinner is planned in the vicinity of faculty and the acquaintance of both faculty and students. The be two students and two faculty principal speakers of the evening will members. After the dinner, student and faculty opinions on various subjects will be given. CROWDS WATCH GRID-GRAPH Eight Hundred Students See Drake Game Here Eight hundred cheering students watched the Kansas-Drake game on the electric scoreboard in Robinson Gymnasium last Saturday as the contest, play by play, was flashed upon it. And eight hundred chagrined but unbenten Jayhawkers filed solemnly out after the game, firm in the belief that there had been "a hit" in the proceedings somewhere. Part of the crowd's abuses were directed toward the manipulators of the score board who, at times, counted too much "time out" between plays to satisfy is impatience. Wild cheering, outdistanced only by that heard at an actual gridiron contest, featured most of the playing although toward the last when Kansas failed to get the pigskin across the goal, a diminishing of enthusiasm was no-iteable. A fumble on the part of the K. U. team was accompanied by a chorus of groans, and a brilliant and run or owl, which he called forth a roar of applause. ASKS NO POLITICS FOR TEAM That he did not favor running football men for offices in the fall elections was the substance of an announcement made this morning by Coach "Potty" Clark. "However," Coach Clark added, "if the football interest is interested in politics, I see no reason why he should not be allowed to run." Clark Does Not Favor Players in Fall Elections There are numerous activities which a man can enter on the Hill athletic athletics team, and many others. No one man should enter too many of these activities, and therefore unless a football man has already established an interest in politics, I do not want him to run for office in the fall." The "Kansas team has a hard fight against our oppressive which tends to detract the players' interest from the major end of developing a good football team. I do not favor the idea of a football being put on the ticket by the party just because he will run a good race." Oval Grubb, c23, spent Sunday in Topeka. Virginia Sowers, c$25, has returned from Ottawa where she was the guest of Katherine Klinkibner, c$25. The cast of "Adam and Eva," the W. Y. C. A. play, has been entirely rearranged from the original selections and now is as follows: Adam, Ted Weir; Mr. King, Albert Kerr; Incue Horace, Zack Taylor; Mr. Claimton, David Mackie; Lord Andrew, Stunt Campbell; Dr. Delemarte, Philip Ferguson; Aunt Abbey, Irene Peabody; Corinthia, Francis Wilson; Julia, Margaret Armstrong; and Eva, Madeline Donneymer. Recast Parts for "Adam And Eva" Y.W.C.A. Play The manuscripts for the play have arrived from New York, and the first reading-over has been held. It was a warm sunny day, with a full swing next week. The play has already cost the producers $50 in royalties and guarantees, and promises to be one of the most successful amateur productions see in Lawrence. Frances Straulman, c24, spent Sunday in Toneka. Ivo Parrott, c23, was a visitor in Kansas City. Richard Beauty, c25, visited in Kansas City. Your OBERCOAT Is Ready! at Ober's Ober's HEAD TO FORE QUITTING K. U. Dames Will Elect New Officers Wednesday An election to fill the vacancies in the list of officers of the K. U. Damen will be held at a meeting of that society at the home of M. J. L. Meyer, 716 Alhambra street, Wednesday at 3 p.m. The K. U. Dames is the organization of the wives of men enrolled in the University of Kansas. The president of Mrs. Harry W. Frazek, and the secretary, Meyer. The other offices are to be filled at the coming meeting to present members and officers extend to all women whose husbands are enrolled in the nUniversity to be present at this meeting. --with Happy Jack, the "fix-it" tramp, and Si and Seth, the rivals in love Think of Boston without its beans and then try to imagine K. U. without Wiedemann's Phi Delta Theta fraternity entertained with a formal dance Friday evening. Archie Larkin, c'23, spent Sunday visiting friends in Topeka. ? Can Quality Overcoats and Suits be sold for $27.50 and $22.50 SkofStadS "Clothes of Merit" prove it "There's a reason" Brick has everything arranged so cozily. He cooks food that students like, and has the interests of the students always at heart. THE OREAD Why sure—that's where We eat —We started there in our Freshman year and have always gone there for regular meals, teas, parties, suppers after dances and eats at all times. Eat there and establish a comforting, satisfying habit. Just a Step from the Campus THE OREAD CAFE E. C. BRICKEN, Prop. Bowersock Theatre Tuesday-Wednesday-Thursday Shows-3:00-7:00-9:00 p.m. They re waiting for you at The wonder-epic of American Hearts "The Old Homestead" You'll laugh— when Reuben parts from lovely Ann and Uncle Josh has to sell the Old Homestead You'll thrill- You'll cry— when the roaring cyclone sweeps the town away and saves Ann from death in Lovers' Gap. THEODORE ROBERTS as "Uncle Josh" George Fawcett, T. Roy Barnes, Harrison Ford, Fritzi Ridgway.—It's a Paramount. also Larry Semon in "The Agent" Adults 40 cts Children 20 cts Black Mask Proclamation It is common knowledge to the student body that political parties do exist on this campus. It is further known that these parties are Black Mask and Pachacamac. Any one who is interested in politics is concerned with the success of one of these groups. Blask Mask and Pachacamac have existed so long that they have become institutions in K.U.life. For it is through the medium of these two parties that the prominent men and women on the campus are placed before the student body for recognition. We who are concerned with the success of Black Mask submit a bit of the history of our party. Black Mack is the insurgent party on this campus. It was organized in 1916 to combat the only existing party, which was Pachacamac. Black Mask has never been interested in controlling or dominating the elective offices on the hill, but rather in submitting the names of men and women whom we think most capable and worthy of the office they seek. Our motto has always been, "Its the Candidate that Counts." We hold that if any individual voter believes that one of our candidates does not fill the requirements, then this man should vote for the opposing nominee. Politics may play a part in the selection of freshman and sophomore class officers, but in the junior and senior class the candidates we have selected are all well known by their fellow classmen, and their merits and qualifications are not matters of speculation. Considering these facts Black Mask has placed the following candidates before the student body for their approval in the election Thursday: SENIORS President—Joe Bloomer Vice President—Marion Collins Secretary—Marion McDonald Treasurer—Milton Cummings JUNIORS President—"Dawn" Davidson Vice President—"Red" Lutz Secretary—C. I. Friese Treasurer—Frances Keith Junior Prom—Clyde Lucas Ralph Stagg SOPHOMORES President—Emerson Norton Vice President—Walter Means Secretary—Mary Lois Ruppenthal Treasurer—Ralph Hower Soph Hop—Earl Alline FRESHMEN President—Wilder Dresser Vice President—Bill Harrison Secretary—Eulalia Richardson Treasurer—Ronald Hall THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XX. NUMBER 28 HANCELLOR APPOINTS SENATE COMMITTEES Selections Made by Lindley Have Been Approved by the University Senate THERE ARE FEW CHANGES Twenty-Six Committees in Lis—W. D. Davis Is New Appointee on Athletic Body Chancellor E. H. Lindley has appointed the following Senate committee for the year and the Senate for the previous change have been made in the list. The list follows: Advanced standing affiliation *c*f colleges and examination: Stufft, Joseph. Cochill, Daima, Davis, Engel, Johnson, W. H., Johnson, F. E., Kent, Kester, Kelly, Mitchell, Mix, Ray, mound, Rice, M. E., Smith, W. R., Sturner. Alumni interests: Hungerford Flint, Foster, Hill, Havenhill, John son, W. H., Riding. Assignment of quarters. Kelly and deans of schools concerned. Kent Directs Convocations Bryan prize essay: Hollands Chubb, Fasset. Concavations and lectures, regular and special; Kent, Wheeler, Nelson Arant, Ingham, Dyer, Butler, Boynton, Burdick, Blitz. Debating: Shinn, Fassett, O'Leary Raymond, Rice, R. F. Division of athletics: Allen, F. C. Boynton, Naismith, Rice, H. A. Davis. Division of libraries: Manchester, Burdick, Dunlap, Dallus, Galloway, Goldsmith, Stoland, Olin, Hodder. Division of publications and committee on printing: Flint, Ackton Foster, Ingham, Kent, Klooz, Manchester, Walker, P. F., Hunter, S. J. Division of summer session: Kent Allen, F. B., Blitz, Arnt, Stouther Butler, Brandt, Cogill, Dyer, Kelly Walker, P. F., Sayre. Division of University extension Ingham, Dill, Brand, Downing, Johns F, E. F., Shoron, OBrien, Owen Olary, Knappen Division of Vocations: Dyer, Blitz Hood, Hunter, W. S., Johnson, W. H. Kent, Sprague, Winston. Graduation diplomas: Foster and Chancellor's Cabinet. Essays on practical Christianity: Lynn, Hollandes, Johnson, W. S. Laired, Wilcox. Student Affairs Committee Joint committee on student affairs: Blitz, Burham, Burnich, Dyer, Barto, Mitchell, Neuen, Schwander, Brown, Awner, Wheeler. Health, hygiene, and housing: Dyer, Blitz, Bacon, Bryant, Charles, Corbin, Gardner, M., Jewell, Naismith, Nelson, Reed, Smith, S. Eulner, Seguiner, Sharon, Sprague, "Templin, Ike Olbrien, Obrien, Barnack, Black Downs Grounds: Shaad, Frazier, Goldsmith, Mnown, Shea, Stevens, Temp lin. Men's student council: Dyer, Brown, Wheeler. Scholarships: Galloo, Hood, Winton, Wilson, Stevens, Spang! r, Oliver Foster. Student loan fund: Foster, Blitz Dyer, Sterling. Recommendation of teachers: Kent, Hunter, W. S., Johnson, W. H., Mitchell, Nezen Schawder, O'Leary, Snuque, Schwegler. R. O. T. C.: Casey, H. J. (acting chairman), Alter, Davis, Hallen, Hunterford, Shaad. University humanistic series: Hodder, Blackmar, Hopkins, Walker A. T. Whitebom. University organizations other than athletic. Thurau, Allen, H. C. Alter, Lawson. University science bulletin: Hunter, S. J., Baugartner, Hunter W. S. Boorens, Stevael, Stoland, Tracy Corbin, Neil Schwender, Bitz Corbin, Neil Schwender, Norma Keys Goes to Boulder Miss Norma Keys, former secretary of the correspondence-study department, has gone to Boulder, Colo., where she is a student at the University of Colorado. Miss Harriet Stevenson, who taught in the Law School high school last year, earned M keys, whose home is in Boulder, and has been secretary of correspondence-study for the past two years. She intends to finish the work toward an A. B. degree while she is in Boulder. Margaret Drake, c'25, of Salina, and Laura Rankin, c'25, of Lawrence, were the guests of Josephine Ryan, Kansas City, City, Friday and Saturday. Will Play Off Girls' Tennis Doubles Soo UNIVERSITY OF KANSA S, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, OCT. 17, 1922. The girls' doubles of the tennis tournament last spring is to be played off this week, according to Lela Duncan, tennis manager. There are now three contesting couples, Mary Helen Hamilton and Nestor Moore, representing the junior class; Mary Harkey and Danielle Gunther; sophomore; and Vera Krebbiel and Lela Duncan representing last year's freshman class. The winners of the turnover will each receive 50 points credit on their V. A. A. sweaters. R.O.T.C. ENROLLMENT REACHES NEW MARK Coast Artillery and Engineering Corps Are Represented in Department Here The R. O. T. C, with a list of 222 men has the largest enrollment that he department of military science and tacuces has had since the corps was established in the University, the Casey Campus, as a faculty process in the department. The Reserve Officers' Training Corps unit was established at the University of Kansas in September, 1919. The enrollment in the department was not known; it may be seen from the following figures: September, 1920, 148 men; January, 1921, 183 men; September, 1921, 195 men; January, 1922, 198 men. The purpose of the department is $\sigma$ train the students to qualify as and lieutenants in the reserve corps if the coast artillery, or as engineers leaping upon the unit in which the student is enrolled. The graduates are to help build the great reserve of officers necessary to national defense. The course in coast artillery deals with heavy artillery, both operation and maintenance. This course qualifies a man as 2nd lieutenant in the coast defense artillery or in the heavy artillery. The course in the engineer unit concern the work of the corps of engineers. This course includes besides the general work in construction, surveying and mapping, mechanical equipment, roads, railroads and bridges, and other similar work. It is Captain Casey's desire to establish an infantry unit in the institution to take care of the troops, who desire military training, but who have not the mathematical foundation to take the technical courses. The decreased allotment of officers and funds for R. O. T. C. work practically makes it impossible. SCRIBES TO GET ACQUAINTED Associated Journalists to Have Party Wednesday Afternoon An old-fashioned get-together party will be staged in the news room of the Journalism Building, Wednesday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock when the Daily Kanan will be host to the nationalization was started in 1971 by Edwin Hollinger, a student of the department who graduated in '17. He is now traveling in France and Italy as correspondent for the United Press Service, and was formerly United States Press correspondent in Rua The Associated Journalists include all students who have enrolled in the department. All cubs and advanced soils are invited to attend. Prof. Geltch Will Give Violin Recital Tuesday Just before the party the *assessed Journalists* will hold a business meeting at 10 o'clock in the Kaan news room, which election of officials will be held. Plans will also be discussed for the entertainment of the Kansas High School Journalists Conference to be held here November 3 and 4. services are important. Just before the party the Associated Journalists will hold a business Prof Waldemar Gelch, of the department of violin in the School of Fine Arts, will give a recital in Fraser chamber Tuesday evening at 8:20 o'clock. Professor Gelch will give a recital by Mrs. Gelch who plays. The public is invited to attend this recital which is the first faculty recital if the year. There will no admission charge. Mu Phi Epsilon entertained Phi Mu Alpha Friday evening, Oct. 13 with an informa Dance at the chapter house. LINCOLN LIVES AGAIN IN ACTINGOF McGLYNN Shows the Life of Our Great President in Six Episodes WRITTEN BY DRINKWATER Rest of Cast Make Admirable Background for the Artist Had Abraham Lincoln himself been upon the stage, the audience which filled Bowersock Theater last night to witness Frank McGlenny portray Abraham Lincoln in Drinkwater? He had been seen more attentive and reverent. Abraham Lincoln may belong to the ages, but Drinkwater and MeGlynn made him live again last night. No one could leave the theatre after that, so Abraham Lincoln was a better citizen and a better American for having seen it. Linein's Personality Shown Frank McGlynn, as Abraham Lincoln, central figure in the play, gave a wonderful interpretation of the great leader. Besides being an anatomical replica of the great president, he has accomplished the seemingly impossible and caught the warmth, the freshness, the freedom and the speciality which befits him to present the character by presenting the dignity of a president; he does not preside Lincoln to us on stilts. He gives us Lincoln as the man, wise simple and lovable. Cast is Good Background The rest of the cast is in back ground for McGlynn and their admiral acting contributed greatly to the finished production that it was. There is no love interest or plot in the play. 'It might more appropriately be called an interpretative parable. Rather than the bare bones of the regular mechanical plot, the play depends for its unity on the portrayal of the modeling of a man's feelings and personality prologue. The play is divided into six important episodes in the life of Lincoln. Scene Shows Lincoln at Home Scene Shows Lincoln at Home The first scene is in Lincolnshire at Springfield when he accepts the presidency. Here he presides. Here we see a Lincoln who is free, more talkative and genial than we do in the later scenes during the trying times of the presidency. Wintfred Hanley, as Mrs. Lincoln depicts well the role of comedian in the presidency, donates the housewife intuities. Mr. Wear has been coached by Ar- thur Hammerstein, Henry Fields, Robert Edmund Jones and George Vivian. His home is now in Topeka and he is a member of the Phi Kappa Psl fraternity. The second scene is laid in Seward's Room in the White House. Here we see a deeper and a quister Lincoln—a man about to be faced with a momentous decision but determined that no pressure can alter that decision. We look forward to John W. Bennet, the ambitious Seward does very creditable work. WEAR HAS MUCH EXPERIENCE The third scene is laid in the White House; the fourth is in the Cabinet Room; the fifth is at Grant's head quarters at Appomattox upon that corner's surrender. The last scene is their assassination at Fort Smith Theatre. Will Play the Lead in "Adam and Eva" T. G. Wear, c'24, who plays the part of Adam, leading role in the Y. W. C. a. play, "Adam and Eva," scheduled to appear at the Bowersock Theatre October 31, has been prominent in the theatricals at Columbia University in the City of New York. He also plays in the University Players and has had part in Robert Edmund Jones' production of "Macbeth" with Lionel Barrymore and Julia Arthur. Mr. Wear appeared in two varsity shows as well as the regular Soph Show. The last Columbia Varsity show was coached by George Vivian, noted English actor and producer. Mr. Wear was his personal stage manager as well as playing a character part in the productions. Winston Tate, A. B. '22, was a guest at the Phi Psi house this weekend. Mr. Tate was returning from Wichita, where he has been in the interest of his firm, the May-Plan Corporation, of Kansas City, Mo. Studets in Healingforns University wear white hats corresponding to an American sailor hat with a bill, according to Lloyd M. Kagey, son of Ambassador C. L. Kagey, United States representative for Finland. This university is one of the oldest schools in Europe. Finnish College Men Wear Odd Headpica Mr. Kagry is a resident of Beloit, and a member of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. In comparing the customs of that country with those of the United States, Mr. Kagey says they are much like us and copy our customs to a great extent. The people of Finland are very thrifty. They deal mostly in lumber and dairy products. They have progressed so far in the dairy business that Holland has put an embargo on dairy products from this country as they were under-selling the people of Holland in their own territory, but it is not a billy company. There are two types of people in Finland, the Fins, and the Finlands. Two languages are used, Swedish and Finnish. All the newspapers are printed in the two languages and paper money is likewise printed in both languages. ROOTERS' SECTION IS OPENTO RESERVATION All Men Who Signed For Seats Should Secure Tickets Tomorrow Cheerleader Miller expresses the hope that every man who signed a rooter's card will ask for a seat in either section F or G. Student active or individual tables are necessary before the seats can be checked up. Wednesday will be the only day in which seats in this section can be had, and the athletic office will be open all day so that every man will have an opportunity to secure his seat. Reservations made at this time will be good for four home games played on the Stadium field. Reservations for the rooters' section will open tomorrow, and all men who signed for seats in this preferred group should secure their tickets at the athletic office, according to Vigil Miller, cheerleader. Two of the team's Kane side have been reserved for the "Thunderning Thousand." TOPEKA REUNION IS OCT.20 Jayhawkers There Will Hea K. U. Faculty The Topeka K.-U. reunion will be held on Friday, Oct. 20, instead of Thursday, as was previously announced. Prof. Herbert Hungerford is in charge of the program for the evening. W. Y. Morgan, A.B.'85, Republican candidate for governor, has been invited to speak. Prof R. A. Kent, dean of the School of Education, will also speak. Dean H. L. Butler, of the School of Music, will sing the singing, Clyde Miller, of Topka, will be one of the Topka speakers. Albert James Harno, professor of law at the University of Kansas in 1919 and 1920, is the new dean of the School of Law at the University Alumnae College. Ahmad News contains the following account of Dean Harno: Professor Hungerford has sent letters to all faculty members, urging them to attend the reunion. "He looks young and is young. In fact, being only, 33 years old, he is the youngest dean on the campus, and comes near being the youngest dean ever at the University. He succeeds H. C. Jones as dean after one year's teaching at Illinois. He was dean of the Washburn University Professor of law at the University of Kansas, and practiced law in Los Angeles three years. He is a graduate of Dakota Wesleyan and of Yale." Former K. U. Professor Dean of Law at Illinois Roland Thompson, *fn*, was a guest at the Pih Psl house this week-end. Mr. Thompson is with the Townley Metal Company of Kansas City, Ms. Earl Sulton, *c26*, spent the week end with his parents in Hutchinson. Gerald Kesse, *c23*, visited his parents at Topka last week. Cards and Tags Appear Unac companied by Demonstra- tions and Excitement POLITICAL CAMPAIGN IS STARTING QUIETLY ANNOUNCE SECOND TICKET No Independent Candidates Have Made Their Advent into the Race Tags, bearing the emblems of contesting political parties for class offices in the fall election are appearing on the hill, and candidates and supporters of candidates are buttonholing the prospective vote. Campaign cards, too, are being freely distributed. For the most part, the campaign is proceeding quietly, particularly when it is compared with the glaring and flaunting banners of two years ago. Name Pachacamac Candidates Pachacamac, the other political party in the fall elections has announced its candidates. They are: Seniors; for president, Louis M. firce; for vice-president, P. K. Smith; for secretary, Elva McMullen; and for treasurer, Paulan Burke. Juniors: for president, Howard Firebaugh; for vice-president, Oliver Kuhl; for secretary, Milred Cornelius; and for treasurer, Cecil Dumont. As principal, Jake Shanicke has been selected to run for Junior Prom managers. Sophonores: for president, 'Raymond Fisher; for vice-president, Tom Poor; for secretary, Bettie Sifers; and for treasurer, Vernon Engle. Lionel Seamon has been chosen to run for Sohn Hosman manager. Freshmen: for president, Orin Shepard; for vice-president, Bond Hammond; for secretary, Frances Patterson, and for treasurer, Harvey Langford. For the manager of the Olympic games this fall which are hold before the annual Thanksgiving celebration has become a holiday is Walters Walters. Other Ticket Is in Field The candidates on the opposition ticket, the Black Mask, were announced in Monday's Kansas. As yet no individual candidates, running for class offices on their own initiative and without the support of a political party, have made their advent into the race. As elections are scheduled for Thursday, it is improbable that either individual candidates or a new ticket with a complete list of competing candidates will be presented. STUDENTS HEAR McGLYNN Frank McGlynn, who has made a great name for himself in the life role of Drinkwater's "Abraham Lincoln," gave an interesting talk before the Dramatic Art class Monday afternoon. Impersonator of Lincoln Speak to Dramatic Class He defined art as that which upfits and makes for a better humanity. "If a play leaves the audience with a pessimistic or intensely morbid feeling, it is unworthy, for it is perverted art," he said. "Your efforts are worthy of only the best. You can do much to advance the art of dramatics in your profession." It is true that unworthy plays are done, but it is not the fault of the actor. Every real actor wants to do artistic work. "The life of an actor is along a weary, often fruitless, path, full of disappointments. Twenty-six years in the profession have taught me that the life requires men and women of all ages and ideals of our fathers and mothers. "An actor is the only professionalist who cannot choose for himself in his work. He is placed where his manager wants him. Otherwise he is not good, because they are never given the chance to make good. A sculptor can choose his clay. Men in other professions can select; but an actor cannot. Sometimes he suffers hardships; years; sometimes he is never known. "I believe that my lifelong study of the ethics of dramatics enables me to play Abraham Lincoln." Marguerite Tracey, c'23, of Wichita, who is now working kindergarten in work in Kansas City, Mo., visited at the Pi Beta Phi house last week. Laura Rankin, c24, visited friends in Kansas City over the week-end. Miss Morrison Arrives Safely in Pekin, China Word has been received of the safe arrival of Miss Charlotte Morrison in Pekin, China. Miss Morrison is a former student of K. U., but graduated from Columbia in 1921. She will teach in the Pekin College and a department of Physical Education in the Yenching College for girls. Miss Morrison's work as an instructor signs her up for five years, of which one year will be devoted to learning the Chinese language and getting acquainted with Chinese customs and manners. Her home is in Lawrence, and she is a member of the Alpha Xi Delta sorority. GOVERNOR'S TROPHY IS AWARDED TO JEWELI Wins Prize in Eugenies Competition Conducted at Kansas Free Fair The family of Albert H. Jewell, 1036 New Hampshire street has been awarded a Governor's Trophy in the Fitter Families Eugenics Competition which was conducted at the Kansas University. Dr. Florence Brown Sherborn, professor of child care at the University, only two other families in Kansas were awarded trophies. Mr. Jewell is director of the Water and Sewage laboratory here and is sanitary engineer for the city. He consists of his wife and one child. The propheies were seven an examination; the sixth an internal history, health history, mental nerves and psychological examination; structural examination including posture, development and strength; general physical examination; special examination of nose, ears, eyes, and throat; and a laboratory examination of blood. One of the rules of the examination is that a lower score is any (the lowest) score of the examination for the trophy even though the averages in the other sections be high. Thus a low mental average cannot be offset by a high record in physical examination. The object of the competition is to "apply the well-known principles of heredity and scientific care which have revolutionized agriculture and stock breeding to the next high form of creation—the human farm." Dr. Sherbon, who is superintendent of the Fitter Families Competition, is assisted by other members of the University faculty. Prof. W. R. Robertson worked out a plan to eugenize the eupheliae and Dr. Martha G. B. Patrick, and Mis Maud Naishm gave the structure examinations. This is the third yearly competition which has been held. SENIORS WILL HAVE SPREA Sale of Tickets Large, Women Urged to Attend The response to the sale of tickets for the Senior Spread, which is to be hold at Robinson gymnasium (Saturday 2 p.m.), has been very enthusiastic. These in charge are very eager to have as many senior women as is possible at this spread. This class as juniors, last year, had the highest percentages of students who they hope to keep up this record. Geraldine Pettit is chairman of the entertainment committee, and plans are being made for games and other Any one who does not have a ticket may get one at Fraser check stand until Wednesday noon. All women are selling tickets for the spread must check in those not sold at the check stand by that time. A get-together will be held for all the instructors in the department of physical education at 8 o'clock Wednesday evening at the home of G. B. Patrick, 1515 Vermont Street. "The purpose of the social gathering," said Mr. Patrick, "is to give the faculty of the department an opportunity to become better acquainted with each other." No definite arrangements have been made for entertainment. Instructors In Physical Education Will Mee "DAD'S DINNER" WILL FEATURE "DAD'S DAY" Harvey Walker and John Statz left Monday morning for Pittsburgh to attend the League of Kansas Municipalities Convention which is being held there this week. Executive Committee Decides to Hold Fear Saturday Evening After the Game ROTARIANS TO COOPERATE Organization With Largest Number of Its Fathers Present Will Receive Prize Allen Offers Prize A novel feature of the dinner and entertainment that evening was assured when Dr. F. C. Allen, in behead of the Athletic Association, offered a prize of football tickets to the organization which could turn with the largest per cent of its fathers present. "Dad's dinner" will be one of the main features of Dad's Day, which is to be held at the University on November 4 the day of the Oklahoma Kansas football game. This decision was reached by the executive committee for Dad's Day at a meeting held Monday afternoon. The dinner, which is for father, son, and daughter, and mother too if she is in town, will be given that Saturday evening after the football game. Owing to the fact that the dinner comes after the game rather than before, a refund for the tickets already used will be the form in which the pants is tendered to the organization. That is, if the winning organization has ten fathers there, it will have a check for the price of ten tickets. The balance of the program for the evening has not been entirely worked out, and the details will be announced at a later date. May Attend Rotary Lunch The Rotary Clubs in this section of the state will be meeting here on the same day, and it is expected that many fathers will "kill two birds with one stone" by attending both the Rotary Club lunch, which is to be held at noon Saturday, November 4, and the Dad's Day functions. No special arrangements will be made for the entertainment of the fathers during the morning of the big day, but that time will be left open in order that the visiting parents may have an opportunity to see the University. The various museums will be open and at their best. The museum also has a formal exhibit and program the afternoon of Friday before Dad's Day and the displays will be left on show for Saturday morning. Favor Insignia for Dads FAVOR insignia tell The executive committee favored the adoptive insignia for the fathers who are present for the day, but nothing was definitely adopted. The committee will be divided and assigned special duties within the next few days, according to Dean John R. Dyer, chairman, and the matter of insignia will be handled through a special subdivision of the committee. All of the organizations at the University are allowed to hold the earliest of the evening of Dad's Day clear of other engagements in order that their fathers may attend the dinner. Every student at the University is expected at least to make an attempt to get his parents here for the celebration. Speaker's Voice to be Amplified by Microphone A unique feature of the K. U. Radio program to be given the night of December 11 at Robinson gymnasum will be the simultaneous sound of the speaker's voice as it leaves his lips and as it comes back from Kansas City, through the loud speakers in the gymnasium. According to the plan, the speaker will talk into a microphone in the gymnasium. His speech will be carried to Kansas City to the Star's broadcast station, where it will be picked up here at Lawrence, and re-encoded along with the original words of the speaker. Cosmopolitan Club To Buy Piano The Cosmopolitan Club held a meeting yesterday afternoon and decided to buy a baby grand piano, instead of the upright one they are now trying out at their house. A committee is to be appointed to inter-mental baskets and others, who may have books that they do not care to keep, but which are still valuable, and ask that they be contributed toward the library the club a founding. Send the Daily Kansan home. 1 . THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University Subscription price $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.00 for one semester; 6 cents a month; 15 cents a week. Entered as second-class mail matte 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 Cairo. The pages of the Department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Louisiana, Kansas Lawrence, Kanaas Phones, K. U. 25 and 66 The Daily Kansan aims to please the people of Kansas by providing the University of Kansas, to go furthest the state, by standing for the identity she envisions, to be clean; to be cheerful; to be clean; to be cheerful; to leave more serious problems to leave more serious problems to serve the best of its ability to serve the best of its ability to serve the best of its ability. Editorial Staff Editor-in-chief Ben Dibbs Editor-in-chief Glenn Claxton Newt Editor Raymond Dyer Sport Editor Glick Schultz Editor-in-chief Glick Schultz Alumni Editor Ruth Carter Alumni Editor Ruth Carter Business Staff Business Manager ...Lloyd Ruppenthal Assst Bus. Mgr. ...Montgomery, J. Assst Bus. Mgr. ...Clyde Burnside Board Members Chester Shaw Dean Boggs Lilleywell White Perry Jones Caroline Carline Harrisker DelVaquon Francis Carlton Powers Roland Biang TUESDAY, OCT. 17, 1922 Pretty soon the elections will be over and the United States senators will be kind enough to devote a little time to the nation's business. ABRAHAM LINCOLN Last night the historical characters of a half-century ago paraded before the people of Lawrence and students of the University. Head and shoulders above them all, the greatest among great men, stood Abraham Lincoln, simple in his greatness, unwavering in purpose, democratic and generous. The occasion was the production of Drinkwater's "Abrham Lincoln." Based upon no plot other than history itself, the drama of a nation unfolded itself before the audience. The potent personality and wonderful idealism of Lincoln—his very soul, if you please—was laid bare before a people that holds his name in reverence. The production was nothing short of inspirational. Surely no one could look upon the great loneliness and the divine courage of Lincoln, as portrayed by Mr. McGlynn, and not come away a bit more humble—a better man or woman for having witnessed such idealism and such belief in the right and the just. When the character of Abraham Lincoln stalks before us, courageous under a load of trouble, our petty difficulties are minimized. One is ashamed to think that he has not always been worthy of that noble countryman, and is inspired to vow anew to uphold the spendid idealism of such a man. And one of the team said that Waldorf-Astoria isn't a children's tonic. WHY NOT A PRIMARY Student elections at the University have long been controlled by two self-perpetuating political organizations of secret membership. Each year the candidates voted for by the University electorate are selected by these parties in secret session. Students have gradually come to feel that they have no real part in filling the positions in the government. But there is a remedy for the situation. Why could not a primary system be established here? Why could not a central committee for each party be chosen as the fall The objection at once arises that K. U. already has too many elections, and that a primary would necessitate another campaign and another day of balloting. The Kansas would certainly not want to see another election folisted upon the University. But there is a workable system of indirect primaries, which would not call for a separate election, and which would, nevertheless, place the selection of candidates upon a more democratic basis. Why should self-perpetuating, secret organizations select the candidates who are to fill the positions in the student government on the Hill? Official Daily University Bulletin Copy received by Florence E. Bliss, Editor, Chancellor's Office until 11:00 a.m. Vol. II. Oct. 17. 1922. GRADUATE RESEARCH COMMITTEE: There will be a meeting of the Research Committee of the Graduate School at 4:30 Wednesday afternoon in Room 102 East Administration Building. No. 28. GRADUATE RESEARCH COMMITTEE: E. B, STOUFFER, Chairman. SUMMER SESSION ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE: There will be a meeting of the Summer Session Administrative Committee at 7:30 Wednesday evening in Room 119 Fraser Hall. R A KENT Director OLD EQUIPMENT COLORADO GEOLOGIC FIELD EQUIPMENT; all equipment issued to members of the Colorado Geological Field Party must be covered by this license. W. H. SCHOEWE, Asst. Prof. of Geol. election? Each central committee which would be selected by the voters of its respective party at the regular fall election, would be the real tangible part of the party, just as the Democratic and Republican national committees are definite continuing parts of the national parties. The central committee of each Hill party would hold office until the following fall election, and would nominate candidates for office at both elections. The committees would include a set number of members elected by the various schools of the University. Such a system, although not quite as democratic as the direct primary plan, avoids the necessity of an additional election. The system would make the nominating bodies popularly elected and their membership known to all, in place of the clandestine, self-perpetuting bodies which rule our campus today. Every voter would have opportunity to be represented in the nominating bodies for he could vote for representatives from his school to one of the central committees. The Black Mask voters on the campus would elect their committee, and the Pacchacamasc voters would select their nominating body. But every voter could help to choose one central committee; the representations to the caucuses would not be by organization, as it largely is today. Some of the politicians, who temporarily forget the welfare of the University, will doubtless characterize this as a "wild-eyed and unworkable plan." But it is not. It is neither wild-eyed nor unworkable. It is perfectly feasible, and it certainly would be more democratic and produce better feelings on the campus than the present system. Jayhawk Jargon This week is "girl week" in St. Louis. Why not give the old maids a week? Yes, a couple or three of them. Girls must be innately military. Four or five of them will always march down the sidewalk abreast. Some fellows are like a worn out larm clock—they raise a big racket t the wrong time. We hope the falling leaves will be a hint to the movie prices. When we take a quiz we need inspiration, but all we usually get is desperation. A soft answer may turn away wrath, but there's too much of that soft stuff now. --pre back again. This time, however, without the old-fashioned buckle. New Flare Tounge effects, with a dainty strap adjustment, now characterizes the novel creation which Dame Fashions favors. Love may. be blind, but the old folks are not. An owl doesn't tell all he knows but he boots a great deal. The Sophomore Black Mask Ticket This ticket is out for real class representation and a Soph Hop that will rival the Junior Prom. The candidates are all chosen on merit. It is up to you to choose the best candidates for the offices, and put those candidates in. Emerson Norton heads the Black Mask ticket, and Earl Alvine is pledged to put over a real Hop. The Ticket The Ticket Emerson Norton—President. Walter Means—Vice President. Mary Lois Ruppenthal—Secretary. Ralph Hower—Treasurer. Soph Hop Manager Earl Alvine. "It's The Candidate That Counts" Pander's QUALITY JEWELRY The Betty Colonial of Brown or Black Satin, Brocaided Quarter, Plain Vamp, and Spanish Heel. PEDAL Price $10.00 COLONIALS Senator Jim Keem says there is more kick in buttermilk than there is in beer. The next thing we know he might be wearing malted milk hounds as drankkens. NEWMAN'S Students are having to abandon their trips to the "Patty." Too many of their profits recognize them. Long hair may have been Samson's strength, but it's a weakness with some of the wafer-wranglers on the Hill. We know a girl whose tongue is so sharp she is always cutting her month. If money were the root of all evil, cost students would be angels at the end of the month. ANNOUNCEMENTS The Filipino Association will hold its first regular meeting of the year Sunday, October 22, at 2:30, at the Cosmopolitan Club, 1633 Indiana. Among other matters to be attended is the election of new officers. All members are requested to be present—S. Visperas, President. Regular rehearsal of the Men's Glee Club Wednesday evening at 7:30 p.m. in Central Administration All members must be present. Mrs. James L. Meyer will act as hostess to the K. U. Dames at her home, 716 Alabama Street, on Wednesday, October 18, from 3 to 5 o'clock. Mrs. Ralph Davill will appear in a video that is urged to be present and on time as important are to be determined at this meeting. Thomas Shoe Electric Shop Oread Shining Parlor CHARLIE'S Best Shines in Town "SuitingYou" THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULTZ 917 Mass. St. PROTCH The College TAILOR Ladies who desire expert Hair-Bobbing Patronize the STADIUM BARBER SHOP "The Shop of Service" First Door South of Von's WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods Visit the Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. United Army Stores Co 706 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Distributors of Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Army Goods Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. sio Penn. St. Phone 335 Phone 139 BELLS FLOWER SHOP Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS 825 1-2 Mass Copyright 1922 Hart Schaffner & Marx Hart Schaffner & Marx top coats for style They have the fine woolens and tailoring that make the style hold up and that give you long wear and money saving. We gathered a great selection for you to choose from; Raglans, Chesterfields belted models, box coats, whipcords, gabardines, tweeds, homespuns The best values to be found anywhere PECKHAMS "I Say, Can You Tell Me What The Date Is?" Tuesday, October 31 at the BOWERSOCK Annual Y. W.C.A.Benefit Play Adam and Eva A modern comedy with a successful run in New York Popular Prices - $1.00, .75 and .50 Mail Orders to Elizabeth Dunkle at Henley House THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Actor Playing Title-role of Abraham Lincoln Has Devoted Over Three Years to the Part Frank McGlynn, who played the title role in the play, "Ambra Lin- tride roe" in the piny, "Abramah Lancolm," which appeared at the Bowersock Theater last night, is a native of the Bronx. He played in San Francisco. He is an ardent lover of the stage, and his chief hobby is horseback riding. Despite his great success on the stage Mr. McGlynn says that he intends, sometime in the near future, to desert it. "I have always hoped," he said, "to own some day a ranch where I can raise hogs, cattle, fruit, and good horses, and always be near my family. For the past fifteen years the McGlymys have resided in New York City, for until three years ago Mr. McGlynn has been playing in New York. Mr. McGlymyn has nine children ranging in age from nine to twenty. Frank, Jr., 18, who has been accompanying his father on engagements for the past month, will leave in a few days for St. Paul. Mime- sota, where he will begin the study of voice and elucidation under the tutor of a close friend of Mr. McGlynn. "Frank is set on entering the university so he must velope the fundamental qualities," Mr. McGlynn said. Mr. McGlynn began his theatrical career by playing certain roles before motion picture cameras of San Francisco and New York studios. He followed this line of work for ten years and on several occasions played important roles in pictures featuring William Farmum, George Arlis, and Billie Burke. It was not until three years ago that he began in John Drinkwater's "Abraham Lincoln" production. "I entered the Abraham Lincoln Museum because since a boy I have been a great admirer of Lincoln and his work. To In giving his personal viewpoint in regard to the theatrical profession, Mr. McGlynn said: "The stage is a great work but the life which one must lead in following it is frightful. Always strvce faces, except for one's own, and all sort of living conditions, most of which are unadmirable. "Occasionally," he said, "I am asked concerning the hotel accommodations in towns in which I have played. Often I describe them in the usual way, Grylln said: "ir the actors could also be the authors and producers of plays only the best art would be presented to the public, for an actor rejoices in playing a beautiful part. There are vast opportunities and distinctive but on the whole there is more good than bad presented newadays. The public," he concluded, "usually has a way of its own in discriminating the good from the bad in melodrama, and the culls are usually left by the way-ide." When asked for his opinion on the trend of modern theatricals, Mr. Mc- impassionate Lincoln on the stage I made a thorough study of his manner, gesture, vocal methods, and general expression; and the gathering of data for this study was a tremendous task," he added. WATKINS NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL $100,000.00 CAPITAL $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. SURPLUS $100,000.00 D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. DIRECTORS C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Asher, L. V. Miller, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishon The Platform of the Freshman Black Mask Ticket Win the Freshman Olympics and Can the Cap. Demand and Receive Fair Treatment from the Laws. Push the Class of 26 to the Front. Smokers for the Frosh. A Bigger and Better Frosh Frolic. This is the platform that we, the candidates on the Black Mask Freshman ticket, have pledged ourselves to put across when we are elected. Every candidate on this ticket will stand back of the platform to the limit; we made the platform, and it is our idea of what the Class of '26 needs and deserves on the Hill. Good Times and Get-Together Mixers. (Signed) Wilder Dresser—President. Bill Harrison—Vice President Eulalia Richardson—Secretary. Ronald Hall—Treasurer. Remember! Remember: "It's The Candidate That Counts" VARSITY THEATRE Tuesday Shows—2:30—4:00—7:30—9:00 p.m. "The Face in the Fog" with LIONEL BARRYMORE and Seena Owen A Paramount Picture Presented by Cosmopolitan Christy Comedy . . . "LET'ER RUN" Adults 28 cts Children 10 cts WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY JOHN L. LARAY PRESENTS WALLACE REID "The Ghost Breaker" IMPORTED BY LILA LEE and WALTER HIERS A Paramount Gallery . but the Eldridge House type, with its pro-modern arrangements, I always depict as being "just like home." The setting of the Friars Theatrical Club of New York The Association of University Women met in the Faculty Club rooms, Saturday afternoon. Following the business session, Miss Helen Rhola Hoopes talks on her European travelies and Miss Katherine Redding told us about a trip to Mexico. About fifty women were present. Refreshments were served. FOR SALE—Black pane velvet dress, size 36. Call 1780 White after 6 p. m. O-19 WANT ADS LOST-Pockeback containing bills, registration card, DeMoly identification card and other valuable. Finish card 2738 Blue or leave at Kanan office. IF YOU want good laundry work done, call M. Perry. 1116 N. J. Phone 2551. Work called for and delivered. O-23 LOST- Tortoise shell glasses in case, Thursday morning. Return to Kansas office. Phyllis Reynolds. FOR RENT - room in modern home for two boys. New furniture, close to hill. 1216 Tennessee. 2531 White. WANTED-Girl roommate comfortable room, moderate rent. 1204 Kentucky.Call 1050. venture. Call 1059. LOST-Bill post at or near the Gym last sat. Call 1748. Reward. —023 LOST-A jeweled Phi Gamma Delta pin with F. C. Schutte's name on the back of it. Reward. Call 444—020 LOST-Gambirde top coat at Gamma Phi Beta open house. Return, Reward to Hogg. phone 285. —020 SPLENDID GPORTIFUN for students (male or female) who desire to earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Pleasant work; after school hours. Write J. F. Stanley, 3445 Wayne Ave., Kansas City. -M79 PROFESSIONAL CARD DREL J. W. 'BRYON, (Denit.) Special attention to prevention and treatment. 804 Perkins Building. Tol. 597. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Ex- clusive, Optometrists) eyes examen glasses made. Office 1025 Mass A Bright Idea Have Sam G. Clarke order a Nobby Overcoat at Special Prices, $30, $35. 1033 Mass. St. The Junior Black Mask Ticket For the Class officers, the Black Mask ticket has representative active members of the class of 24. Compare them, their activities and their future on the Hill, with the Candidates who oppose them on the other ticket. It's up to you to choose for yourself, the candidate whose record merits honor. It is the duty of the Junior class to promote a real Junior Prom. Last year, with successful Black Mask candidates managing the Prom, the first really good party, with all liabilities met, set a mark for future managers. Clyde Lucas and Ralph Stagg, the Black Mask candidates this year, are prepared to meet this mark. Pick from these candidates for the honor positions on the Class of '24. "Davy" Davidson—President. "Red" Lutz—Vice President. Clarence Frieze—Secretary. Frances Keith—Treasurer. Prom Managers Clyde Lucas. Ralph Stagg. 'It's The Candidate That Counts!' Bowersock Theatre Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday Shows: 3:00 p.m.,7:00 p.m.and 9:00 p.m. Children 20c. BLUE LASKY PRESENTS "The Old Homestead" with Theodore Roberts, George Fawcett, T. Roy Barnes, Harrison Ford Fritzi Riddway A Paramount Picture and smiles and heart-throbs will live forever. For more than fifty years the greatest American heart-drama ever written. Now a perfect picture who tears A JAMES CRUZE PRODUCTION Adults 40c. Adapted from Demman Thompson's play by Perley Poore Sheehan and Frank Woods—Scenario by J. Josephson. Also— Larry Semon in "The Agent" Competent Candidates Count Names of political parties and their emblems are significant! The name Pachacamac and its emblem, the Rising Sun, indicate the character of the party which puts before you the strongest list of candidates for the class offices that you can find on the Hill! In selecting your class officers select those whom you think will work throughout the year for the best interests of the classes. Select those whom you think will appoint the best possible committees. Select those who can go into office without any strings or obligations attached to their candidacy. Investigate the past records of the candidates. See if you can find a man on the Pachacamac ticket who has been the president of any organization and then has not called a single meeting of that group. Look on the other ticket and you will find that the Black Mask senior president candidate was elected to the head of the "K" club last February and since that time has NOT called a single meeting of one of the best organizations on the Hill. Can you find a better man than Louie Miller to represent the Senior class? Leaving out any consideration other than the amount of work to be done by the Senior president, don't you think we had better have a man in office who has a brilliant record of steady and wise accomplishment back of him? Such a man is Louie Miller. He is the man who can be depended upon to get things done without making any appeal to fireworks or to taking orders from any small group. Consider Howard Firebaugh for Junior president. Howard is another man of the executive type. He is NOT depending upon football prowess to put his across. Skill on the football field is an important thing, but it and politics do not mix in the fall when a football man, if he is sincere, should be devoting all of his energies to the team. Raymond Fisher is running for president of the Sophomore class. He is another man who will WORK on class routine and see that things are done. He is not making any appeal because of athletic ability. He appeals to the Sophomore class as their logical candidate. Orin Shepherd, the candidate for president of the Freshman class is an overseas man, and a vocational SENIOR TICKET For President, Louie Miller For Vice President, P. K. Smith For Treasurer, Paulen Burke For Secretary, Elva McMullin SOPHOMORE TIKET For President, Raymond Fisher For Vice President, Tom Poor For Secretary, Betty Sifers For Treasurer, Vernon Engle Hop Manager, Lionel Seamon student. He is older than the average student and carries a level head on his shoulders. To meet Orin is to become a booster for him. Consider Chet Shore and Shad Janicke for Junior Prom managers. This is the year for the Junior class to show that a real Junior Prom can be put across. And it is the managers that have to do it. Select the candidates that that have a record of inventiveness and cleverness. Chet Shore is known to everybody on the Hill as the man who invented the Jayhawk glider which the team took back east with them. Shad Janicke has always been in the forefront as a man who can think up original things. Let's have a REAL junior prom instead of the usual sort: And Seamon. If you want a Sophomre Hop. that will make history let Seamon manage the party. He has a record of doing unique things in the past and if the Sophomores elect him he will start in Thursday night planning for the party. To match up the candidates for President on the four tickets are candidates for the other offices who are willing to win or lose by your decision to compare their qualifications with their opponents. JUNIOR TICKET For President, Howard Firebaug For Vice President, Oliver Kuhle For Secretary. Mildred Cornelius For Treasurer, Cecil Dunham Prom Managers. Chet Shore, Fred Janicke FRESHMAN TICKET For President, Orin Shepherd For Vice Pres., Bond Hammond For Treas., Harvey Langford For See'y, Francis sPatterson For Secretary, Harvey Langford For Olympic Manager, Wyth Walters When we say "Competent Candidates Count" we mean that every candidate on the Pachacamac ticket is the best man or woman for the place. You owe it to yourself to get an unbiased viewpoint of the respective merits of the two opposing tickets. If you will do this, Pachacmac victory is assured. PACHACAMAC NO SCRIMMAGE FOR VARSITY LAST NIGHT THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Jayhawkers Take a Much Needed Rest After Drake Defeat Saturday SQUAD IN POOR SHAPE Second String Men May Be Used Entirely in Washburn Game With two weeks in which to prepare for the next Valley game, that with the Kansas Aggies at Manahan on October 28, the Kansas Jays hawkers took the *first string varity* did not scrimmage at all yesterday afternoon, running among signals and watching the second team mix with the yearlings. Two hard games and two equally hard trips have left the Kansae队 in poor condition. A long wearisome journey to West Point, the punishment endured during the Army game and another hard trip and game day at home has some factors in the condition of the asy hawker team. Jayhawkers in Stump The Clark machine was pointed for the early season game with the Army and now the penalty is a slum play. The game will be interrupted intervening the Aggie game should remedy these handicaps. The Washburn game Saturday, according to all indications, will be nothing more than a practice game. After the defense handed the Ichabods by the Manhattan eleven and the Washington eleven, the Washburn eleven against its fresh, there is little to be feared from the Topka team. Four Regulars Injured Coach Clark indicated yesterday that the second string man would meet Washburn Saturday and that if the regular game at all, it is clearly in the nature of a good scrimmage to keep them in condition. Weildie, Cave, Ivy, and Spurgeen are on the injured list from the Army and Drake games, but all four men should be in shape by Saturday or by the Aggie game at the latest. The second variety eleven scrimmaged with the yearlings for more than an hour last evening. The varsity took the offensive most of the time and concentrated on endeavoring to score from within the 20-yard line. The practice last night was secret and spectators will also be excluded from the practices today and Wednesday. Dwight M. Beard, E. E.223, was a visitor at the University of Kansas last week. He is now employed by the Albert Immunel Company, of Kansas City, Mo. This is a large electrical operation and construction company, which owns the Karanov Strictive Electric Utilities Company. Mr. Beard is employed in the home office as a designer and draughtsman. Yes-sir-ee We have the Overcoats for which you are looking at $27.50 and $22.50 and if we cannot save you from $5 to $7.50 at the very least on your coat our name is not SKOFSTADS Secret practice was started yesterday and will continue through Tuesday and Wednesday of this week, running intruders away. Gridiron Gossip Glick Schultz Despite a bright sun, a cold wind swept across the Stadium field last night, and the big K. U. overcoats were brought out for the first time of the season. The coats were in demand, too. It was a crippled screw that limped on the field last night. Cave is nursing a twisted ankle. Weidlein has a bad leg. Ivy's knees are bothering him, and Spurgeon is still handicapped with a twisted knee. Two long, hard trips and the same number of stiff games have combined in an endeavor to disrupt the Jayhawker team. But with two weeks in which to recruit, the Kansas team and the Aegle game in good condition. The first string players will probably get in the Washburn battle just long enough to take a roof workout. The second string will be on the squad will be given a chance. The Jayhawkers have a hard battle ahead. The season is just one-fourth over and two defeats are marked in the first three. A defensive defeat, it's an uphill fight. In an account with the tussle with the Buildings Saturday, the Kansas City Star stated that Drake had eliminated the Jayhawkers from the Misa- These frosty mornings— These cool evenings— souri Valley Conference race. Kansas isn't out yet. The Kaw boys still have a fighting chance to the for honors and to the fighters fighting chance is all Kanaas needs. The Jewell County Club held their first meeting of the year Sunday afternoon, at 841 Louisiana. Of the thirty-five students in the University from Jewell County, thirty-one were present at this meeting. The following officers were elected: president, M. D. Ballard; vice-president, Lela Bell; secretary, Georgia Kelsey; treas- Jewell County Club Meets Wiedemann's ICE CREAM —A Carls Top Coat Gabardine Whipcord The b. doctor in M. M. D. Ballard; vice-president, Lela Belt; secretary, Georgia Kelsey; treasurer, A. C. Bulkrau. Cream Supreme —Sure comes in handy. —Prices as "Easy"; as honest merchandise can be sold $25 $30 $35 Flannel Shirts Sweaters Now Ready CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Joe Bloomer K Heading the Senior Black Mask Ticket Today the opposition to the Black Mask ticket is out in the open. You Seniors have an opportunity to compare the candidates for office in our class. You know them, you've been here four years with them, and we simply call your attention to those who Black Mask believes to be the ones meriting this honor. Irene B. Joe Bloomer—President. Marion Collins—Vice President. Marian McDonald—Secretary. Milton Cummings—Treasurer. "It's The Candidate That Counts" opponents have taken. Here is the quality ticket, and every candidate counts. Marian McDonald There is no need to outline the activities of these four Black Mask candidates. Each one has led in his or her particular activity, and still leads. We ask you to compare what they have done for the Crimson and Blue with what their opponents have done. Heavy Campion, B. S. '13, was the Westinghouse Electrical Company killed in Jamadun Pah, India, October at Wilkinson Pa. In April, 1921, 8, while engaged in construction work he was made construction superinfor- for the Tate Iron and Steel Company; tendent of the Tate Iron and Steel After being graduated from K. U. Company, and was sent to India Mr. Campion accepted a position with where the fatality occurred. "GIFTS THAT LAST" Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING Jayhawker Appointments Now —At Squire's W OBERCOAT REVUE During this week our entire window display will be devoted to Obercoats of every character. STOP! Give us a few moments of your time and you'll witness a Revue of Obercoats that seldom, if ever, has been paralleled in Lawrence. Great Motor Coats, About Town Coats, Promenade Ulsters, College Coats with wonderous fancy backs, Leather Coats lined with fleecy wool. Sheep Lined Coats with gabardine corded Society Brand dine, corduroy, moleskin, or cloth shell. Extraordinary original fabrics: Matterhorns, Diagonals, Stripings, Homespuns, and Tweeds. Exquisite off-shades of Greens, Blues, Slates, Grays, and Camel colorings. They're right in everything the word implies—Quality, Styles, Values, and Prices. In this respect, however, we wish to allow you to be the judge. $24.50 to $60 Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUT-FITTERS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN GREAT BUILDING ERA IN PROGRESS AT K. U. NUMBER 29. Appropriations of State Legis lature of 1921 Call for Six New Buildings JOHN SHEA GIVES RESUME University Has Put in Paving And Is Doing Landscape Gardening UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 18, 1922. The University of Kansas is going through the greatest period of building and campus improvements in its history, according to a resume of building activities on the hill by John M. Sheen, superintendent of buildings and grounds, which appeared in the October number of the Graduate Magazine. The legislature of 1921 made appropriations for six build- The general contractor of the new electrical laboratory in which the students of electrical engineering recently held a housewarming, was the Elephant Construction Company, and the contract of the building was $924.000. Complete Power Plant Soon The University power and heating plant was built by the Collins Brothers Construction Company, Kansas City, Missouri, at a cost of $1,414.85. The machinery for the building was installed by University mechanics, and the plant, when com- pared with cost approximately $200,000. The new hospital building at Rose- dale, which is to be ready for occupancy in the early summer of 1923 has already been leased than $25,000. The contract for the girl's dormitory located on North College grounds was let to Mono Green, of Manhattan, for $125,000. The building is under construction now. Work on Administration Preliminary work toward completing the Administration Building was began two weeks ago, by Collins Brothers Construction Company, of Kansas City, Mo., to whom the contract was let for $292.356. An effort was made last month to let a contract for the construction of a new library building failed, owing to the fact that all bids exceeded the amount of the appropriation. Plans are being re-drafted, and another contract may be made to let the contract. The appropriation amounts to $250,000. Propaganda For Shapely Ankles Is Thick in Pari Continue Paving of Hill Three thousand five hundred yards of pavement have been put in by the University. The Mississippi street approach from the end of the city pavement at the edge of the campus to the south from three south down the hill to the new power plant has been paved. The hill in front of the Administration Building is being graded preparatory to laying it out in landscape gardening, as provided by the designs furnished by Messrs. Hare & Hare and George E. Kesander architects of Kansas City, Missouri. The work made it necessary to remove nearly 10,000 yards of material, 2,500 yards of which is solid stone. Paris, Oct. 18 (United Press)—French women are being told how to cultivate a shapey leg and ankle. and in the Metro (subway). The method to one who is not initiated recalls the Chinese method of footbinding. the newspapers, in the street cars, and in the Metro (subway) This modern torture confines the wearer to the house, and the bandage is far too bulky to be worn under the filmy stockings now in vogue. It consists in wrapping a rubber band tightly about the lower leg and ankle in a certain prescribed way revealed only to the initiated. Unique Paper Given Journalists Milton Amos, c25, spent Sunday Topeka. Prince C. G. Dumal, of the department of English, has presented the department of journalism with a copy of the "New Mexican" for November 24, 1849, *published at Santa Fe, New Mexico*. It is a four column two page paper and the subscription price was $7.00 a year. Today that would amount to something like $20.00. Elizabeth Mize, c26, has returned from her home in Atchison. K. U. Students Investigate California Fruit Marke A report of survey work in advertising done by twenty students in the department of journalism has just been received by Prof. L. N. Flint, head of the department of journalism from George E. Piper, head of the research department of the Cappen Farm Press. The work was done in August and consisted of gathering information about the market for California citrus fruits. Mr. Piper is well satisfied with the type of work done by the students. Similar research work will be done during the winter for practical experience. THIRTY-THREE CADET OFFICERS APPOINTED Capt. H. J. Casey Announce New Men Chosen to Command R. O. T. C. Appointments of thirty-three cadet officers in the University R. O. T. C. have been announced by Capt. H. J. Casey. The list is larger than comparison with previous years, according to Captain Casey, who says, however, that each of the men has gained his appointment through strict attention to the detail work of the unit, combined with the interest necessary to get the appointment. Dr. Casey was directed by direction of Chancellor E. H. Lindley through Captain Casey is as follows: Cadet Major; Coy Patterson, Cadecaptains; William D. Kelly, AugustE. Schanze, Elgin F. Clardy, CadetFirst Leutenants; Henry C. Schmidt, Kenneth D. Childs, WheatH. Bentley, Koeffe O.Kefeel, CeilU. Schranz, Martin F. McLaughlin, Bracken, Verne F. Simons, HenryK Shane, Keith E. Schwain, LouisE. Bredberg, Cadet SecondLeutenants; Travis B. Hale, PaulB. Hughes, Paul Lamb, George E. Rose,Arthur M. Clough, ThomasM. Hughey, Chea A. Jesseh, TheodoreG. Wear, Jesse E. Roth, JamesT. Ulmer, Ember L. Lynes, MillaMills, B. L. Lynes, WilliamTremont, Worth L. Caldwin, ClubFirstSergeants; Herman W. Pontius, WelonT. Armstrong, Guy May. The local unit is planning an extensive social program for the coming year. There will be two dances at the start of which all will arrive the first of which will be the night of November 3. Kennehigh Childs is chairman of the committee for this dance. In addition to this function, there will be three star dimenors, one battalion having charge of the entertainment for each of the students. In the form of a舞 given in honor of the graduates from the course. This will be held sometime in the latter part of June. QUILL HAS MANY CANDIDATES Greater Amount of Verse Submitted This Year More than fifty manuscripts have been submitted by students as applications for membership in the Quill Association, and an arse is larger than usual. A reading committee composed of two Quill members and one faculty member will criticise the manuscripts and recommend the pledges. The successful applicants will be announced probably by November 2. The pledge services will be given November 16. Some of the best of the manuscripts accepted, will be published in the Oread Magazine. The program committee has planned special programs for both short and snappy, with a "surprise number" each time. Special numbers will be the feature of the program Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock in Praser rest room. Mrs. Herbert Feis will read some of her poems and stories, while Mr. Herbert Values in Journalism." Executive Committee K. E. A. Meets The executive committee of the Kansas Editorial Association will meet in the Journalism Building on the morning of November 11. At this meeting the question of employing a field secretary for the Association will be decided. The committee will use the guests at the University at he Nebraska game in the afternoon. Kappa Phi will hold pledge services Wednesday evening, October 18 at 6:45 o'clock in Myers Hall. Notice the change of time. FIRST PEP INSTILLER WILL BE HELD FRIDAY Open Air Yell Fest Will Assemble Between Green Hall and Spooner TO BE PROMPTLY AT NOON Phog, Potsy, the Band, and the Rest of the Gang Will Be There Friday is the day. The Bulletin Board by Green Hall is the place. Twelve o'clock sharp is the time. Plans for the first open-air, midday yell fest of the season are being pushed to completion today. They will be a celebration from the assembled four thousand, and speeches of prediction from "Potty," "Pogh," the Chancellor, Captain "Higgins" Higgins, and others. Everyone To Be There Virg Milner announced this morning that no one will be permitted to leave the Hill before the rally, even if there should be students of such a low and treacherous frame of mind. The K Club and Sachens will be to a man, with the traditional paddles, and will throw a cobon across the roads and other ways of exit. Classes will be cut five minutes early for the rally, Chancellor Lindley said this morning. The festival will be over in time for those who have one-thirty classes to get home at the usual time. As a np instiller for the coming Washburn game, the first home game of the season, great things are expected of this rally. It is the purpose of the cheerleaders and the K Club to fill every member of the student body and faculty 100 per cent full of the "sirit of victory." Can Still Get Good Seats Can Stir the Good Seeds? At the last minute there are still several days left before the fifty-year line. Cheerleader Miller reported. He urges that these be taken up at once. The seats can of course easily be filled, but for the good of Kansas every seat should contain a leather-lumed male rooter. Advance dope for the annual shirt-tal parade will be given in out full in Friday's Kansas. It is known now that it will be the largest and longest in history. The merchants of the town are apprised of the event, and are planning to show the students a royal time. It will be Saturday night, following the first victory of the year. WILL ADVISE ON VOCATIONS Various Departments Prepare Program For Social Work An advisory curriculum has been prepared by the departments of sociology, economics and political science at the University which shows a strong emphasis on the student for vocations of several kinds. Among these are: city manager, personnel officer, and any other social worker. The student without further help, can map out his own course and work. The student is followed throughout his school life. This curriculum is not compulsory, but merely advice compiled by the above departments for the sole purpose of aiding the student in preparation and as a time saver for those who are contemplating work of this kind. Cripple Creek, Colo., Oct. 18 (U.P.) Old-miners of this famous mining camp are seeing visions of a revival of those prosperous days when this section was the greatest gold producer in the world. Other openings besides those mentioned are: community organizer and surveyor positions, medical social worker positions, and several other civic organizations. Cripple Creek May Be Scene of Boom Reviva The Zoology Club will meet Wednesday evening, Oct. 17, at 8:30'clock in Room 304, Snow Hall. Dr. Robertson will speak. Important business afterward—W. T. Pommerenke, Pres. Since 1973 there has been intoxic activity, and Cricket Creek of years ago, when gold was to be found at "grass roots" and money was spent lavishly. The big mines have been closed, but with the discovery of gold of rich gold ore recently, boomesses are looking forward to boomess. ... To provide for a pep rally on the campus at 12 o'clock Noon Friday, all morning classes will be held. The schedule will be as follows: 1st hour 8:30 to 9:15 2nd | 8 a.m. to 10:11 3rd | 10 a.m. to 11:46 4th b | 11:46 to 12:00 **Rally** 10:00 to 12:20 E. H. Lindley, Chancellor COLVIN WILL DISCUSS VOCATIONAL GUIDANCE Prof. Stephen S. Colvin, of Brown University, will speak at the Little Theater in Green Hall, Thursday evening at 7 o'clock, upon the subject of vocational guidance among college students. Brown University Professor to Address Students Thursday Evening in Green Hall Professor Colvin has been in charge of faculty activities along lines of vocational guidance for several years and is one of the country's leading experts on limitations of psychological tests among college students, according to A. J. Kelly, dean of administration. "The most valuable service res- tored to the students by the faculty is the commitment of our students R. A. Kent, dean of the School of Education. "Professor Colvin is eminent not only in this field, but also in educational psychology. He speaks with a thorough knowledge of theory and also from experience in active direction of this work." Professor Colvin is in Topaka this week at the Kansas State Teacher's Association. Wandering Cat Gets Position As Mouser A possible new inmate of Dychs Museum made his appearance this morning when an unknown cat walker into the workroom of H. T. Martin assistant curator of Paleontology and Anthropology, Mr. Martin has been troubled with mice eating the burlap covering specimens, which have been stored, until he has time to prepare them for exhibition. The burlap is wrapped around food when they are dug up, and keeps them from falling into the water. In consequence, when Mr. Martin saw the cat come into his room this morning he rejoiced, for the animal was he said obiously a mouser. Mr. Martin says that he does not ordinarily like the presence of a cat, as the animal may knock specimens off the tables and otherwise rub his hands on the table. In case the presence of a cat, for a short time, is a good thing. R. O. T. C. to Give First Dance at F. A. U. Hal The R. O, T. C. will give its first dance November 3 at the F. A, U. hall. The party will be open to R. O, T. C. men only. This is the first time that R. O, T. C. will graduate men who have completed the three courses. The plan is planned to have a party for these men sometime in June. In addition to these events, the R. O. T. C. plans to give three dinners during the year. Each of the companies is to give one and furnish the entertainment for the evening. These dimmers are stag affairs and will probably be held at Wiedemann's. Josephine Ryan, c23, spent Friday and Saturday at her home in Kanaas Special students entering the Kansas State Agricultural College must hereafter pass more rigid examinationinations which have been adopted. The special student hereafter must be 21 or more years old, is subject to physical education requirements and is taught a marked degree of scholarship. Sophomores vote in basement of Snow Hall. Pops open at 9 o'clock a. m. and close at 4:30 o'clock a. p. Freshmen vote in West Gymnasium. Juniors vote in basement of Fraser. Seniors vote in basement of Green Hall. Graduate students may vote with the Seniors. Special students will not vote. SECOND VARSITY TEAM WILL FACE ICHABODS Clark Will Not Use First String Men Unless Absolutely Necessary TAKE LIGHT WORKOUTS Practice This Week Is Not Strenuous With Little Serimmazing That the second varsity team would start the game against the Washburn Ichabods Saturday afternoon was the announcement made last night by Coach George "Patsy" Clark. He also said that it was not until the end of the first team men would enter the game, unless absolutely necessary. The men on the first varsity team again took a light workout last evening not scrimmaging at all. The players watched the scrimmage between the yearlings and the second team and afterwards ran signals for more than a half hour. Just before going to the sheds, the entire varsity squad was taken over to the dummy pits for tackling practice. Kansas Line-up The probable line-up for the Washburn game follows: Boone and Griffin, fin ends; Mosby and Edwards, tackles; Harris and Haley, guards; Lonborg, center; Andersen, quarter; Timmons and Calvert, half; Shannon full. Shannon and Hodges were both showing well in the backfield against the frost last night. Both men were watching the game, and showed drive in their running. Washburn Line-up The Washburn line-up: Schrader and Jamison, end; Saxon and Barstow, tackles; Blevins (captain) and Fowler, guards; Bruce, center; Davis, quarter; Brown and Brewster, halfs; Severs, fullback. The Washburn attack is centered around Blevins and Brewster. The Ichabods are bringing two full teams to Lawrence Saturday. Several men on the regular variety squad are still limping about and it is probable that these men will not enter scrutiny until the first of next week. Coach Clark was of the opinion yesterday that a good rest would do the men more good than practice. ADMIT R. O. T. C. SENIORS Reserve Officers Corps Allows Them Junior Membership The senior members of the University R. O. T. C. will be admitted to junior membership in the Lawrence division of the reserve officers committee made at the meeting of the corps held last night. P. F. Walker, dean of the School of Engineering and president of the Kansas association of the corps, outlined tentative plans for the organization of the Kansas Dean Walker holds a colonel's commission in the corps, and several faculty men and students as well as city residents are members. The more complete organization of the divisions of the corps throughout the state will result in a more spread study of military problems. The department has planned tats the problems of military taxi ties which are similar to those studied by the School of the Line a Fort Leavenworth. With the addition of the seniors from the R. O T.C., this course will be well attended and should be very instructive, according to Colonel Walker. Iorsemanship Is the Newest Course at O. U. Norman, Okla., Oct. 18. (U. P.) Horse riding is the new "subject" being taught at the State University here. Popularity of the new "course" is shown by the class roll. Sixty-three co-eds have signed up for the class. The class meets once a week for instruction given by officers of the R. O. T. C. unit stationed here. R. O. T. C. artillery horses are used by the girls. The Disabled American Veterans of the World War will give a dance Friday night at the Fraternal Aid Hall. This is the second of a series of dances which will be given by this organization of ex-service men this season. Blanc's orchestra will furnish the music. Graduate Magazine to be Off the Press Thursday The October number of the K. U. Graduate Magazine will be off the press Thursday morning. The Magazine contains features of University life which are of interest to alumni and former students. The K. U.-West Point football game is described, accompanied by a photograph of the crowd of loyal Kansas rooters entering the boat, just previous to the trip up the Hudson River to West Point. A detailed account of Hill happens, including the program for Homecoming Day, is offered for the benefit of all alumni readers. NEWCOMERS' CLUB TO MEET THURSDAY Mrs. Lindley Will Entertain With Tea at First Meeting of Year Membership in the Newcomers' Club is open to women who are members of the faculty or are the wives of faculty members, and are in the University this year for the first time, or were here last year for the first time. There are forty-five members of the club, twenty-four new members and twenty-one who were here last year. Mrs. E. H. Lindley will entertain the Newcomers' Club at her home Thursday afternoon. This will be the first meeting of the club this year. A delightful program is planned and tea will be served. Members of the Newcomers' Club are also members of the University Women's 'club. Each organization meets once a month at the homes of its members. In this way, the newcomers meet twice a month, thus enabling them to get acquainted quickly. Mra. R. D. O'Leary is the member of the University Women's Club who organizes the Newcomers' Club each summer and is the social chairman of the club. SEATS FOR ROOTERS GOING Two Sections on Fifty Yard Line Are Reserved The report comes from the athletic office that reservations for the rooters' section are being filled rapidly. Reservations for this section have been accepted all along, but not until any of the reservations been filled. The roots' section will be sections G and H, of the Kansas side. No better seats can be had than these which are on either side of the 50-yard line. The K Club and the Ku Klu Kan will have the lower sews of these sections and the roots are given seats from there back. To be assured of a good seat all rooters should get their reservations filled as soon as possible, according to the athletic office, for it is believed that the larger part of this section will be filled before the end of the week. Boy on Bicycle in Woods Runs into Deer Party Sarance Lake, N. Y., Oct. 18 (U.P.)-P.J. George Hooley, riding a bicycle through woods on the outskirts of the village, ran without warning into a family party of deer at a sharp curve. In the deer party were a big buck, two does and two fawns. One of the fawns ran into the bicycle. The boy was not thrown, but the bawf was hurled to one side. The buck instantly lowered its horns and charged boy and wheel. Then came a frantic race down the road, with the boy pedaling madly and the enraged buck at the rear wheel. The race ended when the boy flashed into a door yard. Couldn't Leave Fishing Couldn't Leave Fishing "or just got so interested in that I forgot to come here," explaining the explanation at Burlaville Okla, the father of Merwin B. Graham, a student in the College. During an absence of three weeks searching parties and private detectives hunted continuously for him. NAME ELECTION JUDGES TO PRESIDE AT POLLS W. A. A. to Meet Wednesday W. A. A. will hold a board meeting Wednesday, October 18, at 4:30 o'clock in the office of Miss Barto in Robinson Gymnasium. The W. A. A. will meet at 5 o'clock in the same room. Nestor Moore will be in charge of the meeting. Plans Made to Take Care of Largest Balloting in History of University SPECIALS HAVE NO VOTE Graduate Students Ballot on Senior Ticket in Green Hall Election judges have been elected to preside at the polls tomorrow, and plans have been made to take care of the largest vote in the history of the University. The judges as announced by Hilary Mairy, chairman of the election committee for the Men's Student Council, follow: Senior: "Gob" Beatty, "Bob" Jimson: "Carl Carr" Bill "Bill Reilly"; sophomore: Dick Wentworth, Elgin Clardy; freshman: "Bob" Lemon, Gilchult Schutz, Relief men will be "Judge" Kerr and "Doc" Cullem. Polls Open at 9 O'clock The polls will open at 9 o'clock tomorrow morning, and it is asked that all who can vote the first hour, do so. The seniors will vote in Green Hall, the juniors in the basement of Snow Hall, and the freshmen in Snow Hall, and the freshmen will cast their ballots in the west end of Robinson Gymnasium. Graduate students will vote with the seniors in Green Hall. The special students will not be allowed to vote, as they have no class 'classification'. According to Mahin there are 3,762 eligible voters in the different classes. The freshmen have by far the largest number, with the juniors and sophomores about equal in voting numbers. To take care of these voters, 4,000 ballots have been ordered which will be distributed at the polls of the different classes. This, allowing for spoilage, will be enough to take care of all the available votes. The polls close in the afternoon at 4:30 o'clock promptly, and, according to Mahin, the last voter must be on hand before that time. GILPIN COMING TO LAWRENCE First Negro Actor to Gain Prominence in America Charles S. Gilpin, the first microactor to be starred on the American stage, is coming to the Bowersock, October 24, in Eugene O'Neill's much talked of play, "The Emperor Jones." Mr. Gilpin played the part of the slave in Drinkwater's "Abraham Lincoln" during its New York run. The merits of his acting attracted the attention of Mr. O'Neill, who was at a crucial point in his playing players for one who would measure up to the requirements of the lead in "The Emperor Jones." At the end of the run of "Abraham Lincoln," Gilpin was signed and "The Emperor Jones" was produced. The play tells the adventures of a wily, dominieering nogro, once a Paulman porter, who imposes himself as sovereign over a little island in the seaside. He suspects last rebel. He suspects the rebellion and anticipates it by flight. Fear after fear haunts him as he flees through the dense forest. On his trail is the pursuing vengence. The play fears as it affects a primitive nature. Gilpin, by his dramatic skill in portraying the gradual transition of the character of the Emperor from a physical giant, a braggart and bully, which he is at the beginning of the play, to the frightened, cringing villain, to the fate that fame in one night and was voted by the Drama League as one of the ten greatest contributors to dramatic art during the past season. Ship Gridgraph to Aggies For Their Use Saturday The score board that was used for the Kansas-Drake game last Saturday will be sent to Manhattan some time soon. He will have charge of it there. A board similar to the one used here, was used at Columbia for the Missouri-Ames game, where a crowd estimated at 5,000 witnessed the contest. The students of Missouri were so enthused with the board that the Student Council bought it outright, pating $750 for it. Edla Root, c25, spent Sunday at her home in Kansas City, Kansas. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas Subscription price $2.00 in advance for the first nine months of the académic year; $2.00 for one semester; 60 cents a month; 15 cents a week. Entered as second-class mail mast September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kannas, under the act o m March 3, 1879. Published in the afternoon five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism at the University of Kansas and the press of the Department of Journalism. Lawrence, Kansas Phones. K. U. 25 and 66 The Daily Kannan aims to pleasen the University of Kannan, to go furthur the standing for the desisls the students are asking for; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be creative; to be more serious problems serve to the best of its ability the University. Editorial Staff Editor-in-chief...Bern Hibbs News Editor...Glasson News Editor...Raymond Davis Boat Editor...Glick Schultz Alumni Editor...Wilbur Carter Alumni Editor...Rusty Carter Business Staff Business Manager Lloyd Ruppenthal Ast. Bus. Mgr. John Montgomery, Jr. Ast. Bus. Mgr. Clydo Burnish Board Members Cheater Shaw Dean Bogggs Liedwellly White Perry Johns Charlotte White Carlion Harkraider DelVaughn Francis Carlion Powers Roland Blanc WEDNESDAY,OCT.18,1922 Charges are made that American college faculties are harboring Reds. K. U. must be immune, for what Red would want to add another working day to the week? VOTE INDEPENDENTLY Tomorrow you will go to the University polling places to vote for candidates to fill some of the positions in student government here. It is your duty to vote. You may be a bit disignated with the undermacratic methods of selecting the candidates for office, but you will not help matters by staying away from the polls. You must vote. And how should you vote? Certainly not in accordance with hide-bound tradition, which has been handed down to you from former years. Because, for some reason or other which you will never know, your group has always voted one way or another, that does not mean that you must vote a straight ticket tomorrow. In national and state elections, the voters who will not scratch a ticket are becoming fewer in number. Enlightened thinking the country over is bringing men to the point where they carefully study the record, the personality, and the platform of each candidate. They consider the offerings of each party and honestly attempt to make wise selections. How much better this is than the blind acceptance of a complete party ticket! The Mid-west is leading the way in this attempt to break away from fetters of party spirit—an attempt to place the nation before the political party. Certainly the University of Kansas, as a mid-western institution, should adopt this principle in its own petty student affairs. Surely the welfare of the University is more important than any allegiance to party. Then consider carefully before you vote. Don't let your disgust and cynicism concerning political affairs so over-rule our better judgment that you stay away from the polls. It is granted that the system of nominating candidates and the platforms of the parties here fall far short of what they should be. You feel that you have little choice in this matter and you are right. Someday the system may be different. Nevertheless, there are good men on both tickets, and it is your duty to help choose the best ones. SATURDAY SCHOOL AND CHURCH ATTENDANCE There are many reasons why the six-day school proposition should be voted down at the meeting of the University Senate early in November. One of these reasons, which has as yet received no comment in the columns of the Kanaan, is that such a system would doubtless reduce church attendance among the students. Perhaps it is the wrong spirit, but it is fact, nevertheless, that the average student will stay home from church on Sunday morning to write a term paper or prepare a report Official Daily University Bulletin No.29. Copy received by Florence E. Blias, Editor, Chancellor's Office TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE UNIVERSITY FACULTIES: Oct. 18, 1922. Professor Stephen S. Colvin of Brown University will discuss the subject of vocational guidance among college students in the Little Theatre Green Hall, at 7 o'clock Thursday evening. Mr. Colvin has been in charge of the faculty activities along lines of vocational training for both years and is one of the country's foremost authorities on the uses and limitations of psychological tests among college students. Come and hear him. F. J. KELLY, Dean of University Administration. TICKETS FOR K. U. REUNION DINNER AT STATE TEACHERS Tickets for the K. U. Reunion Dinner at the State Teachers' Association at Topeka, may be obtained from the Alumni office, Room 110, Fraser Hall at $1.00 each. The dinner will be served at six o'clock Friday evening in the Chamber of Commerce rooms, 7th and Quincy streets. H. B. HUNGERFORD, Chairman, Alumni Interests Committee FINE ARTS MUSIC RECITAL: The regular weekly recital of music students of the School of Fine Arts will be held at 3:30 Thursday afternoon in Fraser Chapel. H. L. BUTLER, Dean. SIGMA XI: The regular meeting of the Society of Sigma Xi will be held at 8 o'clock Thursday evening in Blake Hall Lecture Room. Professor Stolaw and wilf will be there. rather than go to church and then fail to have the work ready at the required date. If Saturday morning were filled with the meetings of classes, thus taking this extra time from the students, many more would feel called upon to stay home from church on Sunday in order to prepare regular lessons and outside reports for the ensuing weeks. Of course the Utopian ideal would be for the student to stay home from the movie or the dance Saturday night to prepare his work, and then go to church on Sunday regardless of Saturday school. But most students are mere students and not Utopians. GUY W. SMITH, Secretary The advocates of the measure point out to us that the student would have just as much time in the long run because the work done in five days now would then be scattered over a period of six days. They forget, however, that, when they break into Saturday with classes, they are destroying the only real time during the week for continuing, concentrated work. They forget that, if this time were taken from the students, many of them would doubtless substitute Sunday for that period on Saturday. Work and recreation and not church would be the order of the day. And then the advocates of the plan tell us that church-going people all over the world are working six days each week. True enough, but they are not working morning, afternoon, and night, as does the self-supporting man at the University. Again, let us say that the establishment of a six-day schedule here would doubtless cut down church attendance. Columbia University is taking a record step in forensics by meeting Oxford University yf England in a three-man debate. The question is, "Resolved that the United States should at once join the League of Nations." The decision will be rendered by a popular vote. In modern industry, whenever the employer has seen fit to force long hours upon his employees, those employees have usually been found to be a non-church-attending people. And why? Simply because a human being must have some time for recreation and the only play-time for people working under those conditions is on Sunday. Hence they neglect church for play. If Saturday school were introduced here, the result would be comparable. Charlotte Earhardt, c22, is teaching in the high school at Garnett. Campus Opinion **He wants students to** Now that we are in the very midst of that semi-annual struggle which is dignified by the name of "election," I am wondering if I might not have my little word. Politically, I am a "Nobody." Actually, I am a little ewe lamb which wanders about with the other animals, and again with big sheep eyes at the mighty shepherd. When a pretty girl tags me, I wag my tail. I am glad that I am alive. When an office-secker carresses me, I fairly "Ba" with contentment. I do not believe him–but alas—I am only a sheep. Oh Flutterty! He Wants Student Government And now I am not at peace. That indescribable thing within me some call self-resistance and others pride, rebel. Foolish questions well up in my chest that I have no real student government be a fine thing for Kansas? I feel the urge to dive into the inner mysteries of these two velled and shrouded "parties" to find the "why" and "wherefore" of it all, and to emphasize! How positively Roosevelt! Both groups maintain that they were organized to root out foul play and plant the flag of suffrage freedom on Fraser Hall. Both insist that they and only they, stand for the right. Government by of, and of, is the third man pledge. How courageous. And till, I wonder— The other day a boy came to me and Bowersock Theatre One Night Tuesday, Oct. 24 Is your suit ready for this week-end's fussing? 1109 Mass. St. Phone 442 EMPEROR JONES FOR THE AMERICAN GROUP CHARLES C. PARK AS ORIGINALLY PRODUCED BY THE PRODUCTION PLAYED KIRBY CLEANERS DOLPHIN LUMBER presents THE GREET PLAY EUGENE ONEILUS Prices -7dc to $2.50 Plus Tax Mail Orders Filed Now-It Is Advisable to Secure Reserva- tion in Advance for This Attraction. Coming here with original cast after one year in New York and a long run in Chicago. Pander's QUALITY JEWELRY said that both were hopelessly bad. He spoke of "graft" and "playing favorites" and scouted at what he called the force of student government. He pointed out that his mom folk had naught to say at all I will not believe it. Why only yesterday, they let me sign a petition. That friendiness, incorrigible Bolshev. I shan't listen to him again. He didn't. She'll clash牢牢 up my arms. He is biased. Last spring a candidate made me his Pal. We lunched together. He'd he thought I had a future. Oh rhansodies! The next day I saw him on the street. He did not speak. An evil little thought came into my mind. But no, I am sure that I misjudged him. He was merely so absorbed in his own honest regime, had he been elected. And yet tonight, as I sit here at my typewriter, that little naughty suspicion comes back. Oh Mr. Editor! What shall I do? Do you think student government would be a nice hinge for Kansas. ONE OF THE SHEEP. Homer Rupard, e2," is in the Mill machinery department with the Nordyke and Marmon Company of Indianapolis, Ind. Ladies who desire expert Hair-Bobbing Patronize the STADIUM BARBER SHOP "The Shop of Service" E First Door South of Von's Z E.Z. TRUST MARK REG. U.S. PAT. OPP. GARTER Look for the name "E. Z." when you buy a wide-web course garter. It identifies the genuine—the patented garter that has no snip holes or bothersome adjustin'time. MO. FARM. HOUSE. No to 31; everywhere, in single-pip and the E. Z. S-Brip, and the E. Z. Sport Gorter. Made solely by Tha Tos. P. F. Taylor, Bridgeport, Conn. Featured by All Leading Merchants 8 The Knox The Rikki Seremo Shown in Dawn, Mistletoe and the New Scratch Oxford Browns $7.50 The H-G Special Hat in All the New Shades Thomas Shoe Electric Shop $5.00 A Special Showing of Camel Hair Sweaters and Vests $7.50 to $10.00 Houk-Green Clo. Co. The House of Kuppenheimer Good Clothes WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Visit the United Army Stores Co 706 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Army Goods Army Goods Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Army Goods Engraving, Printing, Binding Rubber Stamps, Office Supplies 810 Penn. St. A. G. ALRICH Phone 335 Printing by any process 736 Mass. S "GIFTS THAT LAST" Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF APEIRING YOU DECIDE TOMORROW Tomorrow you decide who will represent you the coming year! What is your decision? Do you want class presidents who will efficiently handle the large amount of routine work which must be done? Do you want class officers who are able to devote the necessary time to their office? Do you want class officers who are free to do as their judgement dictates? If you do then you will vote Pachacamac! Pachacamac has selected no candidate because of his activities in lines other than executive, because Pachacamac thinks that class officers should be filled by executives. Class officers are more than honorary. When an office is given to a person just as a token of esteem the best interests of this class suffer. Compare the two lists of candidates from the Senior president to the Freshman treasurer and then vote as your judgment indicates. Pachacamac leads off with Louie Miller, a man with personality and executive experience because the Senior class MUST have a man who will WORK for the class all this year. Supporting him are P. K. Smith for vice-president, Elva McMullin for secretary and Paulen Burke for treasurer. To know them is to back them in their efforts to see that the Class of 1923 has the best service possible. It is not surprising to see the strength of Howard Firebaugh for Junior President. This year previous prejudices are at a minimum and each person is voting for the best interests of his class. Supporting Firebaugh are Oliver Kuhl for vice-president; Mildred Cornelius for secretary; and Cecil Dunham for treasurer. Now come Chet Shore and Shad Janicke with definite promises to put on the first real Junior Prom in years. How are you going to determine that they can do it? Simply looking back over the records of Chet and Shad will convince you beyond doubt that the Junior Prom will be history making. Raymond Fisher is gaining steadily among the members of the Sophomore class. Every Sophomore should vote tomorrow and register their support of Fisher. Tom Poor, Betty Sifers and Vernon Engle will help Fisher work for the best interests of the Sophomores. With them is Lionel Semon for Soph Hop manager. If the Sophomores want to restore the Soph Hop to its former glory, let Semon do it. There is not another man man in the Sophomore class who can put on a better party than Semon. Give him your vote tomorrow. Orin Shepherd for Freshman president is backed by the best bunch of Freshman candidates possible. Orin Shepherd is an oversees man and a vocational student. When you meet him, he always gets your vote. Tell every Freshman that a vote for Shepherd is a vote for the best Freshman presidential candidate in years. With him are Bond Hammond, Frances Patterson and Harvey Langford. Vote as early tomorrow as it is possible for you to do so. When you go into the polls weigh the comparative qualifications of the opposing candidates carefully. Think of your choice from a business standpoint and these candidates as prospective employees. Pachacamac has only those men and women whom you would want to work for you—those whom you could trust with responsibility. If you believe that "Competent CandidatesCount" you will vote PACHACAMAC THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MEXICAN NEWSPAPERS SILENT ABOUT REVOLTS K. U. Graduates Say Battles Take Place When Press Claims All Is Peaceful PROPERTY IS CONFISCATED Government's Attitude Antag ónistic to American Firms, Reports Geologist "Some of the worst bandits in Mexico are former United States citizens," said Mrs. Alice Bowly-Nielsen, A.A.B. 178, when interviewed concerning her knowledge of conditions in Mexico during her late residence. She and her friends in Lawrence while awaiting the arrival of her husband, Harry (Swede) Nielsen, A.A.B. 178 from Villahermosa, Tobasco, Mexico, where they have been living for the past three years and at which place Mr. Swede was engaged in green field work for the International Petroleum Company. "Revolution is well organized all over Mexico, though press reports have been repressed," she continued. "Engagements are taking place when Mexico City papers report that all is peaceful." Estates Unproductive The present government under Oberregon is not successful. The reason is doubeless because he has allowed Bohlevian to fall away while pretend to lift it. He confiscates more improved estates while hundreds of land owners whose property has been taken away during the last eleven years are seeking vainly for the promised compensation. Confiscated estates are allowed to go to rack, producing nothing for the needy grain markets which then becomes barring the confiscated property are either incapable of producing food or do not care to do so". American Firms Taxed "The situation of Americans is critical. The government is taxing American firms who are developing properties in the Carranza constitution, fifty per cent of their production. Now the government requires all foreign firms to employ ninety per cent of Mexican help in each department. This will require Mexico to must modify its demands before Mexico will be much of an El Dorado for foreign development." Mr. and Mrs. Nielsen have had some very interesting trips through Mexico. They visited Mexico City three times though the railroads between Venezuela Cruz and Mexico City are in terrible condition. They were held up one day and night because bandas had burned out a bridge. At one station on the way they could buy nothing but flowers. Gorgeous baskets of gardenias were sold as cheap as ten cents apiece. Mr. and Mrs. Nielsen were both prominent students on the hill. Mrs. Nielsen was a member of Theta Sigma Phi, the Kansan Board, and the Alpha Chi Omega sorority, fourth team for the season of 1917 and was a member of Pi Delta Theta fraternity. MEXICO U. IS EXPANDING American Students Cause Increase in Enrollment Mexico City, Mex. (By mail to United Press.)—Although the summer course of the National University of Mexico for this year only closed recently, plans are already being made for a still larger school next sum- The session this year was a great success and the number of students was increased from 45 the previous year to 500 this year. Students from the United States made up the greater part of the enrollment. "The future of the summer school in Mexico is certainly a challenging one." Dean R. S. MacElwee of the University School said to the Among those who attended the course this year were 40 ex-service veterans and students of the School of Foreign Services, Gurgstadt Uni- "With the cool climate, the many places and objects of historical, artistic and romantic interest, the learning of the Spanish language and the scientific lore offered by the erudite faculty of the university, is offered a combination of advantages for summer study and recreation that cannot be equaled anywhere. "SuitingYou" THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULZ 917 Mass. St. PROTCH The College TAILOR WATKINS NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. DIRECTORS D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Asher, L. V. Miller, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishon AUTUMN FROCKS A GROUP THAT RADIATES THE NEW STYLE TENDENCIES FROM SUCH VANTAGE POINTS AS THE NEW FABRICS, CLOQY AND MATER-LASSE, BERTHA NECKLINES AND LONGER SKIRTS OFTEN DRAPED, PRESENTS EXQUISITE AFTERNOON COSTUMES. TOMES M Drescher's Correct Dress For Women & Kids $24.75 Correct Apparel for Women and Misses Mine Fire Has Burned Since Strike of 1884 New Lexington, Ohio, Oct. 18, (United Press).—Geologists and miners estimate $50,000,000 worth of boltuminous coal has been burned in the subterranean veins of Perry County. Fire during the coal strike of 1884. of Ohio fuel, is raging again at the mouth of an abandoned shaft near Shawnee. The furnace burns its hot water to heat the air and the air can be seen for miles. C. B. Campbell, e22, is with the Southwestern Bell Telephone Company of St. Louis, Mo. The blaze, which has been eating its way through the unmined stocks At the present rate geologists estimate it will take fifteen years for the fire to exhaust its acreage. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY LOST-Gaberdine top coat at Gamma Pit Bt to open house, $10 Reward. Return to Boges, Phone 285. — 020 GARAGE FOR RENT—1345 Mass. $3 per month. Inquire High School Inn. — 025 Varsity-Bowersock WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY Comedy "OUR GANG" Adults 33c; Children 10c Shows: 2;30,4,7;30 and 9 THE MAN IN A CAP. JANE A. JAMES PRESENTS WALLACE REID "The Ghost Breaker" SUPPORTED BY LILA LEER and WALTER HIERS JASON L. LAROY PRESENTS WALLACE REID "The Ghost Breaker" SUPPORTED BY LILA LEE and WALTER HIERS A Paramount Picture Shows: 3, 7, and 9 "THE OLD HOMESTEAD" La ParvaMount Picture "THE OLD HOMESTEAD" WITH Theodore Roberts, George Fawcett, Tre Roy Barnes, Harrison Forde, Fritzi Ridgway EDITED BY JOHN L. LAWYER A Coinental Greeting Semon Comedy "THE AGENT" Adults 40c; Children 20c BUILT on VALUE : GROWING on VALUE In Royal Shoes a Man Gets Genuine Calfskin Royal serves the real article, men! No subterfuge! The calfskin in many a Shoe is more alleged than real—usually only side leather. Royal Calfskin is guaranteed—every Royal Shoe is solid leather throughout—true oak soils—Goodyear wait stitch. "Ludgate" New broad, flat English last, made of Reaping Calfskin, tan or black, brood flat heel. $5 "Ludgate" ROYAL SHOES for MEN—$5, $6, and $7 for the FINEST "Ludgate" $5 The kind of Shoe a man's proud show his friends. In genuine tan Er grain Calcifink (not the bootlegger variety), glossy and long wearing. Heavy sole; clever punching, sharpness; great mass; real Good. year well sole. They're knockouts at $5. New Fall Brogues and of Shoe a man's proud to its friends. In genuine tan Eric Calfskin (not the bootlegger ), glossy and long wear- heavy sole; clever punch- and stitching; midgest eyellets; real Good- celt sole. They're outs at $5. "Foxhall" $5 837 Mass. Street At All Five Stores Royal O. L. Newby. Shoe Stores Inc Mgr. LOST—Gold tennis medal with name Gerald Hamilton engraved on back. Reward. Call 2498B. —022 FOR SALE—Three octave sheet xylophone equipped with resonators and case. Phone 607. - 024 Sweaters Arrived at BELLS FLOWER SHOP Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS Drescher's Correct Presentation for Women & Men Phone 139 Ye Taverne 825 1-2 Mass. HOT STUFF After the Library Chile Oyster Stew Toasted Sandwiches 1230 Oread—Next to the Black Mask Ticket K JOE BLOOMER A. H. S. MARIAN McDONALD SENIOR Qualifications of senior class officers are not dependent upon their ability as politicians. Black Mask in the selection of candidates feels that these positions are of honor and trust to be bestowed upon those seniors who have already demonstrated their ability. For that reason Black Mast has gone outside of its society in choosing every candidate offered on this ticket. Joe Bloomer ... President Marion Collins ... Vice President Marian McDonald ... Secretary Milton Cummings ... Treasurer JUNIOR Leading the junior Black Mask ticket is "Davy Davidson," a man who has done and is still doing things for Kansas, and who has never asked for a verdict of approval from the student body. "Davy" is a non-fraternity man, who is not making an active campaign, merely submitting his name on the proposition that "It's the Candidate that Counts." Last year, Black Mask prom managers reduced the price of the party from $5 to $4.25, put on the premier party of the year, and met all liabilities. If you wish a duplication of this vote for Lucas and Stagg, Black Mask candidates for prom managers. "Davy" Davidson ... President "Red" Lutz ... Vice President Clarence Frieze ... Treasurer Frances Keith ... Secretary Prom Managers, Clyde Lucas, Ralph Stagg SOPHOMORE The job of steering the Sophomore class requires unlimited energy, if you believe Emerson Norton has this qualification, then you owe it to yourself to vote for him. The Soph Hop involves as much executive ability as the Junior Prom. Earl Alvine, is a man who has this ability and experience, and will make the Soph Hop a distinctive party. The other candidates have pledged their support to carry through the plans of these men for making the class of 1925 a bigger and better organization. Emerson Norton ... President Walter Means ... Vice President Mary Lois Ruppenthal ... Secretary Ralph Hower ... Treasurer Soph Hop Manager. Earl Alvine FRESHMAN Black Mask candidates for the Freshman class offices were chosen at a meeting of over one hundred representative freshmen. This meeting was not dominated by any fraternity or small group as is evidenced by the names below. The freshman Olympic manager is not elected, but Wilder Dresser, Black Mask candidate for president, if elected has promised to appoint Marvin Barnes to fill this office. Barnes is a nonfraternity man, enrolled in the engineering school and is adequately qualified to lead the class of 1926. Wilder Dresser ... President Bill Harrison ... Vice President Eulalia Richardson ... Secretary Ronald Hall ... Treasurer Its the Candidate that Counts THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OHIO STATE STADIUM READY FOR DEDICATION New Structure Is Largest Athletic Field West of Yale Columbus, Ohio, Oct. 18 (United Press)—Ohio State University's million dollar athletic stadium will reopen for football on Saturday, Oct. 21. Dedication ceremonies for the massive horsehoe structure will be claimased by the annual Ohio-Michigan meet, which will feature football fans—the largest number ever gathered for a game in Ohio. Will it sit in the giant stands at Eliose Frome, to see the "Stadium Girl" and the dedication process onto the field. Standing in the heart of the Uni- walls on either side of the main Oleentang River, the Ohio stadium resembles some great Roman amphitheater. Two towers rising above the walls on either side o the fife main entrance, a sweep of horseshoe curve lends the structural monumental grandeur. The athletic monument, rushed to completion in less than a year, is the largest field west of the Yale bowl. Unlike the Harvard stadium, the Ohio field has two decks, the upper deck affording shorter to more than half the sections of the lower leek. In the right section, the claim, can be "stretched" to 73,000 persons. It seats 66,000 comfortably. The entire city of Columbus, hundreds of whose citizens contributed to the $1,500,000 fund to build the stairway, and the ceremonies attending its dedication. Old Ohio Field, scene of the University's football battles of the past, its stands torn down, will serve as parking space for the hundreds of automobiles bringing fans to the game. Governors Davis, of Ohio, and Groesbeck, of Michigan, are expected to watch the games from boxes clabbering in the hallways of their statewide school colors. The new structure, according to Ohio University expansion plans, is to form the hub of a ninety-two acre recreation tract. The stadium site of comprises gymnasiums, showers, dressing rooms, oces, and physical culture rooms. All these utilize the space below the tiers of bleacher seats. A dozen elevators carry fans to the top seats, 115 feet above the playing field. PLAN FOR SWIMMING CLUB University Women to Have Or organization for Water Sports University women who can swim are requested to meet on Thursday afternoon, October 25, in Robinson Gymnasium, for the purpose of organizing a swimming club. Requirements for admittance to the club will be discussed as will arrangements for training. The pool will be when the water in the pool is deeper, which will probably be after the Thanksgiving holiday. It is hoped that a K. U. "Life-Saving Corps" may be formed by mem- bers of the board to obtain a charter for this corps last year proved unsuccessful. Some sort of emblem will be awarded to the candidates who successfully pass the tests decided upon for admittance to the club, according to Miss Ruth Hoover, instructor in swimming. Margery Abyse, swimming manager, has written to other schools regarding the organization and general standards, expecting to receive valuable suggestions from them. A name for the club will be chosen at the meeting Thursday. The suggested ones include "Fish Club." Other names and others conveying a similar idea. Jerry Penny, c.24, who has been working for the Long-Bell Lumber Coin, in Rainier, Ore, returned to his home on Sunday night, to remain indefinitely. Train For Leadership To me, who are eager to shorten the school and the time when they are required to fill a position of representation for firms or to provide training course of education. From actual experience the fundamental principles of business are well known. In the student is the teacher how to apply them in everyday commercial affairs. Rabban Institute, an educational institution *medced* for the purpose of providing students with opportunities to invite you to send their book, *Training for Business Leaders* Babson Institute Wellesley Hills, (Tufts of) Boston Mass. ANNOUNCEMENTS The Snow Zoology Club, which was to have met last week, will meet Wednesday evening at 7:15 in room 304, Snow Hall. Dr Robertson will attend, and new members will be elected, as had been planned last week. The Botany Club will not meet this week, but a meeting will be called next Wednesday evening. Important every member Ku Ku Kun attend meeting tonight; 7:30. 299 Fraser. Discuss games, stunts, etc. Dean. Repeat. Chiefs. Roy Chiefs. Aachth announces the pledging of Helen Clemens, c'25. Mrs. C. R. Carlton, of Walnut, will leave for her home today, after spending in n few days with her nunified, at the Sigma Kappa house. Mrs. J, B. Pierce, of Pamona, Cal., was a guest at the Sigma Kappa house, Saturday night. Mrs. Pierce is a charter member of Sigma Kappa. WANT ADS LOST—Alpha Xi Delta Pin Friday, Finder please call Alpha Xi house, 1332 La. —19 LOST-Pocketbook containing bills, registration cafd, DMoL designation, and other valuable. Fileh at 7238 Blase or leave at Kannan office. IF YOU want good laundry work done, call Miss. Perry. 1164 N. J. Phone 2551. Work called for and delivered. O-23 LOST—Tortoise shell glasses in case, Thursday morning. Return to Kansan office. Phyllis Reynolds. FOR RENT—Room in modern home for two boys. New furnace, close to hill. 1216 Tennessee. 2351 White EVERYDAY is SUIT and OVERCOAT DAY $ 20.00 to $35.00 HOUK-GREEN CLO. CO. ↓ and get warm, use our telephone, and make yourself at home. When you think of cleaners, think of phone COME IN NEW YORK CLEANERS SEVEN FIVE WANTED-Girl roommate, comfortable room, moderate rent. 1204 Kentucky. Call 1059. LOST-Bill失锁 at or near the Gym last Sat. Call 1748. Reward. — 023 LOST-A jeweled Phi Gamma Delta pin with E. C. Schultz's name on the back of it. Reward. Call 444 — 023 LOST-Gabardine top coat at Gamma Phi Beta open house. Return. Reward to Booga, phone 285. — 020 SPLENDID DOPPORTION for students (male or female) who desire to earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Pleasant work, after school hours. Write J. F. Stanley, 3446 Wayne Ave., Kansas City. Mo. PROFESSIONAL CARD DR. J.W. ORYON. (Dentist). Special attention to prevention. Phone 204 Perkins Building. To 707 PROFESSIONAL CARD D.J. L. O'BRYAN, (Dentist). Special训 prevention and treatmnt of 304 Persons Building. Tel. 507. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Ix- canada) glasstm office. 1025 glassman office. 1035. Wiedmann's Tea Room Service The Dining Service Supreme 10 A very nifty two sport pocket Ide French Flannel Collar attached Shirt $3 You should see our assortment of silk striped woven madras and solid colored crepe shirts $3 $ \mathrm{S}_{\mathrm{K O F}} \mathrm{S}_{\mathrm{T A D}} \mathrm{S} $ 1 OBERCOAT REVUE Now! there is every out-of-door reason for buying an OBERCOAT —this winter and every style, comfort and economy] reason for [going] over to Ober's to'buy it! Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS $24.50 to $60 "It's the Candidate that Counts" Character is not in the name of an organization but is evidenced in the deeds of the men it has put in office. Compare the deeds of John Tracy, Ed White, Everett Bradley, Coy Patterson, Chubb Fraker, P. H. Parks, Bob Lynn, Cecil Custer, John Bunn, and last but not least, "Old Father Time" George Nettles, who were elected by Black Mask with those of men such as Burt Cochran, who left a Jayhawker deficit of more than $2,000; Art Walker, who was dismissed from the Men's Student Council because of certain irregularities in handling Ku Ku funds, Joe Schwartz, the last inefficient cheerleader, and other prominent Pachacamac such as Judd Benson, "Scoop" Olson, John Olds, John Monteith, Shirley Peters. At this time Black Mask wishes to state facts which will prove that certain statements made last night by Pachacamac are lies. Referring you to the Kansan files we find that Joe Bloomer, the Black Mask candidate for senior president, called meetings of the "K" club on the following dates: March 7, Sept. 29, Oct. 5, 1922, contrary to the Pachacamac statement that Joe Bloomer, as president of that organization had not called a single meeting of the "K" club since elected president of that organization. At the same time he managed the varsity dances and also piloted the baseball team into a tie for the Missouri Valley championship. Joe Bloomer has been selected by Black Mask for senior president because of his executive ability which has been demonstrated by his past activities. He is not a politician and is not managing his own campaign. You know the kind of service that Joe has given in the past and, by that, the future is judged. Seniors, if you believe Bloomer the biggest man in your class it is your duty to vote for him Thursday. Black Mask resents the insinuation that "Davy" Davidson is not putting his all into football. Juniors, what do you think? It is not our purpose in this statement to be hard on any one but we have been forced to make a few statements here that may be found in the different files of the above mentioned organizations. Fellow students, it is for you under the present system to submit the men and women you know to be fitted for the respective offices. You are the last judge. Compare the candidates and Black Mask feels sure its opinion will be yours. Black Mask "It's the Candidate that Counts" THE 6 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XX NUMBER 30 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, OCT. 19, 1922. W. A. A. IN CHARGE OF ALUMNAE REUNION Women Back for Nebraska Game to Meet in Robinson Gym OLD GRAD WILL SPEAK Students to Give Program Rep resenting K. U. Activities, Under Direction of Dean Blitz The Women's Athletic Association will be in charge of the program for the alumnae on Homecoming night, November 10. An informal get-to-knowing event for the Nebraska game and women students, in charge of Dean Anne Dudley Blitz and Miss Katherine Reding, will be held on the second floor of Robinson Gymnastics at the same time; a woman will take place on the first floor. Consider Benefit Performance The members of the W. A. A., assisted by other students, will arrange a short dramatic sketch of University life and other stunt representatives of University activities. At the meeting yesterday it was voted to ask an old graduate to give a pop speech to a new president of the W. A. A., will appoint committees to start work immediately on the program. The association considered having a W. A. night at one of the shows down town. It plans on giving one or two numbers of the program and selling tickets on the campus in order to take over a share of the proceeds. Miss Margaret Barto, of the department, said that in the University of Illinois, the women made over $100 by taking over the show for one evening. After debating at length concerning the requirements for a white sweater, a motion was carried to the effect that the president should appoint a committee to prepare and present at the meeting an amendment to the constitution concerning the awarding of white sweaters. Elect Hiking Manager 1234567890 Frances Martin was elected hiking manager for this year, as the office was not filled in the last year's spring election. At the previous meeting Marjorie Ashby was elected manager of swimming to replace Olga Fulton, who did not return to school this year. Press Club Will Entertain High School Journalists NEW NAME FOR JOURNALISTS A committee is to be appointed to consider a hike for the association and the decision will be posted on the girls' bulletin board. The Associated Journalists will be known as the K. U. Press Club with membership open to every student in the department of journalism, hereafter, according to decision made upon the recommendation of the Journalism students yesterday afternoon. After the meeting, women of the department as hostesses for the Daily Kansan, served refreshments in the Officers for the Press Club were elected and plans made for the entertainment of the high school journalists who will be invited to a conference at the University November 17 and December 8; Officer: Charles Johnson, vice president; Helen Scott, secretary; and Violet Johnson, treasurer. women's study room. Included in the refreshments was a large birthday cake for Marion Collinne, a former Stubba, Ruth Carter, and Helen Havely were in charge of arrangements. Women Medics to Elect Officers of Association The Women's Medical Association will meet at 7:30 o'clock Tuesday, Oct. 24, in Dr. Martha Bacon's office to elect officers and discuss plans for the coming year. All pre-medic women are invited. The Women's Medical Association is an organization for the promotion of fellowship among pre-med women. All women enrolled in the department automatically become members of the Association. Louise Robinson, c'24, and Josephine McDonald, fa'25, returned Monday evening from Wichita where a boy was stabbed by Chain, A. B. 21, and P. M. Arnold. Flippers and Flappers Combine to Paint the Village Red and Shock the Native Inhabitants Shades of Little Lord Fauntleroy! It last the reason for the famous user Brown collar and the wonderl Winder tie has come out into the pen. And the very productive Californian climate, has added another bit of heavenly haberdashery with the bit not but not gaudy Toreador trousers. Who is all this for? Just 'listen— The National Flippers' Fellowship (not approved by Good Housekeeping) has dropped in for to visit us a bit. A very little bit if the setting doesn't prove productive. The national headquarters of the organization is at Be Canyon Island) has just granted a charter for the Lawrenz flippers. The best of the best (including the Only-Onlys) furnish the field of material for the organization. The only real challenge is the collection of genial gentry is to promote joy, joyity and jazz in a fact and furious manner. The motto is "More Steam" and the working character is the frivolity phrase is "Sail On." It was feared for a time that there might not be the proper kind of congenial companionhip for the pleasant playfellow, but Santa Claus paid it. Mrs. Claus presented them with a sister organization. She is called the National Flappers' Flock. The local chapter has started to scorch through and by the ports of learning at a rate that is beyond the public call out for the price of an Ingersoll. "More Steam" being the motto, there ought to be a great deal of energetic endoelash displayed by the RAIL ROVER KILLED BY U. P. PASSENGER Vagrant Meets Death Under Wheels of Train Near A man was run over and killed last night by an east-bound Union Pacific passenger train about two hundred yards east of the fort-to-fort-high crossing in North Lawrence last night. He was identified by a watch charnet of peculiar design as John Vincent Smith, 1810 W, 58th S, Los Angeles. He has also left his left arm the tattooed initial J, V, S. The body was discovered about 8:15 last night by a flagman, who immediately called a motorcycle patrolman. The coroner, Dr. Carl Phillips, decided that the man had tried to "hop" a train, and either missed his step or miscalculated the distance. The accident probably occurred about 8 o'clock, since a short time before the body was found, a man was seen on the tracks. The remains were taken to the Funk Undertaking parors. Railroad authorities have not received an answer to a telegraph of inquiry sent to Sioux City. Filty Legion Men Stage Moving Act Some people who walked along the 800 block on Massachusetts Street about 8 o'clock last night may have learned a wholesale factory robbery was being perpetrated under the very eyes of the citizens of Lawrence. There were grounds for the belief. At the time mentioned about fifty young men—some carrying chairs and some carrying tables, but all carrying some piece of furniture—came out of the Merchants' National Bank building and headed in the direction of the People's State Bank. The Legion will hold open house in its new home Tuesday night. The rooms have been repaired and repaired throughout. The entitlement invited, and Legion officials are particularly anxious that students attend. There was no robbery, however, Eli Arlard Dorsey Post of the American Legion was simply moving its equipment from its old home above the mansion to the rooms in the 900 block recently vacated by the chamber of Commerce. Flippers' Fellowship when its members hang around the hill. There is—but the peak of the load, so to speak, is carried after five thirty. And it around the hill for sure, not on it. Fourteen students are helping pay expenses by working from one to four hours daily in the journalism employed in any other department. Great rivalry is springing up between the local palaces of amusement as to which one will have the At the first meeting which was held during the county fair the following officers were elected: president, Harry Kirkman; secretary, Ernest Ruff; treasurer (without bond), William Bruery. honor of being the meeting place when the Flippers and Flappers do their first get-together. To keep peace in the community it is thought that the party will be in the nearest phone booth. The oath of the president consists of saying "Have another" fifteen times at a rapid rate and then escaping before being taken up. The secretary must attend to having the crest of the organization engraved upon all papers used. The crest consists of a flat tire suncrest with a flowing bow of flames. The entire surrounded by a staining towel. The treasurer is more of a figure head than anything else although other adjectives have been invented by some of the fraternal Fellows. To hold his office he must succeed in obtaining at least two checks from a fountain and get out the door with out losing more than one of them. The honor of being charter members was bestowed upon Rose Cave, Fitzmarrion Fitzmarrion, Ed Madden, Cocholom Hall Km Crüger and Sammy Smith. Will Move Seismograph to Geology Building The sozismograph, which has been set up in Blake Hall, will be moved to the geology building as soon as it according to Prof. C. J. Pesey. The seismograph is a very delicately balanced instrument for detecting the shock of the earthquakes. It can be used by this instrument at a distance of 5,000 miles. A shock of a large intensity can be detected from any place in the world. No earthquake recorded recently, according to the record. PORTER TALKS TO Y. W. C. A. "How to Like Your Bible" Is Subject Subject "How to like your Bible," was the subject of a talk by Eliot Porter, of the School of Religion, to the W. W. C. Tuesday afternoon. Kappa Phi. Methodist women's organization, help dplease serves last eventing at 0:45 o'clock in Myers Hall five year women in the University. Printed slips containing a list of the psalms, with their respective meanings were given everyone as alds in home study. Later classes in Bible study may be organized by the Y. W. C. A. "The reason many people did not read the Bible is that they were afraid of it and regard it as a "golden book flung down from heaven" to be swallowed whole," said Mr. Porter."Without an understanding of the Bible people would be unable to understand music, art, literature or history. Following the services, the mem mers hold a business meeting it which they decided to elect a new member for the board meeting next Wednesday evening. For the apparent neglect of the majority of people in reading the Bible, M. Porter blames the teachers and proachers, the printing of the meant of most editions. The Bible should not be treated as a single book but as an entire library, because it is as varied as any library and there are thoughts there for all moods and arrangements, according to Mr. Porter. Kappa Phi Holds Pledge Services in Mvers Hal Announcement was made by Ed-Wina Ware, editor-in-chief of "Candle Beam", the new Kappa Phi paper, that the first edition would be out next month. Lela Belt will be editor f this edition. Very Slow Voting at Polls Characterizes Fall Elections This Year FEW STUDENTS VOTE FOR CLASS OFFICERS SENIORS SHOW INTEREST Freshmen Feature Lively Elec tionering Contest at Robi onson Gym Very slow voting at the polls is characterizing the fall elections this year. At noon a total of less than a thousand votes had been cast by the student body, and the voters were sticking in very slowly for their bailout. This afternoon, say those in charge at the polls, there will probably be lower votes cast than there were this morning, bringing the total for the election to much less than two thousand. In the past, a student body of more than 3500 inson Gym At 10:30 this morning the voting at the polls of the four classes stood as follows: Seniors, 150; juniors, 103; sophomores, 110; and freshmen, 157. At noon the senior class seemed to be in a state of parition with the size of the other classes on the campus. The freshman vote, although featured by a lively electionening contest outside the soils, was coming in very slowly and indications pointed to but a small class voting before he day was over. Early Start Made The vote for the classes stood at moon; Seniors, 208; juniors, 228; conhomores 201; freshmen, 274. HOME ECONOMICS PLAN WORK seni: Nurses, 268; juniors, 228; sophomores 204; freshmen, 274. Election judges who are presiding at the polls are: seniors—"Gob" Beauty, Bob Smith; Juniors—Coral Hill, Rick Lilly; Freshmen—Wendotworth, Elgin Claryd; Freshman—Bob Leon, Glick Schultz; Relief men for these judges are "Judge" Kerr and "Doc" Cullum. The chairman of the election committee for the Men's Student Council is Hilyar Mahin. Club Appoints Committees For the Year's Program The Home Economics Club met yesterday in Room 9 Fraser Hall. An open discussion of suggestions for the meetings of the year was held. Prof. E. H. S. Bailey was voted an honorary membership in the club. The following committee were appointed as members of the student of the Home Economics Club: Program committee: Advisor, Miss Sprague; chairman, Enola Long, Lela Belt, Josephine Hellmann, Louise Phillips, Alice Godsey, and Ella Jane Hagan. Refreshment: Advisor: Miss Virginia Gillett; Chairman, Bridge, Edith Ernest, Edwin Wara, Jeanette Wagstaff. Entertainment Advisor, Miss Meguiar; chairman, Henrietta Gillette; Phyllis Reynolds, Virginia Jennings, Cahrolle Cutter, Elizabeth Tucker. Publicity: Chairman, Laura Adair, Opal Lynn, Ms. Frederick Jones, House Assistant, Miss Tilley. And chairman, Adla Tilley. All Junior women are urged to attend this dinner for which tickets will go on sale Monday morning. Oct. 23, on the campus. Juniors to Have Dinner at University Comme Plans are complete for the Junior Dinner, which will be served at the Commons, Thursday evening, Oct. 26, according to Mary Rose Barrons, junior W. S. G. A. representative. "The purpose of the dinner is to foster class spirit and to get acquainted," Miss Badron Marron. The Junior women will meet at Robinson Gymnasium at 6 o'clock and sing class songs and give class yells. Games will be played under the direction of Elizabeth Martin. Promptly at 7 o'clock all will march from the gymnasium to the Commons, which will be reserved for them." ... To provide for a football rally on the campus at 12 o'clock Noon Friday; all morning classes will be shortened five minutes and the schedule will be as follows: 1st hour 8:30 to 9:15 2nd hour 8:25 to 10:10 3rd hour 10:20 to 11:00 4th hour 11:05 to 12:00 Rally 12:00 to 12:30 E. H. Lindley, Chancellor That Faculty Members Often Flirted In Chapel Is Shown By Ancient, Pencil-Marked Bible "Property of the University of Kansas; for use in Chapel." That is the identification in an 1887 edition of the Bible recently resurrected by Prof. W. A. Dill of the department of journalism. Chancellor John Fraser's name appears in the Pilbe three times and it was probably during his administration that it was used for devotional exercises in chapel. The last time he appeared in the '80s' wrote note to one an other on the "fliesen" of the Bible Charlie is my favorite name. Thanks, you don't know how high! you flatter me." The above are pencilled notations which appear on the first leaf of the old relic. The mystery becomes deeper on the next page, due to the fact that half-hearted attempts have been made to obiterate the writing and smash it. In spite of this difficulty the following histories are enclosed: Letters Urge Faculty to Attend K. U. Reunion The dinner is to be held at 6 o'clock Friday evening, October 20, at the Chamber of Commerce, Topeka. Tickets for the dinner may be obtained from the alumni office or at the K. U. booth in the State House, Topeka. Attendance of all faculty members at the annual K. U. reunion-dinner held in Topela in connection with the State Teacher's Association, is urged in a letter sent out by Prof. Wesley Coyle, head of the faculty Alumni Committee. PROFESSOR COLVIN TO SPEAK Subject of Talk Will Be Vocational Guidance Prof. Stephen S. Colvin, who will speak at the Little Theatre in Green Hall this evening at 7 o'clock upon the subject of vocational guidance among college students, is professor of the College Brown University, Providence, R I. He received his Ph. D. degree from the University of Strasburg and is an eminent author probably the best known for his volumes on the history of education to High School Teaching" and "Human Behavior." The latter a joint work with W. C. Bagley, Brown University was one of the first higher educational institutions connected with the guidance given their students by the institution. Dr. Colvin has been in charge of this work. He is considered to be without doubt one of the most influential men in the field. Former K. U. Students Wed at Sorority House The marriage of Mavis O'Brien, A. B. "22, of Iola, to Raymond Ferguson, A. B. "22, of Topeka, took place at the Alpha Gamma Delta house, Wednesday afternoon at 4 o'clock. The Rev, Dr. E. A. Block, of the First Presbyterian church performed the ceremony. The attendants were Fern Lawson, fs24 of, Iola, maid of honor, William Sprout, e28, best man and Jane Kennedy, ring bearer. Immediately after the ceremony a reception was held at the Pi Kappa Alpha house, the farthest of which Mr. Ferguson is a member. Mrs. Ferguson is a member of Alpha Gamma Delta sorority. Mr. Ferguson is connected with the International Harvester Company. At present they will make their home in Topeka. "Thundering Thousand" Seats Are Going Fast The seats for the "Thundering Thousands" are going fast. According to the Athletic Office over four hundred wore reserved yesterday and they expect to sell 500 more today. Section G will be completely filled, and it is hoped to fill half of section F. These are the best available seats as they are on the 50-yard line on the Kansas side. Only men having student enterprise tickets may have the benefit of these seats. The freshmen of Sigma Chi fraternity will entertain for the upper-schools with their annual freshman evening, October 20, at Eckle's Hall. — in the most charming young lady in Lawrence “I wear my most fattieer, as most young men are.” “Indeed, I mean it. I joke a great “Indeed, I mean it. I joke a great deal, but not always.” Whether this romance between the "most charming young lady in Lawrence" and the "flatterer" ever amounted to anything will probably never be known. Did this take place between two professors while some speaker was bravely attempting to give an address to the statute body? It is evident that the holder of the book passed some of the hour away by counting the chapels in the Bible and noting that there were 1890. The words in the first chapter of Genesis were counted also, and found to total 795. From all of this accumulated evidence we get the impression that even the professors were human in "we old days." Steps Taken to Establish American Society of Engineers R. O. T. C. ORGANIZES BASKET BALL TEAM A meeting was held immediately after drill of all those men interested in an R. O. T. C. basketball team. Men were presented and enthastically decided to attend at once with the expectation of playing Fort Leavenworth, several Kansas City teams, and if possible entering the inter-fraternity tourn- The first rifle drill of the local R. O. T. C. unit was held yesterday afternoon on the drill ground and was characterized by the veteran-like manner in which the cadets went through their arms, using rifles for the first time. Steps are also being taken toward the establishment of a student branch of the American Society of Military Engineers, which was founded as a national society in 1918. About 25 or 30 men signed the questionnaire in regard to the student branch, thus supporting their support to its establishment. The first student unit of the society was founded in the Oregon Agricultural College, and it is the hop of those in authority in the local R. O. T. C. unit that K. U. may establish the second one in the nation. Literature and application blanks have been requested and active steps toward the establishment of the branch will be taken as soon as they arrive. CUPID VERY ACTIVE AT K. U Fifty-Two Marriages of K. U People in Three Months In the last three months fifty-two marriages of K. U. people have been announced or an average of twenty percent have been missed on this issue of the Graduate Magazine. mime magazine. A question has arisen—will the K. U. student marry the woman he meets at K. U. or will he marry the woman at home? Statistics will show that the K. U. woman stands about a fifty-fourth of range with a K. U. student. Sometimes he marries the woman he meets at school, but sometimes he doesn't, in which case she is disappointed, and may have to start all over again, competing with the younger women, with a losing chance to win. Among the fifty-two marriages in the past three months twenty-five of them were the result of friendships made while in school, and twenty-nine more marriages in which only one party was formerly a student of K. U. Manchester Attends Meeting Earl N. Manchester, director of the library, is attending the regional meeting of the American Library Association at St. Joseph, Mo. Miss Marie Winey, president of the Library, Miss Edna Dart, employees at Spooner Library, are also attending the meeting. The Lutheran Church will have a huking Eebie Friday night. Students are requested to meet early Friday night at the church. A report is circulated that a field of red corn has been planted especially for this occasion. Last year more than $p hundred students attended the bee. NIGHT SHIRT PARADE AFTER ICHABOD GAME Snake Dancers Will Leave Rob- inson Gymnasium at 7:15 O'Clock Saturday Evening FREE MOVIES PROMISED Chamber of Commerce Will Furnish Apples, Doughnuts, Sandwiches and Cider The annual "Night Shirt parade" will be held Saturday night, October 21. The parade is always held on the night following the first home rootball game. Positively no dates of any sort will be allowed. Both the Sachems and K men will be out in force to punish all who attempt to leave. Since there will be no thieves allowed, a large delegation is expected to turn out to the parade. The parade will form at the gym at 7:35 o'clock and there will be several snappy speeches made by prominent men on the Hill before the parade starts on its journey down town. "K" Men Will Police Mob It is requested by Cheerleader Miller that no cars be on the campus when the parade is formed. The "thundering thousand" will leave the gym in single file, both Sachenis and Km will be police to keep the mob in line. The parade will be headed by Mac's hand and will proceed down Fourteenth Street to Massachusetts Street. No cars allowed on Massachusetts Street between the hours of 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. In town there will be several special feature stunts for the entertainment of the group. At the various street intersections the Chamber of Commerce will hand out refurbishes consisting of apples, pears, doughnuts, sandwiches and jigars. The mob will snake dance down Massachusetts Street and will end up in front of the Bowersock Theater with a huge bonfire where more speeches and stunts will be given. Both picture shows will be thrown open at 10 o'clock to all who took part in the parade. The management of the shows promise to give a snappy show for the occasion. Bonfire on Street "THUNDERCLAP" IS NEW YELL Virg Miller Says It's a Real Noise Maker A surprise is in store for all local supporters at the "Pep Rally," which is to be held tomorrow noon in front of The Capital. Clap" is the name of the new yell. Virgil, Marmor, cheerleader, says it is a real noise maker and should make the Stadium hum every time it is given. He also says that it will be hard to find any person would learn this yell and remember it until the game Saturday. The yell will be given as follows: On the call for the "Thunder Clap" every one clap their hands, continuing until the cheerleader's hands are raised above his head. The clapping is to gradually die down as the leaders move down the court and the sigh given every one is to give a shrill whistle, following with a mighty "Boom" and a clear-throated, "Yea- Jay Hawk." Woman's Educationel Sorority Entertains Honi Lambda Theta, woman's honorary education sorority, gave its annual reception to all women enrolled in the School of Education yesterday afternoon in Fraser Rest Room from 3 to 5 o'clock. The shades were drawn and the room was lighted by candles. The decoration consisted of cut flowers. In the receiving line were: Mrs. Luisa McDonald, an associate member of the organization; Myra Lingenfelter, chairman of the social committee; James Helen Welch, president of the organization; and Agnes Brady, an alumni member of the society. In the spring of each year Phi Delta Kappa, men's honor education classes, Theta, join to give a reception to all enrolled in the School of Education. Theta Tua, professional engineering fraternity, announces the pledging of Vivian O. Smeltzer, e;24; Lynn A. Hibbs, e;25; Qurber R. Sharp, e;24; Lorraine C. Long, e;25; and Charles A. Fry, e;25. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University II. II. I. I. I. Subscription price $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.90 for one semester; $6.25 a month; 15 cents a week. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kanashe, 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 California at Berkeley, in the department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Pfluger, K. J., III and 66 Editorial Staff The Daily Kansan aims to plop University of Kansas; to go fur- ward at the University of Kanan; to go for standing for the team; to deasle the orites to be clean; to be cheerful; to serve to be clean; to be cheerful; to serve to be more serious prose serves to be more serious prose serves to the host of its ability the service to the host of its ability the Editor-in-chief...Ben Hibbs Editor-in-chief...Glasson News Editor...Raymond Dawey Sports Editor...John Gervais Sports Editor...Glick Schultz Alumni Editor...Rustie Carter Alumni Editor...Rustie Carter Business Staff Business Manager ___ Lloyd Ruppertal Asst. Bus. Mgr. John Montgomery, Jr. Asst. Bus. Mgr. Clyde Burnside Chester Shaw **Boygge** Liewellyn White **Perry John** Myri Hart **Caroline Harkraider** Carline Francis **Caroline Powers** Holland Blaine THURSDAY, OCT. 19, 1922. The friendship which you now imagine to be as stumach as the oak may seem like the mushroom after election. A CAMPAIGN AUDIT During the last two years the expanse of campaigns preceding student elections at the University of canes has been materially decreased. The discontinuance of the use of posters was a step in the right direction. Ever, something more is needed, and that something is an audit of campaign expenses—an accounting, if you please, for the receipts and disbursements of funds. Throughout the country wherever we find enlightened primary laws and other progressive regulations for the conducting of campaigns and elections, there also do we find in nearly every instance, provisions for the audit of campaign expenses. It is one of the many ways by which the electorate of this country is attempting to clean up national and local politics. It is a sign of progress; the locality that does not make its candidates for office give an accounting of the receipts and disbursements of funds is indeed considered backward. It is presumed that students at the University are preparing to be leaders in various lines of work in the state, and yet here at K. U. we hold tenaciously to an antiquated political system that has outlived its day—if ever it had one. We need three things, a new and more democratic nominating system, platforms that mean something, and a code of regulations governing campaign expenses. The Kansan is accusing no Hill politician of misuse of campaign funds, but it does believe a limitation on the amount of money to be spent and a careful audit of expenses would help to end that prevalent feeling of distrust of political parties at K. U. The claim is put against Sennato Reed of Missouri that he is trying to cling to the pettitcats of the W. C. T. U. in his campaign for re-election. Not such a hard job, now that they're cut longer. MINCE PIE Pie is a great institution. The old fashioned mince pie was the perfection of the pie makers' art. But the mince pie has fallen into evil ways. It has become a questionable thing—the modern mince pie. It is a blight upon its ancestry. There is a legend that once upon a time a king declared a pie-making contest in his kingdom. All the fine ladies of the court had their cooks make rich and costly pie. The good housewives of the land fluttered about their kitchens making mice to please the palate of the king, who was to judge the contest. One little girl wanted very much to make a pie for the king, but her parents were poor and the cupboard was nearly bare. She had no expensive pieces, rare fruits, or choice syrups, but she used what she could find. She chopped up a few apples and a pear. She shredded a few scraps of meat which could be spared from the mouths of her hungry little brothers and sisters. She added the chopped meats of some nuts which she had picked up in the woods. She used cinnamon and cheap spices, sipled it with cider and baked it between two flaky crusts. She served her pie warm and its mouth-watering aroma and pleasing taste captivated the king. He commanded that the mince pie should be the royal pie and kept the royal table its making for the royal table. Such is the noble ancestry of that sorry specimen of piedon—the modern mince pie. With its leathery crusts, its tasteless, insufficient, and doubtful filling, a wedge of restaurant mince pie is a travesty on the royal ancestor. Let no such pie be trusted. The sale of liquor on American ships has been prohibited. Fewer Americans will go to Europe to visit the battle-grounds of the Great War now. PRUSSIANISM STILL ALIV] Not long since, the ex-Kaiser's own guard, the Hussar regiment, celebrated the dedication of a monument at the Potsdam palace. The Russians paraded the streets dressed in full regalia of the old militarist rule. Tn carried the colors of the Hohenzollers and people lined the streets cheering at the sight of the ex-Kaiser's own insignia. An old army chaplain addressed the soldiers, urging them to keep the military spirit alive in order that Germany might win future victories. The new German state is a wonderful piece of governmental machinery, and a certain faction of right-thinking people in that country are working hard to make the republic function as it should. But that faction is fighting a grim fight against the spirit of Prussianism—a spirit that has been instilled in the hearts of the people through long years of monarchial rule. Whether the right-thinking people of Germany will be able to hold out against the hanguity and unsubdued forces of autocracy is a question that no one can answer. And yet we harshly criticize France when she insists on keeping an arm to siege guard her back door. We accuse her of being unreasonable and mercenary; we point out to her that the country cast of the Rhine is now a model republic. But France shakes her head and smiles bitterty; she knows full well of the spirit that was shown at the Hussar demonstration. She knows that lined up against the fact which lies in government of the people are the militaries, who are watching for a chance to start another debacle worse than the last. How Is France to know whether she is safe—whether the forces of truth and light will ultimately conquer in Germany? Now the world is watching tensely while another战 is brewing in Europe. Nations claim that they cannot understand France's attitude; an era of misunderstanding seems to be spreading over that portion of the world. Perhaps, if the statesmen who so merciless flay France for their attitude toward Germany had been at the celebration at the Potsdam, they would, at least, think twice before condemning the stand taken by the French nation. The citizens of nations throughout the world are viewing the situation anxiously, for they are the ones who fight the wars of hatred and jealousy—wars thrust upon them by short-sighted statesmen. People are wishing that international politicians would forget their petty aquabulates and remember that Prussianism is not dead, and transform a hollow mockery into a real victory. The follow that asked you the final score two days after the game had been played, inquired of us if a football coach had four wheels. We told him Ree Beach was a summer resort. All of which points to a new "gym" equipment. Official Daily University Bulletin TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE UNIVERSITY FACULTIES: Copy received by Florence E. Bliss, Editor, Chancellor's Office Oct. 19, 1922 No.30 Professor Stephen S. Colvin of Brown University will discuss the subject of vocational guidance among college students in the Little Theater, Green Hall, at 7 o'clock Thursday evening. Mr. Colvin is in charge of the faculty activities along lines of vocational guidance in Brown University for several years and is one of the country's foremost authorities on the uses and limitations of psychological tests among college students. F. J. KELLY, Dean of University Administration. TICKETS FOR K. U. REUNION DINNER AT STATE TEACHERS ASSOCIATION: Tickets for the K. U. Reunion Dinner at the State Teachers' Association at Topoka, may be obtained from the Alumni office, Room 110, Fraser Hall, at $1.00 each. The dinner will be served at six o'clock Friday evening in the Chamber of Commerce rooms, 7th and Quincy streets. H. B, HUNGERFORD, Chairman, Alumni Interests Committee LASSSES SHORTENED FRIDAY MORNING FOR FOOTBALL RALLY. Morning classes will be shortened five minutes on Friday to provide additional training. Jayhawk Jargon Some people are always howling about "not springing from monkeys." Judging from their quota of brains, they haven't sprung yet. We are wondering whether or not "Alam and Eva" are going back to the beginning of domestic troubles. Maybe they'll raise cain. We'd hate to be king of England. We can just hear people saying, "Let jeorge do it." Ex-Kaiser Wilhelm is going to get married again. Some men will never learn! The only reason New York doesn't wag the St. Lawrence-Great Lakes waterway is that it would likely cause the absolute monopoly she has on East-West transportation to spring leak. Here's betting he's at Reno, Nev. ithin six months! There will be another white elephant on the market when the G, O, P. finishes white-washing theirs. Surgonaut removed a door key from a man's stomach. The key to the trouble. and now to resurrect that old gaur; kurney had better not push on to them, for when turkey lands in a general rule that its oosse is cooked. Wasn't it overdoing hospitality to out a "Welcome I. O. O. F." sign on he jail? It must be open season on meal tickets. Most of them are soon riddled with holes. If some girls keep adding a coat of complexion kalsimeine every time the weather turns colder, what will they look like by Christmas? United States airmen broke several world's speed records at a flying meet held in Ohio recently. Well, even at that they didn't get anywhere—all they did was fly in circles. There are only twenty-six white rhinoincreses left in the world and the are very valuable, but white deer are just as hard to get. 63 of all ever. One mean fellow is commenting on the size of the cast in Abraham Lincoln and wonders if the Presidn't cabinet shifts scenery on the side. "The Pen Is Paying." This headline instead of being an encouragement to the literarily inclined, graces a news story to the effect that the penal institutions are paying their own way. Eastern college executives say here are too many people in college. We have some professors on the campus who must have Eastern ideas. The professor who has a decided limp on the campus is as spry as a kitten on the golf links. The inventor of the permanent marcel wave began life as a stonecutter. A good many papish wish he had stuck to his own trade. Inmates at the Student Hospital are complaining because they are not allowed to have lady visitors very often. What do they expect for six weeks, high school, medical attention, and high class entertainment in addition? The president of Bethany College wants it distinctly understood that his school is not a nutritionally built school, and he will not care careful or he'll kill the enrollment. E. H. LINDLEY, Chancellor. Edward Ranft, University of mba student, is the only surviving member of a fraternity organized here last fall for unkissed men. He has stuck to his vows as a matter of pride. Pride always comes after a fall. Hike and husking bee are to be combined in the annual frieled Friday night for all Lutheran students. Meet at the Church, corner 11th and New Hampshire, at 5 o'clock promptly, if late, follow interurban to Bishops Farm, snail stait and east, at Schanke farm. Don't forget your quarter. ANNOUNCEMENTS Essential every Ku Ku attend meeting of Klan tonight (Thursday) 7:30, 209 Fraser.—Bredberg, Chiel Ku Ku. Fen and Scroll will meet tonight in Fraser Hall, Room 205, at 7:30 P. M.-Walker Means, Pres. The schedule of the Dramatic Club try-out plays is posted in the public speaking department office—Gus Lauterback. On Other Hills Fred Bonebrak, c. e. 22, is assistant county engineer and superintendent of federal aid project, at Garrett. Gordon Sunders, e22, is with Cook's Paint and Varnish Company, of Kansas City, Mo. Pauline Newman, A. B. 22, has charge of the Sunday Society News and Woman's Page of the Dispatch-herald, Erie, Pa. C. C, Willis, A. B, '22, is now employed by the Oklahoma Gas and Electric company of Oklahoma City as assistant statistician. Mr. McPherson had the honor of being the first student in the department of military science and tactics of the University of Kansas to receive a commission granted by the United States War Department. He is also a member of the honorary chemical fraternity, Alpha Chi Sigma. William L. McPherson, A. B. "22", is an instructor in the department of chemistry for the laboratory work of chemistry I. and II. In connection with his instructing, Mr. McPherson is taking graduate work in advanced chemistry including phase rule and advanced organic topics; and diagnostics in the department of bacteriology. Maude Landis c'97, who has been visiting here, has returned to her home in San Francisco. Miss Landis is now superintendent of nurses in the Lane Hospital there. The Lane Hospital is a new institution and is under the supervision of Leland Stanford University. Miss Landis is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. WANT ADS LOST-Gaberdine top coat at Gamma Pbi Beta open店, $10 Reward. Return to Boggs, Phone 285. -020 WANTED-Man roommate, large room, moderate rent. 1088 Tennessee. Call 2076 White. O-24 LOST-Sigma Chi fraternity pn. Name on back. Reward. Call 334. GARAGE FOR RENT-1345 Masa. $3 per month. Inquire High School Inn. -025 LOST—Gold tennis medal with name Gerald Hamilton engraved on back. Reward. Call 24188. —022 FOR SALE--Three octave sheet xy- phone equipped with resonators and case. Phone 607. — 024 LOST-Pocketbook containing bills, registration card, DeMoly Iday registration card and other valuable. Fiesta 67285 Blue or leave at Kannan office. IF YOU want good laundry work done, call Miss. Perry. 116 N. J. Phone 2551. Work called for and delivered. O-23 LOST—Bill fold at or near the Gym last Sat. Call 1748. Reward. -023 LOST-A jeweled Phi Gamma Delta pi with E. C. Schultz's name on the back of it. Reward. Call 444—020 LOST-Gabardine top coat at Gamma Phi Beta open house. Reward. Return to Bagga, phone 285. —020 SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire to earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Please work, after school hours. Write J. W. March 2045 Wayne Ave. CITY, City - S73 PROFESSIONAL CARD DOLE LAY, GHROWN. (Dexlst) Special attention to prevention and treatment of pyorrhea. 204 Perkins Building. 507. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Ex- clusive Optometrist). Eye exames. glasses made. Office 1025 Mass. A. G. ALRICH Stationery Printing by any process 736 Mass. St Engraving, Printing, Binding Rubber Stamps, Office Supplies Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 Thomas Shoe Electric Shop Fine, Printed Stationery 190 ENVELOPES, 208 NOTE SHEETS--$1.50 Printed With Your Name and Address Printed With Your Name and Address 4.5-1.5 inch printed on heavy Italian style in latex lint only. Use 20 lb. weight of the paper. Punches and dings are free with the purchase of $100. Fold over and seal with a sturdy adhesive tape. NATIONAL STATEMENT CO., BOX 72, MUNICIPAL MINISTRY OF NATIONAL STATEMENT CO., BOX 72, MUNICIPAL MINISTRY OF PROTCH The College TAILOR We make clothes. We do alterations on both women's and men's clothes, relining ladies' and men's overcoats, cleaning and pressing. Suiting you, anyway. That's My Business SCHULZ THE TAILOR 917 Mass. St. WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods United Army Stores Co 706 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Army Goods Ladies who desire expert Hair-Bobbing Patronize the STADIUM BARBER SHOP "The Shop of Service" First Door South of Von's "GIFTS THAT LAST" Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING Phone 139 BELLS FLOWER SHOP Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS 825 1-2 Mass Tango in a salon. Keep Comfortable Indoors and Warm Outdoors-WEAR Duofold Health Underwear Warmth Without Weight Duofold Health Underwear is made of two thin layers of knitted fabric with an air space between. This keeps out cold and dampness and provides greater protection than a single layer fabric that is much thicker and heavier. You get warmth and health protection in light weight knitted garments. Outer layer is made of warm wool (can't touch the skin) and the inner layer made of soft cotton. Come in and let us show you also. Interwoven toe and heel Socks PECKHAMS The Y. W. C. A. is bringing one of New York's biggest hits to Lawrence, The Pep of a student cast will put new life into a play that made the world's metropolis rock with laughter. You Can't Miss Adam and Eva at the BOWERSOCK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31 Mail Orders sent to Elizabeth Dunkle at Henley Hall will receive Immediate Attention THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BONES OF MAMMOTH DINOSAURS ON EXHIBIT Geologists Display Their Summer's Catch of Fossils at Haworth Hall A collection of fossil bones of prehistoric animals, which were gathered by the expedition from the University, conducted by Dr. W. H. Schowee, is on exhibition in a case museum at the New York Institute includes several fossils of giant dinosaurs, reptiles which lived probably more than a million years ago. The dinosaurs are the largest animals of which there is any record. They ranged from forty to sixty feet in length and from ten to fourteen feet in height. The bones which have been gathered are pieces from the lower limbs, and are from eight inches to a foot in thickness and width. One of the choicest pieces in the collection is the tooth of a dinosaur which was found by Dr. Schoewe. This is the best specimen outside of the one at the museum but it is much longer and but is three inches long and an inch in thickness The bones of the dinosaurs were first found in New Jersey, and then were found in different parts of this country and Africa. A new bed has just been opened up in the Gobi desert in Mongolia, Asia, and this is thought to prove the wide extent of the old animal life. The dinosaur was an animal which might be called a cross between a crocodile and an arctirh, but very much larger than either. The fossil bed from which the specimens were taken are located near Canon City, Colo., in the Morrison formation. The K. U. expedition was at work during June and July at these beds. This is the first time that this summer college has ever been offered to geology students. Chapel Filled With Appreciative and Enthusiastic Audience GELTCH RECITAL PLEASES Prof. Waldenkirk Gelch, of the violin faculty in the School of Fine Arts, gave the opening faculty recital of the year Wednesday. Fraser chapel was completely filled by an active and enthusiastic soprano. G Minor Concerto by Bruch, which is one of the really great numbers of violin literature was played with in this concert. The violins equally pleasing in the two groups of lighter numbers which closed the program. Of these, the best number and the best played, was the Presto, which was closely similar, which closed the program. Professor Gelch played the difficult numbers of his program with case, and was voted as a victim of assassination in votes by those who heard him play. ARKANSAS ARMY GOODS SOLD Will Use Sale Profits to Beau tify Camp Pike Pomp Kike, Ark., Oct. 19 (U. P.) —Final auction sale of surplus army supplies owned by the state of Arkansas and stored in the camp gymnasium here, has been made. Harness, saddles, bridles, halters, and sunny items, valued at more than $0.00 when purchased, were offered. Prospective bidders were required to report before the hour set for the sale to register, establish their identity, and make a deposit, signifying their good faith. Numbers were issued and all bidding was done by the bidder calling his number instead of name. Among the articles listed were 2800 sets of harness, 5,000 saddles of four different makes, 12,000 horse covers, a large quantity of halters, bridles, bits, silice furniture, machinery, electric motors, wagons and house furniture. The sale last June realized approximately $100,000. Profits from two sales will be used to beautify the camp grounds. Hunter to Address Phi Sigma Hunter to Address Phi Sigma Dr. W. S. H Hunter, of the departments of psychology, will speak to Phi Sigma, national bacterological society, at a meeting Monday evening at 7:30 in Room 307, Snow Hall. Lawrence Wiberg, fs'24, is working in Wellington. John Wulf, c'23, refereed a football game at De Soto yesterday. Miss Anita Humphrey, c'22, will be a guest at the Kappa Alpha Theta house this week. Miss Humphrey is charge of the department of parish in the Chanute high school. Mr. Francis Myers, c'22, of Corning, is visiting his sister, Mary Myers, Send the Daily Kansan home. Delt, Bull Pup Mascot, Has Deserted Admirers Delt is a deserter. He is lost; he has gone away without leaving his address. Delt, the Boston terrier belonging to Margaret Barto, head of physical education work for women, was the popular mascot of the department. But now the ruler has abandoned his kingdom. Delt was taken to the doctor in North Lawrence Monday afternoon for treatment of the inner dog. As his mistress and he were leaving the doctor's home, Delt frisked across the street. He was struck by an approaching automobile which he did not see. Delt has never been struck by a strange car before and it hurt his dignity. He gave a surprised and padded揍 and proceeded to leave the room, but he will be engaged in doing so for search or far has failed to find him. Tokyo (By mail to United Press) Rickson日本禁裙 put on cook clothes and labored all day in the public parks here recently. JAPANESE NOBLEMEN LABOR LIKE COOLIES Are Dirided by the Masses for Setting Example of Diligence Their purpose was to set a worthy example of diligence and industry to the masses. But the masses somehow didn't get excited at all—for the simple reason that "indefatigable industry" is all ready the masses' middle pane. The Japanese coole begins to work when he is big enough to toddle and keeps it up until he dies—and he has no Sundays or week-ends. There is much lost motion in his work, as the western standards go. And he is not very good at managing demand and get high wages. He has ended the old myth of "Japanese cheap labor" and thereby he has removed one of the country's greatest advantage in international trade competition. But, be all that it may, he certainly knows how to work hard hours every day of his life. So the cooled of the capital found it rather funny when the thirty wealthy peers, composing the "Brotherly Love Society," spent one entire day working in the public parks, in order to set a good example to the masses. The Osaka Mainichi, one of Japan's greatest newspapers, poked a little fun at the lack of duties do not call forth the praises of the people." said the Mainichi. The Mainichi smoke of the general "decision and secret" with which the people received the performance of the nubile men and commented: "Of recent years the popular psychology has undergone a remarkable change. While the public has hitherto regarded even a slight labor or virtue deed by the rich with admiration or respect, this is no longer tolerated. His attitude has become decidedly cynical." NEW SUPER TANK DEVELOPED Carries 50 Troops and Makes 20 Miles an Hour London, Oct. 19. (United Press)—Despite the veil of secrecy that is invariably thrown around the development of new engines of destruction, the United Press learns from reliable sources of a monster tank, enabil of carrying fifty troops, which were contracted For the War Office. One who participated in several of the recent trials stated "it was as comfortable as riding along a well-paved street in a taxi." These tests have been carried out in an isolated spot not far from London and every detail of construction has been jealously guarded by military officials. In addition, great attention has been given to interior comfort. The significance of this feature will be obvious to anyone who has had the un- The new tank is designed along the same lines as those used against the Germans, but there have been numerous improvements. For instance, it is capable of a speed of 20 miles an hour, whereas the noisy, clumsy tanks of the last war could scarcely do eight miles at top speed. The super-tank is well provided against attack. Experiments are being carried out with a machine gun for firing one-inch bullets. These it is claimed, will penetrate and put out of action an enemy tank. orguttage experience of loisting over itchens, rocks and shell-holes in one if the early monotransites. The avail-ance of such an environment me rached the scene of action. There is an elaborate arrangement of springs and the interior has been unholstered. The var office has considered the possibility of arming each of the crew with these guns. This would mean that a fleet of these monsters could have to be in all their obstacles before insumountable laid with a contingent of troops. MARTIN UNPACKS SPECIMENS Museum Is Receiving Fossils Unearthed This Summer Several boxes of paleontological specimens, recently shipped here by H. T. Martin, assistant curator of paleontology, from the Hat Creek Basin on War Bonnet Creek. Upper rocks are being unpacked at present. Mr. Martin gathered the fossils on a trip during the late summer. There are various species represented in those which were opened up yester On account of the destructive at THE OREAD Why sure—that's where We eat —We started there in our Freshman year and have always gone there for regular meals, teens, parties, suppers after dances and eats at all times. Brick has everything arranged so cozily. He cooks food that students like, and has the interests of the students always at heart. Eat there and establish a comforting, satisfying habit. Just a Step from the Campus THE OREAD CAFE E. C. BRICKEN, Prop. You Need The KANSAN! Every day THE KANSAN is chuck full of things which are of interest to you regardless of your status on the hill. News All of these things are important to hill life—to YOUR hill ing and what is shown by the merchants of Lawrence. stories covering every school activity, announcements of meet- at your door every evening. life. THE KANSAN brings the news of all them to you. If you haven't subscribed, call K. U. 66 and have it delivered tacks of mice and rats, the bones are kept locked up in a steel cabin. Otherwise the mice would eat the bones allowing the bones to fall apart. Mr. Martin is also restoring some matodon teeth, which have been stored in the Museum for several years. Mr. Martin is not only rediscovered a short time ago. Mr. Martin is uncertain as to where the teeth may have come from originally, but says they might have grown from several miles north of Lawrence. The unpacking and preparation of the fossils from the recent shipment will take several months. Kodakers Mrs. B. E. Loomas has reopened her "kodak studio" at 820 Mass. St., opposite Ober's, second floor, phone 212. Fresh supply of Eastman films in stock. Home of the amateurs. Looms Kodak Studio. Phi Delta Theta announces the pledging of Don Kendall, c24. Oread Shining Parlor CHARLIE'S Best Shines in Town Bowersock Theatre One Night Tuesday, Oct. 24 DOLPH LAMBERT presents THE GOEST PLAY ELGENE TWELVES THE GOEBEL PLAY ENGENE O'MIEL'S EMPEROR JONES with the amazing actor CHAMBERIE & GILDAN AS ORIGINALLY PRODUCED BY THE PROVINCIAL BOY PLAYED Coming here with original cast after one year in New York and a long run in Chicago. Dolores The annual pumpkin party will be H. T. Bradley, c'26, has returned given by the Sigma Nu fraternity at it to his classmates after an absence form **1300 BASELINE CIRCLE Tax Seat Sale Saturday Mail Orders Filled Now—It Is Advisable to Secure Reservoirs in Advance for This Attraction WATKINS NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. SURPLUS $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill J. C. DIRECTORS D. G. Ashar, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Caah. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Caah. D. C. Asher, L. V. Miller, T. C. Green M. Moore, S. O. Bishop GIRLS! An electric curling iron and comb— Hairbrush with comb Hairbrush with rod It will marcel without burning your hair. Kansas Electric Power Co. 719 Massachusetts St. We're Here--to give you the best in Laundry and Dry Cleaning service. Our workers are skilled and all our equipment is the best. The result is: We Guarantee Satisfaction. May we serve you? Phone 383 LAWRENCE STEAM LAUNDRY Water as soft as melted snow THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN RACE WELL STARTED IN MISSOURI VALLEY Tiger Football Team Leads Wit First Two Conference Games Won HUSKERS PLAY SATURDAY Missouri Valley Stana Kansas Aggie-Sooner Clash Will Be Real Contest of Week W Maiouri University 2 0 1000 Drake University 1 0 1000 Kansas Aggies 1 0 1000 Kansas University 0 1 000 Ames 0 1 000 Bingham University 0 1 000 Grimali 0 1 000 Nebraska and Oklahoma have not played conference games. This Week's Valley Schedule Kansas vs. Washburn at Lawrence. Missouri vs. Nebraska at Lincoln. Aggeris vs. Oklahoma at Norman. Ames vs. Grinnell at Grinnell. Washington vs. Drake at St. Louis The University of Missouri's football team is leading the race in the Missouri Valley, with the first two games of the season won, although football has just got under way among the conference schools. Missouri has played one more game than any other Valley school, having taken Grimell and Ames into camp, Drake and the Kansas Angels are tied for the top spot. All teams have won their only gantle played with Valley teams. Kansas plays Washburn this week and will not get a chance to break into the win column of the Valley standings. Kansas lost to the Bulldogs by a close score 6 to 0, the Jayhawks being unable to score after the ball had been carried past the twenty yard line time and again. Missouri found a real team in the Ames last week and if it had not been for the foot of Al Lincoln the Tigers would have lost. Field goals were popular in the game and Kansas was one of the leading one. The Kansas Aggies by one touchdown beats Washington University of St. Louis 22 to 14. It was a hard game and according to doppler tracking they should have won by a larger score. Nebraska and Oklahoma did not play in the Valley, but both teams got into Valley action this week at Wisconsin, where State Normal 19 to 0, while the Cornhuskers sent the day watching the Ames-Missouri ' contest. Grinnell easily defied St. Louis University with a win over Pine Rock, from former coach at St. Marys. Good Games This Week Good Games This Week This week's schedule will find some good game and every Valley team in action. Kanas is the eleven which played against Hawkins and hawkers clashed with Washburn on the Stadium field and even with the second team in the lineup should easily defeat the Iachobs. The real game of the valley Saturday will be the Kansas Aggie-Sooner club at Norman. Very little is known about Benny Owen's team this year but it is reported not to be in his league. The Aggies have an exceptional eleven and with "Ding" Burton back in the Farmer lineup, they will make a hot m "take a look" at the Best Dress't fellows at the Game Saturday— —nine times out of ten, you'll find - that they wear Clothes that bear this label— CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Nighties for the Parade content and should beat Oklahoma by a close score. The Aggies have had it on the Sooners in the past two years, having beaten them last year 14 to 7, after Kansas had beaten the Aggies and lost to Oklahoma. The previous year Oklahoma played the Aggies to a 7 to 7 tie. Enemies Will Meet The Cornbush-Tiger affair at Lincoln will be a funeral for the Missouri boys, and should prove a regular track meet for Nebraska. Every Valley follower knows the athletic relations have not been as good as they might have been between these two institutions in the past few years especially in football, and this is the first year the teams have met on the gridiron for four seasons. So the University of Missouri scores the largest score possible. If Missouri scores it will probably be from the foot of Lincoln. The Ames-Grinell contest should prove a victory for the Iowa state school, although Coach Edward at Grinell has the best team turned out at that school in a number of drakes. Drake is deputed to win from Washington, although the Pikers are better this year than usual. FROSH BASKETBALL IS FAST Best Teams Will Hold Tournament Before Thanksgiving The basketball teams in the freshman gym classes are producing some real basketball. Teams evenly matched, and if as there was a prize at stake, A tournament between the best teams of all the classes will be held just before Thanksgiving. The excitement is now increasing as teams, with perfect scores in the same class, meet. Seven teams remain with perfect records. There are twelve that have lost only one game, and sixteen have met defeat only twice in the three weeks of play. The 2:30 o'clock and 4:30 o'clock classes lead with two undefeated teams each. The 4:30 o'clock class also holds the championship of the cellar league, with three teams yet to win a game. Advance reports on the attendance at the Homecoming game, November 11, indicate that there will be a record attendance. Letters come daily to Alfred G. Hill, K. U. Alumni see records of the games and announce their intention of being in Lawrence to see the K. U.-Nebraska game. ACTIVE ALUMNI LIST ONLY 45 PER CENJ Forty-five per cent of the graduates of the University of Kansas are or the active list of the Alumni Association according to a tabulation of association membership by classes just completed in the Alumni Officer There have been fifty classes graduated from the University. In ten year periods, they ranked in the following way: With the active membership as a basis, the tabulation shows in a striking way the difference in strength and flexibility of the spirit among the graduated classes. Smaller Classes Have Highest Average for Membership in Association FUR CHOKERS Marmot Coat, 40 inches long, handsome shawl collar, beautifully lined . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $95 Natural Muskrat Coat, 40 inch length, shawl or collars, handsome skin linings ... $135 up to $167.50 There is a genuine satisfaction in buying your Furs from this collection—you are assured of the most dependable Furs made, both in quality and style. Our guarantee of satisfactory service is back of every purchase you make. Fur Coats and Fur Pieces of Brown and Taupe Cony 40 inch length for ... $55 1873-1882 -Classes of '75 and '76, tied with four active members out of five living, or eighty per cent. 1893-1902 -Class of '92 with fifty eighten active out of twenty-six, or sixty-five per cent. Russian Marmot Coat, 40 inch length Raccoon collar and cuffs, also self collars, priced at $135 1903-1912 - Class of 1911 with one underded sixty-four active out of three hundred forty-two, or forty-eight per cent. 1893-1902—Class of '82 with fifty active out of ninety-one, or fifty-five per cent. Hudson Seal Coats, 38 inches long, shawl collar and cuffs of Marten ... $295 Black Rat Coat, large collar and flare cuffs, fancy lin- ings, a splendid value at ... $175 SHEWITCHER Gray Squirrel, Dyed Fitch, and Kolinsky Ringtail. $15 Stone Marten, Balm Marten, and Mink $25 up to $47.50 Animal Scarfs of Brown and Silver Kit Fox $25 Animal Scarfs of Black and Brown Fox $35 to $47.50 So Thick You Can Hardly Draw Them Through a Straw Luxurious Furs 1913-1922—Class of 1918 with two hundred one active out of three hundred twenty-six or sixty two per cent. French Seal Coats, 38 inches long, Australian Opossum Collars, for $175 In All the Newer Effects Try a Malted Milk From WIEDEMANN'S Innes, Bulline & Hackman Agents for Whitman's Candies in Lawrence Freshman Gym Classes Hold Chinning Contests The freshman gymnasium classes have been holding contests in chinning themselves for the past few days. The classes were divided into teams and the results have been announced as follows: 5 7-8; 2:30 team, 6 1-6; 2:30 team, 7 1-6. Average of classes: 4:30 class, 10:5; 10:30 class, 10:2; 3:30 class, 9:9; 11:30 class, 9:8; 9:30 class, 9:3; 2:30 class, 8.5. High individuals; C. H. Dickerson, 26; W. Noe, 24; J. Botsford, 23. Low individuals; C. Finch, 0; J. Benson, 0. High team average: 3:20 team, 14 1-5; 10:30 team, 13 6-7; 10:30 team, 13. Low team average: 3:20 team All music of the program for the Kansas State Teachers' Meeting which will be held in Hutchinson on Thursday, Friday and Saturday of this week, will be furnished by teachers and pupils of Kansas schools. The members of the Hutchinson High School glee club and quartets of students will entertain the 5,000 expected teachers. SKOFSTADS Overcoats of merit are moving so get yours while the assortment is near complete, $27.50 and $22.50 SkofStadS ELLING SYSTEM LAWRENCE, KANS. Pander's QUALITY JEWELRY Varsity Dance! F. A. U. Hall Saturday Night October 21,1922 Langworthy 5-piece Orchestra Lovely Satins For Dress A Plain Black, Beaded, and Brocaded Stylish and Serviceable $7.00 THE SPOT CASH SHOE STORE. Zoology Club Elects Members | *ics*. Several new member were Dr. W. R. B. Robertson spoke to elect. The names will be announced the Zoology Club at their meeting after the initiation, which will be held on Monday, the next week before Thanksgiving holiday. Concerning Chromosomes and Genes- day. Pajamas $1.15, Night Shirts 85c for the parade! ROBERT W. SMITH OBERCOAT REVUE Showing Obercoats of every character, for every purpose, and for every purse. "Come over to Ober's" and see them. $24.50 to $60.00 Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS A Punjab Picture Varsity-Bowersock WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY Shows: 2:30,4,7:30 and 9 JEROME L. LANDIS PRESENTS WALLACE REID "The Ghost Breaker" SUPPORTED BY LILA LEE and WALTER HIERS 10 JERSEY L. NAPPI PRESENTS WALLACE REID "The Ghost Breaker" PRODUCTION BY LILA CEE and WALTER HIERS Shows: 3,7,and9 "THE OLD HOMESTEAD" "THE OLD HOMESTEAD" WITH Theodore Roberts, George Far, J. B. T. Roy Baines, Harrison Ford, Fritz Hidgway A General Store Friday and Saturday Katherine MacDonald in DOMESTIC RELATIONS ALIAS JULIUS CAESAR Charles Ray in LIAS JULIUS CAESAL THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 10 NUMBER 3 VOLUME XX EVERYTHING SET FOR NIGHTSHIRT PARADI Lid Flies Off at 7:15 O'Chock Saturday Evening in Robinson Gym MAECH DOWNTOWN AT The stage is set for the 1922 nigh-shirt parade, Virgil Miller announced this morning after a final conference with a committee of business men he toename. The lid will fly off promptly at 7:15 o'clock Saturday night, in Robinson Gymnastium, and feet on until the owl gets ready turn in the room. Day the order the night will be noon, cats and snuz-dancing. Evening Is Full of Special Stunts, Bonfires, Shows, and Snake Dance Short Program at Gym A special feature this year in addition to the regular order of events will be several stunts, quartets, and other attractions, which will begin to "spread their stuff" at the gym, and will continue along the line of march Short Program at 9:10 After a few short talks and yells the crowd will be entertained at Rob inson until about 8 o'clock. Every one is urged to be there for the first day of school and will begin start earlly getting the men out. Cheerleader Miller said that no freshman will be "hazed" in any way as long as he keeps with the game and gets there on time. Bonfire at Sixth Street The revelers will swing into line behind the band at eight o'clock, and march down town. There may be 8 confire in South Park, and a few victory speeches. The first step for refreshments will be at Rankin' the dance will get under way, and will proceed north on the "main drag". More grub will be passed out at the ninth street corner and other points. The main bonfire will be at 11th Street here. This is by the corner by the Kwik bridge. There is more room there than at the Seventh Street corner, where the fire was built in former years. The traditional material for nightshift parade fires will feed the flames. "The Admirable Crichton" Will Be First Big Production DRAMATISTS CHOOSE PLAY A special program has been arranged at the picture shows, and it will be all and more than it usually is. The doors of the shows open to the chairs at 10 a.m., and not before that time is anyone to "chase the gate." "The Admirable Crichton" has been chosen by the executive committee of the Dramatic Club to be the first big production of the club this year. It is an English play written by the great playwright, James M. Barrie and has had great success in New York. It has been produced in motion pictures. Manuscripts have been ordered and tryouts will probably begin next week In the meantime, however, it is suggested that those who intend to try for parts in the play should obtain a copy of it at the library and become acquainted with it. The other copies will be at the public speaking' The date has not been definitely, settled, but the plan is to present this first play before the Christmas holiday, held at the Theater given the剧. office within a few days and may be obtained for a short time. "Watch the Kanan for further reports," is the instruction on Gs. Lauenbach, in the club. Eli Dorsey Post Will Open New Club Rooms The Eli Dorsey Post of the American Legion will open their new club rooms officially next Tuesday evening, when they will have an open house, all ex-service men and their friends, all being cordially invited. The new American Legion quarters are those recently vacated by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce at Ninth and Massachusetts. The rooms have been decorated recently, and their staircases and balconies are very proud of their new quarters. A canteen will be operated in the clubrooms, by Mr. McGinnis, which will carry a stock of candies, gum, cigars, sandwiches, hot chocolate, etc. Marie Owens, A. B'21, is visiting at the Alpha Delta Pi house. Mrs. Lindley Entertains K.U.Newcomer's Clut UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, OCT. 20, 1922. Mrs. E. H. Lindley entertained the Newcomers' Club yesterday at its first meeting of the year. About forty members were present. Miss Burton of the public speaking department gave a few readings. The club is in its fourth year, having been organized in 1019 through the efforts of Mrs. Frank Strong and Mrs. P. F. Mrs. Membership is limited to women who are members of the faculty and wives of faculty members during the first two years they are connected with the University. NEW EXCUSE SYSTEM ON TRIAL IN COLLEGE Student Can Be Reinstated in Classes in Shorter A change has been made in the system of checking up absences in the College, in the hope of eliminating confusion and slowness. The new method consists of a system of absence cards. On one side of the card is space, for the name of the student, the names of the courses, the time, the date, the dean's signature, and the instructors' initials. On the other is space for the statement of the student's excuse and the signature of some recognized author, such as house-mother or physician. A letter from the dean's office was sent to each of the members of the College faculty with an enclosed sample of the absence cards. In this communication it was made clear that the card is not to be taken as an official excuse excluding the student. A reply is given. It is used as a means of conveying to the instructor the reasons for the absence of the student. NEED COPY FOR SOUR OWI The new system is being tried in the College in the hope that it will save time and confusion in aiding the student in reinstating himself in college. The college must excuse for absence was not available after ten or fourteen days. Dead Line For Material Is No November 1 "Snappy articles are wanted in quantity for the Sour Owl," said Ch. t. Shore, editor, this morning. "These articles must be in by November 1, and should be in by the first of next week, if possible. One act plays of a humorous nature make excellent material. Don't forget the idea of the magazine, as expressed in the title, 'The Who's Who Number.'" A confidential amount or interests is now in the hans of the editor one day and is then sent to today, however, most of the "dope" is from the pens and pencils of a small group of contributors, and the policy of the Sour Owl board this year is to get as many of the new students working as are willing. should be dropped in the box which has been placed near the Bulletin Board, according to the editors. Former fame as cartoonist or writer is not necessary. The material published will be printed on merit of the work alone, and not on the reputation of the writer. Tickets to Junior Dinner Placed on Sale Tomorro Phil Delgado, of Las Vegas, NM, is visiting at the Alpha Tau Omega house this week. Mr. Delgado will be present at a presentation at Las Vegas. Tickets for the Junior Dinner which will be held at the Commons, Thursday evening, October 26, will go on sale for the first time Saturday instead of Monday, according to Mary Jordan, junior W. S. G. A., representative. "We want," said Miss Barrons, "to get the tickets for the dinner sold just as soon as possible so that we can make an estimate of the number who will attend. For this reason, we have moved up the date of the ticket sales, and it is hoped that all juniors can will buy tickets before Monday." Tickets may be obtained from Josephine, Brauer at 1344 Louisiana Street, and Marianna Dunkel, 631 Ohio Street. Meeting of all, ex-service men interested in Kansas compensation, Tuesday, October 24, at 4:30 o'clock, in Green Hall, The Committee. PRIDE IN TEAM MARKS FIRST RALLY OF YEAR Miller Expresses Determination of Kansas to Keep Stadium Clear of Defeat REVIVES OLD SKYROCKET Ending with the Crismon and the Blue and an en-splitting Rock Challis from 3000 throats which carried out over the valley, today's nons rally, the first of the school year, installed a new ride in the hearts of K. U. Armstrong in the team with the Army battles written points a wet gridiron and then tomorrow battles the Washburn squad on Stadium Field. Cheerleader Also Introduces the Thunderclap, an Innovation in College Yells "We're not quitters!" declared Cheerleader Virg Miller in a spiked speech following the practice of some new yells. We are sticking to what works, whether face or onelist; that is the true japhae grill. "We must remember that when the Kansas squad met the Drake Bull dog, it was after an extremely hard out in the east and a tiring training ride. West Point, incidentally thought that Kansas was coming East with a weak team which would be unable to play well. Well, West Point doesn't want any more 'practice' games with Kansas," said the cheerler significantly. Made Good Against Army Miller discussed the determination that Kansas to keep the new Stadium field clear of defeat. Kansas has yet to take the short end of a score to the showers with her from the Stadium. Practice New Yells Sigma Chi is giving its annual fa party at Ecke's tonight. Two of the yells practiced were the Thunderchap, an innovation in college yells which sounds much like its appellation, and the old Skyeckroe which has fallen into a little disuse since 1986. It came in for its share of the noise, too. BIBLE STUDENTS WILL MEET "We want everybody out to tomorrow afternoon," said Miller in closing for the Kansas-Washburn games. Dill Speaks on "Literary Values in Journalism" "Literary Values in Journalism," was the title of a talk given by Prof. Student Volunteers to Be Guests of Park College W. A. Dill, of the department of journalism, before a meeting of the Quill Club last night. Professor Dill spoke of news writing as stepping stones to literary work, and he gave up of cases in his news later because of great literacy or the stimulus for literary productions. Another purpose of the meeting will be to derive the benefit of intercollegiate work among volunteer bands. About twenty members of the K. U. Student Volunteer Band will attend the meeting. One of the principal objects of the meeting will be to promote a better spirit toward modern missionary work. The Bible Training School is deeply interested in the promotion of foreign missions, and it has through study of the conditions, both in this country and abroad. Mrs. Herbert Feis read some poems of the following English and American can诗: Eleanor Wyle, Robert Nathan, Edna St. Vincent Millay, James Stephens, and Francis Ledwidge. Miss Burnham read a chapter of a serial written by her, which will be a feature of each meeting of the students. Each time the reader will designate someone to write chapter of the serial. At the close of the program refreshments were served. The K. U. Student Volunteer Band of the Scarcity Bible Training School will be the guests of the Park College Volunteers of Parkville, Mo, October 28. There will be a banquet and a "get-together" meeting in order that a better feeling of friendship may be established between the volunteer bands of the two schools. We will have a lecture in Bible study work will address the members of the bands which attend the banquet. K SENIOR CLASS PRESIDENT MID-SEMESTER GRADES TO BE FILED BY DEAN Freshmen May Find Name of Adviser on Fraser Bulletin Board Freshmen will find a list of advisers and their office hours on the bulletin board outside the Business Office in Fraser. Each freshman is expected to report to his own advice sometime next spring, starting November 29 for his grades. Mid-s semester grades for all college students will be submitted by the faculty to Dean J. G, Brandt's office later than November 16. These grades will be filed and arranged according to classes as soon as possible, so that students may get their grades after November 20. At a recent faculty meeting, it was decided that all grades of upperclassmen would be turned in to Dean Brandt's office where upperclassmen may call for them after November 20. Formerly, the unsatisfactory grades, that is, grades below C, have been turned in. Faternities and sororites desiring to do so may submit to the Dean of the College a list of their members, together with the subject's in which they are enrolled. These lists will be filled out with the grades and will be mailed to the various organizations before Thanksgiving. Blanks for this purpose may be obtained at the dean's office. CHOOSE NEW KANSAN STAFF Clare Ferguson Will Be Editor in-Chief At a meeting, Thursday afternoon of the Kanana Board, governing body of the University Daily Kansasan staff position; editor-in-chief, Clare Farguson; news editor, Llewellyn White; campus editor, Raymond Dyer; plain tales editor, Perry Johnson; campus editor, DeWayne Franks. Election of new members to take the places of those board members will retire shortly will take place one month from yesterday, and the board will be brought up for discussion in two weeks. It was decided to run by lines, giving credit to the four University students who are not as Kansan students and music this year. Hereafter the names of those who passed judge ment on such things have not appeared in the Kansan. The four state works are being selected by the faculty. Plenty of seats will be available at the ticket stand on Stadium field Saturday afternoon, for those who have not yet made reservations for football game recording to a report from the Athletic office this morning. Reservations Still Open For Tomorrow's Game On the east side of the field about 2,000 good seats are still available. Reservations by Washburn supporters for the west Stadium seats have been expected to be around 600, but this number is expected to total 800 or 1,000 before summer total. Out of town guests at the O'Brien Ferguson wedding held at the Alpha Gammn Delta. house Wednesday afternoon were: Mr. and Mrs. T. J Ferguson, Jr. and Mary B. O'Brien, of Florence; and Fern Lawson, former student, of Iola. Constance Hausam, A. B. '23, spending a few days at her home Emporia. AWARD SCHOLARSHIPS FOR HIGHEST GRADES Four Self-Supporting Student Receive Financial Aid for Good Records The George O. Foster scholarship for $25 for the self-supporting man in the freshman class making the best grades has been awarded to Ralph Hower. A similar scholarship for women was awarded to Bresa Engle for $30, and to Robert Schulz for scholarship standing of the entire freshman class, each having thirty hours of A's. Others of the class whose grade records approach these very nearly are: Lloyd Mumfie Jackman, Geele Preel, Walker Mearns and Homer Smith. Each of these men has at least twenty-seven hours of A's. Miss Eloise Neum Schwander of forced a similar scholarship to the self-supporting man and woman of the sophomore class macking the best grades. These scholarships were paid to him by his father. Both of these students were on the dean's honor roll in the freshman year. STOLAND TALKS TO SIGMA XI Four New Members Are Voted in at Meeting Prof. O, O. O. Stoland, of the department of physiology, talked on the subject of Anaphylaxis last evening at the XII Nobel Prize in Biotechnology XI. honorary scientific fraternity. New members of the faculty who have affiliated with the Iota chapter are: H. H. Lane, head of the department of zoology; F. M. Dawson, dewon of geology; C. E. Kent, department of physics; Miss Sybil Woodruff, department of home economics; Miss Elvira Weeks department of chemistry; H. H. Anderson, department of electrical en engineering; Mr. Seanman, department New members voted in at the meeting were: Dr. W. H. Bailey, an alumnus of Kansas, now a practicing physician of Oklahoma City; Hervey S. Faris; Ira D. Horgel; and E. A. Swenson, graduate students in the School of Medicine, Dr. Bailey is the son of Prof. E. H. S. Bailey. Y. W. C. A. OFFERS PRIZE Will Give Complimentary Tickets For "Adam and Eva" A prize for the best poster for "Adam and Eva," the Y. W. C. A. benefit performance, has been offered by the executive committee. "Adam and Eva" will be given at the Bow- en event on the evening of October 31. Two complimentary tickets will be given the student who makes the most effective poster. The classes in design are especially urged to compete although every student with artistic ability is urged to submit their posters to Elizabeth Dunkel at Henley Hall. The entries should be made as soon as possible, but the dead line has been set for Tuesday, October 24. The judges will be Miss Rosemary Ketcham, Velma Marshall, and Dorothy Brandle. Lawrence Highs Defeats Argentine by 20-7 Score The Lawrence High School football team won its second home game of the season yesterday afternoon on the Stadium field when it defeated the Argentine High School team by a score of 20 to 7. The Lawrence team then played better game than a week ago when Emporia beat them at Emporia. All of the Lawrence points were made during the first half. In the last half the visitors played much better than they did in the first half and had a little edge on the local team Argentina's bounce came from the basket from Shifter to Peterson. Shifter kicked real. The Lawrence touchdowns were made by Lindley, Wellman, and Captain Mackie. Mackie drop-kicked goal twice after touchdowns. Wallace James, Ias5b, who is teaching science and mathematics at Greenleaf, Kana, will spend Saturday and Sunday in Lawrence. Carl Simon, B. S. 290, who is now principal of Agra, Kana, High School is spending Friday and Saturday at the Alpha KappaLambda house. ELEVEN ELECTED BY BLACK MASK; PACHACAMACS WIN EIGHT OFFICES Winning Party Secures Sophomore and Freshman Class Presidencies; Howard Firebaugh, Opposition Candidate is Choice of Juniors The outstanding feature of his address was the fact that while psychology tests are valuable, they are not an absolute criterion of mental ability. Various tests have shown that about twenty-five per cent of the students who pass the tests with high grades do unsatisfactory classwork, and the same amount of those who fail the test make goo-grades in their college. Professor Colvin mentioned two causes for this variation: slowness of thought and difficulty of expression. High grades in psychology tests are often used as a means of encouraging students who are doing unsatisfactory class work. No student at Brown has ever been did not from school, though in many cases the faculty have advised withdrawal. Professor Colvin's presence here last night was due to the invitation of former Brown University graduates in Lawrence. Before his as dress a dinner was given at the University Club in his honor, by the Brown graduates, who are: Professors George E. Coghill, R.A. Schwegler, Roy Towne, H. C. Tracy; Teacher William Seam, E. N. Manchester; and Rev. Mark Mohler. PLAN PARTY FOR ENGINEERS Prof. S. S. Colvin of Brown University spoke on "Intellectual Teens and Vocational Guidance" last night at the Little Theater, in Green Hall Professor Colvin is head of the faculty-student advisory work, in the dept. of psychology, at Brown University, an important research work in this lively field. JOE BLOOMER HEADS SENIOR CLASS Faculty Will Give First Reception of the Year Both Parties Come Out in the Open in Fall Elections; Vote is Light in Every Class But the Senior; · Freshman Offices Black Mask Honors were about evenly divided in the class elections yesterday with Black Mask electing eleven of its candidates and Pachaamac placing eight of its men in office. Black Mask had a slight edge, however, in that three out of four of the class presidents elected were Black Mask candidates, including the senior presidency to which office Joe Bloomer was elected. intelligence Tests Are Valuable But Not Absolute Criterion of Mental Ability The major point of interest in the class elections this fall was the fact that both parties. Black Mask and Pachacamac, openly backed a full ticket in each class, stating that it was the Black Mask or Pachacamac ticket, as the case might be. In former years the two parties have always entered candidates but never before under the party name, concealing the party identity by a class slogan. ker, will be revived by the entire party. PSYCHOLOGIST SPEAKS TO FACULTY MEMBERS The faculty of the School of Engineering will give a reception Wednesday, October 25, at which the engineering students will be entertained. A similar event was given two years ago and was a success. The program, though not yet completed, will include a chalk talk and cartoons by Stonebraker; numbers by the Acomas and Cosmopolitan orchestra; numbers by the engineering faculty; string quartet. Old engineer songs, a hobby of Dean P. P. Walker, will be revived by the entire There are two new members of the engineering faculty and this will furnish an opportunity for all the faculty and the students to become better acquainted. Professor J. A. Dent has charge of the faculty side of the affair and Howard Patterson represents the students. El Atenco, Spanish club, held an initiation picnic Wednesday evening. About forty people were conveyed in a truck to Smith's grove where the picnic was held. A blind-folded boxing match for the initiation of the new members, and the burlesque by the older students of the "peculiar" class offered different classes caused much merriment, and combined with "hot dogs," marshmallows, and other suitable foodstuffs evinced a real picnic. The senior presidency, probably the most desirable office of the election, went to Joe Bloomer, who headed the Black Mask ticket. Marian MacDonald and Milton Cummings were elected to the offices of secretary and only successful Pachaeam candidate in the senior class was P. K. Smith who won in the race for vice president. Marion Collins by twenty votes. The only class president which Black Mask lost was the junior president, Howard Firchau winning over "Davy" Davidson. The other desirable offices which Pachacamac won were the Junior Prom managers, Harry Janieke and Chester Shore being elected, and Soph Hop manager, Lionel Senon falling heir to this position. Norton Heads Sophomores Norton Heads Sophomores Black Mask candidates won the other two class presidencies, Eunerson Norton being elected at the head of the sophomore class and Wilmer Dresser leading the freshman class. The frehmian class offices went straight Black Mask, Wild Dreser, Bill Harrison, Endile Richardson, Bill being elected on that party ticket. The vote yesterday was exceptionally light in all of the classes except the senior. The freshman vote only 60 out of more than 1,200. On the other hand the senior vote totaled 468 out of a possible vote of approximately 900. The Results Senior Class President, Joe Bloomer, 247 votes, and Louise Miller, 219; vice president; P. K. Smith, 214 votes; marion Collins 221; secretary; marion Mac Donald, 232; and Elva Mullen, 196; treasurer, Milton Cummings, 228 votes; paulen Burke, 228. Junior class, President; Howard Firebaugh, 250 votes and "Davy" Davidson, 161; vice president; "Red" Davidson, 161; vice president; "Mildred" Milcord Cornellius 217 votes and C. I. Friess 193; treasurer; France Keith 218 and Cole Dumann 218; managers Chester Shore 223, Harry Stagg 199, and Clyde Lucas 172. Sophomore class. President: Emerson Norton 268 and Raymond Fisher 217; vice president: Tom Poor 218 and Walter Means 225; secretary: Mary Ruppenthal 423 and Betty Eagle 721 and Ralph Hower 113; Cup Hop manager: Lionel Seamon 290 and Earl Alpine 193. Freshman class. President: Wilder Dresser 313 and Shepherd 285; vice president: Bill Harrison 318 and Bond Hammond 286; secretary: Eudulia Hammond 329 and Patterson 297; treasurer: Hall 308 and Langford 297. Plans are being made by the W. Y. C. A. for social work at Haskell and Girl Scout work in Lawrence. Last Monday a representative group of women met at Henley House to make first plans. Classes of discussion on the work will be held every Monday at 4:30 o'clock at Henley House. Margaret Dale has charge of the work. Any woman who is interested The meeting of women interested in a swimming club has been postponed to next Wednesday afternoon, o'clock in Robinson Gymnasium. Elizabeth Hanson of Iola is spending a few days visiting her sister and brother, Eleanor Hanson and Richard Hanson. 力 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas Subscription price $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.00 for one semester; 5 centa month; 15 cents a week entered his second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kanas, under the act of March 3, 1879. Published in, the afternoon five times a week by students in the Department of Kansai from the University of Kanagawa from the department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phones, K. U. 25 and 66 Editorial Staff The Daily Kassanani plans toplease the University of Kansas, to go foray in standing for the dear female writers, to be dignitary, to be courageous, to make more serious problems serve to the best of ability the university has. Editor-in-chief Ben Hibbs Director Glenn Cahill News Editor Raymond Dyer News Editor Peter Koehler Boat Editor Glick Schultz Alumni Editor Ruth Carver Alumni Editor Harvey Carson Editor Glenn Cahill Business Staff Business Staff Business Manager .Lloyd Ruppenthal Asst. Bus. Mgr. John Montgomery, Jr. Board Members Chester Shaw Liewellyn White Myri Hart DevYnaugh Francis Carlton Powers Doin Boggs Perry Jones Harkraider Carlton Powers FRIDAY, OCT. 20, 1922 THE POLITICIANS SAY I CAN'T BE DONE Shall we have a reform of student politics at the University of Kansas? The politicians tell us that it can't be done; they point out that, no matter how progressive a nominating system is installed here, always a little group behind the scenes will really rule the campus. But would it? Hardly more than half a century ago the nominating, election, and campaign conditions in this country were in a most corrupt state. Then came an attempt to curb the abuses of political parties; a number of laws were passing governing elections, nominations, and campaigns. To be sure, the political situation in America today is not all that it should be; in some localities politics are extremely corrupt. But conditions are far better now than they were before any attempt was made to carry out a political reform. In any community where a number of public-spirited citizens are fighting machine politics, the boss politicians gather round and predict failure, frankly telling the reformers that laws may be evaded. And yet time after time we see the political machine ousted, and a democratic system installed in its place. Of course, no reform is ever complete. As long as men live in the world, just that long will some people attempt to thwart the purpose of democratic government. But the fact that we cannot make things perfect does not mean that we should not try to make them better. To be sure, a little group of politicians will doubtless always try to dominate the University campus, and it will have some influence in spite of any up-to-date nominating plan that may be adopted. Nevertheless, the power of that little group would be swiftly and surely diminished if the system of indirect primaries which was explained in Tuesday's Kansan would be instituted at K. U. Nominating bodies elected by the students and performing their business before the gaze of all simply could not be held under the thumbs of the boss politicians as are the secret nominating caucuses today. The University can not hope to shake off its antiguided system of student politics over night. It can not expect to correct everything in a few months or even a year. But politics can be reformed here as they are elsewhere, whenever the electorate persistently demands it. Shall we work consistently for the scrambling of our worn-out system, or shall we forget the conditions until the political pot boils over next spring, and then wonder why we are again herded about like sheep. Columns will soon be devoted to the "annual night shirt parade." It's a shame we can't advertise the new coat we can get this year, too. QUITE A "RIPE" IDEA QUITE A "RIPE" IDEA Oberlin, Ohio, the proud parent of Oberlin College, boasts of an innovation. Oberlin, you know, being over-run with students, is obsessed with the same apparition as is Lawrence—overdrafts. And all the Oberlin banks—both of them—being quite resourceful, have evolved the plan of issuing denominational check-books with each deposit. Now, that’s quite a rite idea, so to speak. Suppose a student deposits his bi-monthly pension from lecher peter, to the amount of $45,83 (not a bad quid, by the way), he receives from the obliging teller a little checkbook marked like unto the family grocery and ice books, with each slice of paper of a given amount. Result: No "lifting" of checks; no checks drawn on the wrong ban; and no overdrafts. The check-book has fitted away into the balmy ear, "that's all there is; there isn't any more." Quite a fruity idea! Why not try it here in Lawrence? THEATER MANNERS Someone has said that "manners are of more importance than laws, and upon them in a sense the laws depend." But if such a syllogism were true in the case of the University theater-goers, the laws would be in a rather chaotic state! A University student is supposed to have learned in his pre-high school days that discourtesies and inattention during the performance of a play are the height of ill-breeding. He should have learned that it looks nothing less than crude to dash madly into the lobby of the theater every time the curtain falls, and then to meander leisurely back, tramping on people's feet, obstructing their view, and with resounding footsteps and whispered words keep the rest of the audience from enjoying the production. Yet, evidently, a good many of the K. U. students have had their education in manners sadly neglected if their conduct at the recent performance of "Abraham Lincoln" is an indication and sample of it. When the chronicle came out for the first time, it was with difficulty that he made himself heard at all, so hindered was he by the shuffling feet and incessant movement of the people in the botanies. Those who had come to listen to the play instead of to practice for the spring track meet, were sadly hindered in their effort to hear. Such attention from a University audience is disgracious, and it is to be hoped earnestly that in the future theater manners will be more carefully watched. On Other Hills Communication of news between the University of Oregon and Oregon Agricultural College will be carried on this year by means of radio. A local operator at Eugene will handle messages for the Emerald, and the Barometer will be cared for by the department of physics of the Agricultural College. News from the campus that any station may pick it up. It is thought that only scores of games and other special items will be sent at first. The University of Oregon has just installed a chapter of Phil Beta Kappa, national honorary scholastic society. The advent of the chapter will mean increased scholastic standing for the University. Commencement at the University of Illinois found the class of 722 back 100 per cent strong. This is a record among colleges and universities, as no other college has ever had 100 per cent attendance of any class. The University of Utah has issued a new set of rushing rules for its sororities, which surpass in the matter of stringency the rules for the previous years. Each sorority is allowed two parties and can spend no more than 75 cents per capita on the first ride. A third party should during the rush season; personal rushing can be carried by not more than three old members; and no man may be asked to rush for any sorority. Official Daily University Wulletin Only received by Florence B. Bliss, Editor, the publisher's Office Vol. II. SPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER SERVICE AT COMMONS: The following cases of service will be available at the Commons for Sunday dinner; Oct. 20, 1922. in ten cent servings is in addition of the amount of lard cubes. 2. A regular 75 cent table dish diner will also be served on the wine. 1. Patrons desiring table service may secure same by the payment of a tax service fee in addition to the amount of their check. No. 31. 3. The east side of the room will be devoted to self-service as usual. ANNA H. BARNUM, Director. NOTICE TO UNIVERSITY BAND: All band men are requested to report at South Park at 10:30 Saturday morning in full uniform. WASHBURN-K, U. GAME: The Washburn-K. U. game will be called at 2:30 Saturday afternoon. F. C. ALLEN, Director of Athletics. GRADUATE SCHOOL ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE: There will be a meeting of the Administrative Committee of the Graduate School at 4:30 Monday in the office of the Dean, 101 East Admission Building. J. C. McCANLES, Director DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH FACULTY MEETING: There will be a meeting of the Faculty of the Department of English at 4:30 Monday in Room 213 Fraser Hall R. D. O'LEARY, Chairman. Plain Tales From The Hill lar service at Antofagasta, Chilr South America The Difference "I am going home over the weekend," remarked one of the first year men. "I'm not homesick, but at home I am a student and here I am just a fresh." Eather: "What is that smell? I believe something is burning." Easter: "Oh, that's nothing; the roosting one of the professors." Moon-Eyed Romantic Young Thing: "Oh, isn't the moon just splendid this evening?" Practical Fellow: "That isn't the moon. That's the clock on the bank down town Poor practical young man! Wide Open Ding: "Let's hike down and see the Wakeman. Sunday" The class in editing was writing headlines about a child named Shute who swallowed a needle. "How's this one?" asked a future editor from Bat: "I didn't know Lawrence had a Sunday picture show." Freshman: "My watch has been right on the dot all day." this one?" asked a future editor from the front row. "Needle Goes down Shute." Hello Day would have been more successful if it bad come during political week. Jayhawks Flown Young Journalist (Absentmindedly): "The same dot?" Salesman: "Yes, selling salt!" Young Man: "Oh! a salt seller Shake!" Young Man to Salesman: "So you're a traveling salesman now." YE LADY-BUG'S COMPLAINT E LADY-BOUS COMP Friday night My George Asked me For a date For the Varsity, And I said I wouldn't Be in town So he said He guessed his study That evening And I said he Was stringin' me But he said He meant it. Well, Saturday night I saw him At the Varsity, Now what'd you do To George For pullin' he says that?" For pullin' A stunt like that?" It is of interest to Kanans that six former Kansas University men are on the engineering staff at Illinois University, Urbana, this year. These are: Harold J. McKeever, B. S. '22; Jamison Vawter, B. S. '16; C.K. Mathews, B. S. '19; Rex Brown, B. S.'20; LaForce Bailey, formerly of the architectural department; and C.C. Williams, the new head of the department of civil engineering of the University of Illinois. South America. H. W. Goodwin, LL. B. '21, is county attorney of Logan County and is also practicing law at Russell Springs. Ruth Rule, '14, is doing Y. W. C. A. work in Rega-Latvia of the Balkan states. Mrs. Henry J. Allen, wife of Governor Allen, who has been confirmed to a hospital for the last nine weeks, will be removed to her home Sunday. Lemis Madison Hall, A. B. '17. A. M. '18, Harvard, 22, is now employed as a radio engineer at Boonton, N. J. Ray Kerfoot, c.e.22, has been working on a new dam project for the Lehigh Cement Company in the state of Washington. In the near future he will join Ed White, B.S.22, with the Washington Water Power Co. , at Spokane, Wash. John Clawson, B. S'22, has a position with the General Electric Co. Schechnady, N. Y. Albert R. Wolf, B. S.22, is working for the Studebaker Corporation, South Bend, Ind. Blanche Holloway, A. B.22, is teaching in the high school at Stillwell, Kansas. Esther M. Carter, A. B. 21, is laboratory technician at the Highland Sanitarium, Shreveport, La. Melvin Bishop, A. B.22, is teaching in the high school at Stillwell, Kansas. At Emporia, out of 1,035 students in the college department of the Kansas State Normal, 457, or 44 per cent are Methodists. In a religious survey just completed by W. S. B. Carey, we found that 29 per cent presented no religious preference. The Christian church stood second and the Presbyterian third. Enterprise Whitcraft, B. M.'22, is teaching public school music at Frankfort, Kansas. Esther Jeter, fe23, is teaching in the junior high school at Junction City. LOST—Gaberdine top coat at Gamma Phila Retra open house. $10 Reward. Return to Boggs, Phone 285. -020 Stewart E. McMillan, A. B. '14, LL. B. '17, is in the American consu- WANT ADS Oread Shining Parlor CHARLIE'S Best Shines in Town Thomas Shoe Shop Electric WANTED—Man roommate, large room, moderate rent. 1038 Tennessee. Call 2076 White. O-24 GARAGE FOR RENT-1345 Mass. $3 per month. Inquire: High School Inn. —025 LOST—Gold tennis medal with name Gerald Hamilton engraved on back. Reward. Call 2498B. —022 FOR SALE—Three octave sheet xylophone equipped with resonators and case. Phone 697. -024 IF YOU want good laundry work done, call Merry. Perry, 1116 N. J. Phone 2551. Work called for and delivered. O-23 LOST—Bill fold at or near the Gym last Sat. Call 1748. Reward. -023 LOST—A jeweled Phi Gamma Delta pin with E. C. Schultz's name on the back of it. E. Reward. Call 441--620 LOST-Gold jewel bracelet with jewelled ball hanging on it, yesterday afternoon on hill. Finder will receive liberal reward. CALL 240-642- SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire to earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Please work, after school hours. Write I. J. for after school hours. 0246 Wayne Ave, City City, KS79 - PROFESSIONAL CARD PROFESSIONAL CARD DR. J. W. ORBYON, (Dent) Special attention to prevention and treatment of oral caries 304 Perkins Building Tel. 567 LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive Optometrista). Eyes examn glasses; glasses made. Office 1025 Mass. A. G. ALRICH Engraving. Printing, Binding Rubber Stamps, Office Supplies. Stationery Printing by any process 736 Mass. St Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 PROTCH The College TA I L O R We make clothes. We do alterations on both women's and men's clothes, reining ladies' and men's overcoats, cleaning and pressing. Suiting you, anyway. That's My Business SCHULZ THE TAILOR 917 Mass, St. E.Z. TRADE MARK REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. SPORT GARTER E.Z. TRADE MARK REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. SPORT GARTER This garrer is ideal for men's and a long house—and just right for women—because the wedding is soft and warm. Hop up and stand in front of your guests. Then, F. Parker, Co., Bridgesport, Conn. Featured by Leading Merchants WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods Army Goods Army Goods Visit the United Army Stores Co 706 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Army Goods Ladies who desire expert Hair-Bobbing Patronize the STADIUM BARBER SHOP "The Shop of Service" First Door South of Von's "GIFTS THAT LAST" Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING BELLS FLOWER SHOP Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS 825 1-2 Mose Phone 139 825 1-2 Mass We're Goin' to the Game too so let us press your suit "rite now" Phone 442 KIRBY CLEANERS 1109 Mass. St. United Army Stores Co. 706 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kan. If it's for Hunting or Hiking you can get it at the United Army Stores Co. Lunches put up in neat packages that you can carry Jayhawk Cafe More About Apples and Serpents in Adam and Eva The play that entertained New York for three years Y. W.C.A.BENEFIT BOWERSOCK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31 Mail Orders sent to Elizabeth Dunkle at Henley Hall will receive Immediate Attention THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MANY K. U. DELEGATES TO ATTEND K. S. T. A Approximately Seventy Teachers and Students From Here Will Attend Meetings TO GATHER AT FOUR CITIES Old Fashioned Get-Together Planned For K. U. Alumni Sunday Evening at Topeka Nearly seventy teachers and students will represent the University of Kansas at the sixty-ninth annual convention of "the Kansas State Teachers' Association, which is in Hays, Missouri," but it was Hays Hutchinson, and Pittsburgh. This convention is held each yea to discuss various problems concerning education, and is attended by teachers from every school and college in Kannas, as well as speakers from other states. In order to accommodate all, it is held in four towns in various parts of the state. Must Pay Enrollment Fee Only those who pay the enrollment fee will be admitted to the meetings. The fee is $2 and includes one year's subscription to the official publication of the association, the Kansas Teacher and Western School Journal. The payment of this fee entitles the member to the services of the Kansas Teacher and Western School Journal on the basis of the terms under which the Bureau is operated. Committees of the Chamber of Commerce will be at the various fairway stations in each town to welcome the visitors to the convention. Western Union telegraph messengers and Scout Girl Corps will send messages to budgie Girl Scouts will run information bureaus and will be in charge of registration. Plan K, U. Alumni Reunion All members of the K. U. Alumna will have an old-fashioned get-to-party party in Topaka Friday evening at 6 clock at the Chamber of Commerce, Seventh and Quincy Streets. Will ticket be $1 each and will be on sale at the State House maintenance desk. faculty members from K. U. w. will faculty at Topeka and their subjects are: Superintendent H. P. S- mith, "The Teacher's Annuity Bill"; Prof. Walter R. Smith, "Faculty Participation in College Administration"; Miss Katherine Reding, "The University of Mexico"; Dean John R. fort, "Vocational Guidance in Colleges"; Prof. Raymond A. Schweigel, Mental Measurements as a Fundamental in Junior High School Organization and Instruction"; Dean F. J. Kelly, "An Outside's View of Objectives for Primary Schools"; Miss Elise, Neueswander, for Committee on the High Schools; Dr Hussein P. Cady, "Radium and the Electron"; Prof. A. L. Owen, "The Teaching of Spanish Literature"; Dr. R. Kent, dean of the School of Education, "Essentials of Teacher Training"; Rose Missery Ketcham, of the School of Fine Arts, "How Best Results May Be Obtained in Arrangement"; Prof. J. C.pose, "Some Important Earth Motions and Results"; Prof. Frank E. Melvin, "Plans for Future Meetings of the Round Table"; and Prof. H. C. Thurnau, "The Present Meeting of German in Kansas." Other teachers from nesu, "The Present Status of German in Kannas." Other teachers from K. U. will speak on various other topics. Hays, Tittsburg, and Hutchinson. Light to Shine for German Journalists The light is commencing to shine for the poor downrodden journalists. So it is being started by the one country from which the least might be expected. Germany, with all her skyrocketing thoughts and subterranean cash, is the first to recognize the value of the journalists and the importance of keeping them out of the chase. Although the action is not officially by the government it is fostered by the man who, perhaps, has more power in that country at the present time than anyone else. He is Hugo Stimmes, the greatest financier in Germany. The following was sent from Berlin by the Associated Press and printed in the Kansas City Star. "Hugs and 'n' hurts." "down and out" newspaper media, lately have been walking the same path. In Germany in large numbers in search of jobs, will be beneficiaries of an aid fund of one-fourth billion dollars, Stimmes, the financier, is promoting. "The fund, which Herr Stinnes, owner of the Allgemeine Zeitung, is raising, in conjunction with other well kni$^2$ industrialists, will be designed to unobeyed newspaper paper men, but to meet journalism as well." EX-SERVICE MEN WILL RE-ORGANIZE TUESDAY The ex-service member of the University will hold a meeting in Green Haln next Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock for the purpose of organizing all students that were in service as well as to discuss the Kansas Compensation Act that is to be voted on at the coming election in November. Will Discuss the Compensation Act and Registration for Coming Election The compensation act that is to be voted on at the coming election, Nov. 7, for all men who were in the service, does not mean only those men who were in service overseas, but also those that did not go over. If the measure is passed by the voters of the state it will have no effect. If that was in her service to one dollar a day for every day that she served. All men who are interested in this measure as well as to get information as to when and when to register for the meeting, we urge to attend this meeting. For those desire to register for the coming election may do so at the City Clerk's office, and the latest information will be allowed is October 27. FEED TREES DYE IN HANOVER German Science Is Making Imitation Hard Wood Berlin (By mail to United Press) —Several acres of "dyed" or "vaccinated" trees are growing in the vicinity of Hanover, their leaves red and back and other unusual colors, their wood similarly stained. This is the result of the newest achievement of German science, which converts ordinary wood into an imitation hard wood by feeding the tree dyes when it grows. The process can be further altered to produce wood-maghogy, ebony and so on—is developed under hydraulic pressure. Holders of patents for the new process say that they will make the German furniture industry independent of import of costly foreign woods, while, with the hardening process, it is expected that a substitute for hard woods in furniture making and its hardware will be achieved at low prices. The Oversea Week in Hamburg displayed a number of samples of the vaccinated wood, the promoters claiming that these specimens were scarcely to be distinguished from the genuine. There is a question, how- would the trees or not the color would remain fast. The inventors say it will hold. Kansan's Efficiency Shown That the Kanan is quite efficient in reaching its readers is shown in the fact that the story in a recent issue about a stray cat wandering into the office of H. T. Martin, at Dyche Museum, has resulted in a number of calls by people who have lost cats, to find out if their "tabby" is the one in question. Mr. Martin has been kept so busy by these calls that he has scarcely had time to work, he said Friday morning. Ye Taverne A place to enjoy your food and your friends. Next to the Stand Pipe Emporia Would Make Excellent Home For Christopher Morley's Dog 'Gissing', Wails Ruth Garve "I suppose someone has Gissing now," walls Ruth Jane Garner, from the Bowling Green column in the New York Evening Post. "And all because I live in Kansas, out with the sunflowers and Henry and Me and the prohibitionists and so forth and so forth, and after it it's published, when it's too late to get a look in on good old Gissing." Gissing, by the way, is Christopher Morley's "good ole dog," or rather, he was, until he got naughty and broke his teeth. He'd the doggie reformatory, Bide-A-Wee. Miss Garver doesn't really wail from the column purposely at all. Heres was merely a causal letter to the editor of the column which, much to her dislike, she wrote. "I'd do anything," she writes, have Gissing meet me when I home o' nights, after secretary to the Boss, and learning my literary R's. And we could manage the landlord somehow—Emporia landlords are different from the New York species. She's sure, considering the Boss's stand for a living wage, and fair wages in general. She's sure Gissing a good home. She's really in earnest about it too, she promises much Rouquetfort and a goodly supply of beef bars; as well as her services as a secretary, in case Gissing should have trouble in tapping off his letters to u犀im on the job. OFFER PHOTOGRAPHY COURSI A two-weeks' intensified course in military photography, open only to senior engineers in the local R. O. T. C. unit, will be started in a week or two. The War Department of the national government has furnished three additional aviation cameras, with which photographs of the campus and surrounding territory will be taken. The photographs will be developed and printed as a part of the course, since the unit maintains a dark room and print- Supposing Giasing was packed up with a lot of dog biscuits, and neatly abled with a request for the bragage man to provide water; Miss Senior Engineers in Local R. O T. C. Are Eligible vin hall for this purpose. A little later in the year, the senior engineers will also be given a thor- ough course in the operation and up- of having him arrive safely at Emgo pooria might possibly come true. keep of radio sets. The War Department has supplied the local unit with an E-3-BIS radio set, which is recognized as one of the best, and which will give the enemy a good chance to collaterally themselves with radio as it is used in war times. Cancel Memorial Meeting The meeting of the Memorial Corporation Board of Directors, formerly scheduled for October 21 has been postponed. The new date for the meeting will be announced later. Appointments of James J. Threlfall as battalion Sergeant Major, and Paul L. Harrison as battalion Color Sergeant, are also announced by the officers of the unit. These men will take their positions at once. Exenna Bennett, A. B'21, Grace McGuire, A. B. 22, and Fern Lawson, former student, are visiting at the Alpha Gamma Delta house. Saturday Will Be a Good Time to Look These Over GAUNTLET KID GLOVES This is why we say Saturday. They are very much in demand, there won't be nearly enough to go through the season. All gloves are now coming in under the new tariff which means an advance of 75c and $1.00 a pair. See our window display of these new styles in Gauntlets, all shades of brown, especially Russet, Coffee, all black, all white, white with black and black with white. Prices from $4 to $6.50 a pair. Cape Skin Gauntlets in brown, only a pair. $3.50. SILK AND WOOL HOSIERY These are also displayed in our window tomorrow. They come in plain and also in clocked. All the best shades, Cordivan, Oxford, Black, Navy, Casto, and Camels Hair. A pair, $2.00 to $5.00. WE AVERS WATKINS NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President Chairman of the Board. SURPLUS $100,000.00 D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Ashar, L. V. Mifler, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishop DIRECTORS Do you know the correct time when you look at your watch? The Sol. Marks & Son Watch Repair Service will guarantee to make your watch tell the truth for a whole year for a cost no greater than $2.50. What time is it? Usually the necessary repairs are much less. Don't Delay! Bring us that untruthful watch today! Sole Agents for Rookwood Pottery and Cordova Leather Sol Marks & Son Rhadamanthi Open Only to Upperclass Aspirant 817 MASS. ST. Owing to an error printed in the Kawan Monday night, it was announced that membership in Rhadamanthi, K. U. Poet's Club, is open to all classes. According to Daisy Bishap, president of the club, only members of upper classes are eligi- the club and it is desired to fill them at once, but members of the freshman class are not eligible, and members of the sophomore class will be considered only if exceptional talent is discovered. Seven or eight vacancies exist Warren Woody, A. B, 22, and his wife, formerly Itasca Hillman, A. B, 20, who are teaching at Sterling, B. 20, who are over Sunday visiting old friends. GE When your friends drop in unexpectedly an electric chating dish makes immediately possible a delicious Welsh rarebit or wholesome homemade candy. We have them in all styles and sizes Kansas Electric Power Co. 719 MASS. ST. ← Give us the job of keeping your formal clothes fit NEW YORK CLEANERS Phone 75 BOWERSOCK ONE NIGHT 24 THEATRE TUESDAY OCTOBER THE GREATEST DRAMATIC NOVELTY OF THE PRESENT ERA ADOLPH KLAUBER presents An amazing play of thrilling adventure originally produced by Provinctown Players THE EUGENE O'NEILL'S THE EMPEROR JONES WITH CHARLES S. GILPIN THE ASTONISHING ACTOR WHO BECAME FAMOUS IN ONE NIGHT THE PRESENTATION IN THIS CITY WILL BE ON THE SAME HIGH ARTISTIC PLANE AND WITH THE SAME ATTENTION GIVEN TO EVERY DETAIL OF THE PRODUCTION. BUILDING IT'S MEMORIAL JUNCTURE IN THE ENTIRE SPACES, THE PRINCESS THEATRE - NEW YORK AND EXTENDED ENGAGEMENTS IN BOSTON - PHILADELPHIA AND CHICAGO The Drama League of New York unanimously voted Mr. Gilpin "One of the Ten Greatest Contributors to Dramatic Art." No Other Stage Offering in Our Time Received the Same Measure of Praise from America's Leading Critics:— Kenneth MacGowan said in the New York Globe "The moment when Charles S. Gilpin raises his naked body against the moonlit surface on the edge of the jungle and prays, is a scene unseen until now." This Unusual Play and Its Surprising Star Created a Furor Throughout The Eastern Theatrical Circles—It Will Undoubtedly Prove to Be the Outstast Art of the Week. Prices: 75c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50, plus tax. Prices: $75, 1.0c, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50, plus tax. It Is Advisable to Secure Reservations Well in Advance for This Attraction SEAT SALE OPENS TOMORROW THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TAKE FINAL WORKOUT FOR WASHBURN CLASH Varsity Squad Is Scheduled for Short Brisk Workout This Evening ICHABODS PROMISE FIGHT Jayhawkers Will Wear Blue Jerseys in Hope of Changing Their Luck The Varsity squad is scheduled to take a short brisk workout this evening in final preparation for the game with the Washburn Ichabods tomorrow afternoon which will see the second Jayhawk team in action with the regulars watching from the sidelines as the game arrives in Lawrence tomorrow morning and the game is called promptly at 2:30 o'clock. For the past week word has been coming out of Topeka, the home of the Washburn school, that the Ichabods were not at their best in the Aggie game and that the Washburn Res were determined to make A better showing against the Jayhawkers on the Kansas field Saturday. Play Upperclassmen Only Play Upperclassmen Only The Washburn team will probably be weakened tomorrow, however, as they have been working hard against their freshmen against the Aggies while according to an agreement renched last year between Kannan and Washburn, the Topper school in Wisconsin, has a special appreciation in the preseason Saturday. Coach Clark announced last night that the Kawans would wear blue jerseys against the leabods. In the two games which Kawans has played this year, the Jayhawks have appeared in red jerseys and both teams have won. The lowers are of the opinion that Coach Clark is a little superstitious. Jayhawker Line-up The tentative Jayhawk line-up follows: Boone and Griffin, ends; Mosby and Holdman, Harris and Haley, guards; Longberg, Anderson; quarter, Hodges and Calvert, halfbacks; and Shannon, full Kansas and Washburn first startte football relations in 1891. Since that time the two schools have met each other in football 27 times, Kansas winning 19 games, Washburn 5, and 3 games ending in tie. The Jay hawkers have scored 40 points in the 27 contests while the Ichabods have been able to count only 146 points. Scores of Previous Games Scores of Previous Games The scores of the games between the two schools, follow: Year Kansas Wasbh 1891 32 10 1891 38 10 1892 36 0 1899 23 0 1900 0 24 1900 0 24 1901 0 0 1902 33 0 1903 0 5 1904 5 0 1905 18 11 1906 0 0 1907 5 12 1908 23 0 1909 17 0 1910 21 6 1911 14 6 1912 0 10 1913 14 0 1914 20 14 1915 14 0 1916 27 0 1917 34 2 1919 0 0 1920 6 0 1921 28 7 STADIUM WILL.BE PICKETED All Students Asked to Sit in Stands Under the same plan as was used last year for the games played in the Stadium, the Athletic Association of the University has arranged that the path following the brow of the hill south of the Stadium will not be used by pedestrians during the game Saturday afternoon. "The team wants the support of the whole student body," said Dr F. G. Allen, director of athletics, this morning, "and we want the star player back." He said Stadium back away, instead of stand back and not rooting." Those who find it necessary to cross the campus, said Doctor Allen, will use Mississippi State's south side of the Sindium to prevent trespassing. Paul O'Leary has accepted a position with Stern Brothers, investment bankers, in Kansas City. Mo. He will leave Monday to take his place as a bond buyer in the municipal bond department. Anna Horning, fs'20, of Topeka, a guest at the Sigma Kappa house. The Game on a Platter, Team Promises "Potsy" The members of the football team have promised to hand "Dotas" Clark the Washburn game on a platter, and they will be together Saturday in the Stadium. He announced last evening on the practice field that he was the father of a daughter born late yesterday afternoon. The football men declared that the game must be nothing less important, in honor of the new arrival. “Potsy” isn't divulging the name of his daughter as yet, for fear that he might want to make a change. CROSS COUNTRY TEAM TO TRYOUT TOMORROW Finish Between Halves and Winners Will Run Against Aggies October 28 Tomorrow will see in addition to the Kansas-Washburn football game the final tryouts for the cross-country team. The regular five miles will be run by the squad and the team, which will compete against the Agries on October 28, will be chosen according to time. Captain "Ace" Wilson announced this morning that he expects some fast time from the squad when they prepare to face the championship race will start at the end of the first quarter of the game, and the finish will come sometime during the intermission between halves. The race will begin one lap around the stadium track. Although ineligibility has cut down some of the early season hopes a good many fast men will be fighting for position at the finish. Captain Wilson, Schaub, Sims, Cochill, Grady, Pratt, Threlfall; Meng and Wunsch are among the candidates for the team. The record for the five miles, 26 minutes and 26 seconds, was put in jeopardy two weeks ago when Captain Wilson finished a few seconds behind the mark. The breaking of a record is therefore not expected when tomorrow. The five mile record was established in 1916 by Fred Rodkey. KLAN VOTES TO CARRY ON Bredberg, Chief Ku Ku, Out lines Policies for Year Whether the pioneer pep organization of the Missouri Valley should rise or fall was the question before the Ku Ku Klan, at its meeting last night. Twenty-five members voted for its continuance. "Although a shady past handicaps the Khan, we shall attempt to outlive this and endearor to make a place for it in University activities," said Chief Ku Ku Bredberg. "The society will be completely re-organized and a new constitution drawn up in the near future. At present membership will be limited to twenty-five men and this year they will buy Student Activity Tickets to assure presence at functions." The Khan will sit in the roots' section at the Stadium, to help in generating enthusiasm, and will put on stunts between the halves. They request suggestions for original stunts from the student body and faculty memoirs. It is not assured whether we will win the team to out-of-town games, but it is possible that it will go to Manhattan and Columbia. K. U. Medical Sorority to Entertain New Women The active members of the Alpha Epsilon Iota, medical sorority, will entertain the new women in the dorm at Te Vaerton with a dinner at Ye Taerventon tonight. At a recent meeting the following officers were elected: Anita Udendstock, president; Myriot Friedel, secretary; and Paidam Taurant, treasurer. The K. U. women who are studying medicine were first organized in 1919 when Dr. Martha Bacon organized the women's Medical Association for medic and pre-med students. Last spring Itasca Hillman, Frances Kincel and Ruth Greider petitioned Alpha Epsilon Iota for a chapter at K. U. and were granted the Omnicron chapter. A cozy log fire, pleasant company, and a cup of "the cup that cheers" is the welcome extended by Henley House to all University women every Friday afternoon. Your host will bite of your sewing, or seek peaceful solitude, a favorite book, or if you desire other diversion, there are congenial spirits and an ever-ready Virotha. Even if you have been through a difficult season, remember that Y.W. CA. stands for "You're Welcome, Come Again." Photograph of Chancellor at His Desk Will Be One Feature JAYHAWKER TO HAVE 'DIFFERENT' PICTURES A photograph of Chancellor Lindley seated at his desk in Fraser Hall, to be taken by the photographer of Squire's Studio, will be a feature of the 1922 Jayhawker. A special camera has been sent for by the studio expressly for the purpose of taking the picture. "No expense has been spared," said Ted Hudson, editor, "to make this year's book an unusual one in the matter of photography. The cost of the photography alone will amount to seven or eight tliches as much as the amount expended in former years." The 1923 Jayhawker editors have contracted with the Lawrence Studio to take sixty pictures of interior points of interest on the campus. This work will be begun in the near future. WIEDEMANN'S For the first time in four years, the Jayhawk will contain pictures of all houses owned by organizations. The camera will take his 18x7 Graphiex cameras will take ICE CREAM Purest for over Fifty Years For This Week Marischino-Nut Brown Bread Apricot Vanilla Chocolate Strawberry Pineapple Ices Photos Phone 182 Russell Zarker, fa23, is connected with the advertising department of the Willy-Knight Motor Car Com company's territory includes all of Canada. pictures of the political campaign and balloting activities today as a part of the pictorial calendar. Louise Flynn, A. B.22, who is teaching in Syracuse, is visiting at the Alpha Delta PI house. David Lodge, e'25, made a business trip to Kansas City Wednesday. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY LOST—Gold jeweled bracelet with jeweled ball hanging on it, yesterday dafternoon on hill. Finder will receive liberal reward. Call 240—0-24 LOST—Gold fountain pen, with name "Helen" engraved. Please return 1161 Ind. or call 295. O-24 LOST—Sigma Chi pin. Name on back. Reward. Return to 1439 Tenn. that really are "Clothes of Merit" are arriving daily and it will pay you to have a look for you cannot find better values and such an assortment anywhere else $27.50 and $22.50 Extra. Varsity-Bowersock FRIDAY and SATURDAY SKOFSTADS "Domestic Relations" The story of a man who drove his wife from home but couldn't drive her from his heart. Pathe News and Katherine MacDonald Fun from Press Adults 28 etc. FRIDAY and SATURDAY Shows: 2:30 p.m, 4:00 p.m, 7:30 p.m, and 9:00 p.m. Adults 28 cts Charles Ray in "Alias Julius Caesar" Something to shout about—the radiant Ray in Roman raiment runs roit through six reels. Pander's QUALITY JEWELRY Varsity Dance! Sport Review Children 10cts F. A. U. Hall Langworthy 5-piece Orchestra Saturday Night October 21,1922 H. B. Duncan, of Indiana Universi- cocha Ball, A. B'22, has a position it visited at the Alpha Tau Omega in the ELDorado High School this winter. Chester Wolfe, of Monrovia, Cal., is here visiting his sister, Kathryn house this week. Night Shirts, with a ghostly look, for the Parade! First floor. They Have That Look of Style Young Men Like Our Obercoats are Carefully tailored and correct, of course—and they have the style that young men like. For style, for fabric—for winter comfort—we could offer you nothing finer. Whenever you say, we will be glad to show them. Don't fail to see Matterhorn Diagonals' the new Obercoat fabrics. Rich colorings in gray, brown and tan, and heather mixtures. $24.50 to $60 Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUT-FITTERS We're Here--to give you the best in Laundry and Dry Cleaning service. Our workers are skilled and all our equipment is the best.The result is: We Guarantee Satisfaction. May we serve you? Phone 383 LAWRENCE STEAM LAUNDRY Water as soft as melted snow THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1 VOLUME XX. Deadline Set On Reservations For "Dad's Day" Feed NUMBER 32. Urge All Students to Communicate With Parents at Once to Estimate Number of Visitors The dead-line for reservations for Dad's Dinner, the big event of Dad's Day, which is being celebrated on November 4, has been set at Wednesday, November 1, according to Dean John Green. The executive committee for the day. All organization houses and boarding clubs are to be notified concerning the plans for the big dinner Saturday evening after the Kansas-Oklahoma football game. Students are being urged to get in touch with parents at once, so that all reservations may be made before noon of November 17th. When arriving the dinner must know three days ahead of time how many parents and students are to be present at the dinner. Organization houses will be asked to report the number of reservations wanted by their members and their parents to Dean Deyer's office in Fraser Hall. Students who are not members of organizations are being asked to report individually the number of tickets wanted. Mothers Invited, Too This is the first annual Dad's Day at K. U. The day is to become one of the big functions of the year at the University. Although Dad will be invited to the dinner, his mother is invited to too and will be welcome at the dinner held that evening. Invite Rotary Club The committee is arranging an in tereasing program, and the Athletic Association is offering a prize of refund tickets for the game rewarding the organized house having the large number of fathers present at Dad's Dinner. The Rotary Clubs of Kansas are holding a meeting here on the same day, and it is assured that many of them will be able to attend the Dad's Day functions also. Forty members of the Topeka Rotary Club have already agreed to be on November 4. City Schools Teach Blind Sightless Men in Missouri to Learn Trades On the letters which are being sent to Rotarf Club members all over Kansas is the question, "Have you a son or daughter at K. U."? "Dad's Day is to be one of the biggest impacts of the school year," said Dean Dyer this morning, "and the student who does not make every effort to get his parents here for the occasion is missing an opportunity to participate in one of the real all-University events." St. Louis, Mo., Oct. 23, (Unite Press)—Classes for the blind to be established in the public schools of St. Louis and the reinstating of sightless workers in industry from which their affliction has removed them, are two important features of Missouri Commission for the blind. Previous to 1915 all activity in be half of those without sight was conducted voluntarily by a philanthropic society known as the Missouri Association for the Blind. Since the war work has been taken over by the State. "Thus far," said the secretary of the commission, "we have confined our efforts to teaching the blind a trade, so as to make them at least partially self-sustaining. At our factory on South Jefferson Avenue we give employment to one hundred blind men. "They are taught broom and brush making and rug-wearing. The foreman of the factory, himself totally trained, has taught scores of men their trade." UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, MONDAY, OCT. 23, 1922. Eight of the men are employed as salesmen and dispose of much of the output of the factory from house to house or the residence and business districts. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Irwin, of Anthony, Kans., formerly K. U. stuents, were in Lawrence Saturday to attend the K. U.-Washburn game. Claude M. Gray, A. B. 22, visited Newell White at the Alpha Tau Omega house Saturday and Sunday. M. Gray is with the Kansas City Star. Special Train to Carry Kansas Rooters Saturday A special train will leave Lawrence for Manhattan at 9 o'clock Saturday morning, over the Santa Fe. It will transfer to the Rock Island tracks and take the train to journey. A 45 minute stop will be made at McFarland for lunch and for the team to limber up. The train will arrive in Manhattan at 1:15. The squad will go directly to the field. The squad alone will be on the screech. Round trip rates of one and one third fairs will be charged. The trail will leave Manhattan promptly at 6 o'clock, stop at McFarland for dinner and arrive in Lawrence at 9:30, according to Dr. F. C. Allen. All K. U. Will Hold Revel On Night Of Witches And Cider Committee Promises Everything From Stunts to Dancing at Halloween Party Plans for the All-University Halloween party Friday night are maturing rapidly, and a gay time is being promised. Proms and dance will be every evening of the evening from 8 o'clock on, will be filled with stunts, games, refreshments, and dancing. There will not be a dull moment for anyone, according to the party manager. Both floors of the grammarium will be used in order to accommodate the large crowd that is expected, and everything possible is being done by the committee to make things lively and interesting on both floors. Halloween would not be Halloween unless there was fortune telling, so the committee has arranged to import some really妥陷 fortune tellers who will disclose to all who desire it, just what the Fates have in store. Also, there will be a Chamber of Horrors. This sounds fascinating but the committee declines to state just what it will be like. At least the Dramatic Club has volunteered to present a short play, and after the play will come the big event of the evening, namely, the refreshments. Good old-fashioned Halloween晚会 would be pleasant, and there will be plenty for everyone. Ku Ku's Distribute Cards The latter part of the evening will be given over to dancing, and Blanche's orchestra has been engaged to furnish the music. Scatter Compliments at Topeka —to Manhattan Friday "Compliments of K. U. Ku Kui Klan 1922," was the message kui Ku Kui 1922 carried to Washburn Friar Ku Kui 1922, who kui Kui is frightened. day. A member of the Klan in uniform, with an automobile decorated with crimson and blue drove about Topeka and the Washburn campus where he distributed about 1,000 cards with the above message. The Ku Ku Klan will go to Manhattan next Friday and join with the Aggers in their big rally there Friday night. They will also distribute cards as they did at Washburn as compliment of K, U., and at the game Saturday they will put on a stunt. The Ku Ku Klan has been limited to twenty-five members and at present has almost that number. It will be an organization hard to get into, according to Bredberg, Chief Klanman, and easy to get out of if one is not an authorized member. The Klanman has也him ransom Jersey sweaters with blue Jayhawkers, crimson caps and dark trousers, for its uniform. S. P. E. E. Wiil Meet at Manhattan Oct. 27 The Kansas-Nebraska section of the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education will meet at Manhattan, Oct, 27 and 28, according to Dean P. F. Walker, chairman of the society. The society is a national organization that includes members from the University of Kansas, the University of Nebraska, and the Kansas State Agricultural College. Ten or twelve members of the faculty of the School of Engineering will accompany Dean Walker, by automobile, to Manhattan, where sessions will be held Friday afternoon and Saturday morning. The members will then stay over to see the football game between K. U. and the Aggies. Play Festival By Famous Company November 3-4 Series is to be Presented Under Auxpices of Department of Public Speaking A festival of modern plays featuring Hilda England and Mercedes Desmore will be presented at Robinson Gymnasium on November 3 and 4 under the auspices of the department of public speaking. The plays which will be given are: "Rosmerholm," by Dsen; "Easter," "Strindberg; and" the Marriage of Kitty," by Zenne. The plays were produced by Sissera, Lawrence Clarke and Theodore Ross and have enjoyed long, successful runs in London and New York. Clarke and Ross have also presented plays of unusual merit in Chicago where with others they formed a corporation for the purpose of continuing Mr. Clarke's original work. The plays well, and properly acted, in towns and cities remote from the large production centers. Hilda Englund Featured Hilda England, a feature of the play festival, began her stage career at the Royal Theatre at Stockholm, Sweden. At nineteen she was chosen among a host of contestants by Henik Ibsen to create the role of Mother Aise in "Peer Gynt." So overwhelming was her success in this part that she became known by critics nearly the world over because of the tribute paid her talent by George Brandes, famous Danish critic. Later Miss England was again chosen by Isen to create the role of Regina in "Ghosts" and of Gerd in "Brand." She physed opposite Audrey Hepburn, who played the actor, in all three plays. Because of her various triumphs in the Iasen roles, she remained with August Lindberg as his leading woman for five years, and acted with him in Madam Mavrova, and in Petrograf, Russia. Played with Beerbohm Tree Mercedes Desamore is an English actress who is accredited considerable beauty and charm. She received her early stage training in London, playing with such stars as Sir Beerbohm Tree, Ellen Terry, and Mrs. Lew Waller. Other players who will appear in the festival are Robert Donaldson, a young actor who is known for the originality of his work, and who plays the loading rule opposite Miss Kissy. At the concert, the present guest: Franklin Ramsey, who created the leading role in the road production of "Brewster's Millions"; Maurice Drew, Miss Almun Bunnell, and Albert Lowy. School Supers To Meet Public School Men Will Stud Announcement of a conference or educational measurements to be held by the School of Education on Thursday, November 9, and continuing through Friday, November 10, have been sent to all county and city as well as the office of Prof. R. A. Kent, Dean of the School of Education." Tests The conference will precede the annual homecoming at the University which will include the formal dedication of the Nebraska game on November 1. The object of the conference is to assist the administrators and supervisors of the public schools in the use of tests in the school program. Mrs. B. R. Buckingham, director of the Bureau of Education Research on Ohio State University, is among the speakers on the program. Other speakers are Chancellor Lindley and members of the School of Education and other school people out over the state. "Real Cartoonists Budding"—Shore Knights of the Gillotte pen and Higgins ink are requested to get their cartoons in to the Sour Owl by Wednesday, as this is the theme appended to the bunch has already been submitted according to Editor Chet Shore, and it looks as if some real "Bud Fishers" were on the Hill. All drawings should be made twice size for reduction, and a half inch to any depth desired, so the sizes wanted. V. F. Smith Will Head Architectural Society The new officers of the K. U. Architectural Society have been announced at the department of architectural engineering. V. F. Smith will head the organization for the first semester. The officers are: V. F. Smith, president; A. B. Harris, vice-president; G. L. Geergy, secretary; Carl Paulsen treasurer, Social committee; James Hartert, Harlesthe, Ora Nicholson, W. P. Cuningham, K. Schwainly, Membership committee; A. B. Bloomgarten, chairman; R. Gerard, F. McArthur. Library committee: E. L. Brinknall, chairman; R. Rose Middlekewitt, Peterson. Spending Too Much For Unnecessaries Thinks Chancellor hat Students Waste More Than Is Right Was Accusation "The money we spend for education in this country is so insignificant that we spend more money in a year for cosmetics than for salaries for teachers in institutions of learning," said Chancellor Lindsey last night in the Uniplanetary League at the Uniplanarian Church in Toonka. Doctor Linder also declared that not more than ten per cent of the brain power of this nation is in the game of living. He said that the salvation of the world rests in education. "Living," according to the college, "is a continuous process of adjustment to conditions and environment." Declaring that the trouble with the world is wrong living by individuals, and that too many of us are not getting the best out of life but are content with the second best, Doctor Watson. This was an audience this audience. Education was spoken of by Chancellor Lindley, in the broader sense, and the things which it will do to solve the present day industrial problems. He said, that the persons on both sides of any dispute must come to realize that there is within the hearts of the men of each side a spirit of good will for the other A lively discussion among members of the league took place following the address. Some of the speakers agreed with the Chancellor while others did not believe in his ideas regarding the relations of the working people and the employers. In a short rebuttal speech Doctor Lindley declared that it was not the purpose of the educational system to teach students how to avoid work, but how to do it better and glorify it. Memorial Statue Started French Is Sculptor of Uncle Jimmy's Statue Work on the statue of Uncle Jimmy Green, dean of the School of Law for so long, who died three years ago, has been started by the sculptor, Daniel Chester French. When it is completed, he will be on campus on the campus near Green Hall. The plans have been approved by the committee appointed for that purpose, the chairman of which is Terrance J. Madden, f'04-06, of Kansas City. Funds for the statue come from a memorial memorial fund of the University. Mr. Madden said in speaking of the statue, "In the heart of all K. U. is the sentiment that the memory of Uncle Jimmy Green may never die. To perpetuate this, it is proposed to erect on the campus near Green Hall memorial that you will be born before his life. To do this we have selected Daniel Chester French, who, in the art of portraying personality, is the foremost sculptor of the world today. The French monumental status of Lincoln gives us reason to believe and expect that the product of Mr. French's genius for K. U. will be a triumph of art. It will be a source of pride and inspiration for our University, and will glorify the memory of our departed Dean." Gilpin to Talk To Students Charles S. Gilpin, who plays the title role in the play "Emperor Jones" at the Bowersock Tuesday night, will give a short talk to all University students, who care to attend in the Little Theatre, at 4 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. Gilpin To Talk To Students Embryonic Editors Adopt Distinctive Mark For Seniors Four Year Journalists "Break Out" With Swagger Sticks A-Swinging What hbs been for two years a mere threat, has at last become an actual fact. Sensors in the department of journalism, both men and women, blossomed this morning to support the decision. The decision to adopt the swagger stick as a distinctive means of identification for seniors in the department, has come as the result of quite a little speculation, and several attempts, over ten years to decide upon something, were unsuccessful, suitable for both men and women. Corduroy Custom Died The custom which lived for a few years, that of the corduroy trousers, was abandoned two years ago be- At a meeting of the seniors last Wednesday, the swagger stick was adored after considerable discussion, and as a result, all of the twenty have equipped themselves over the week-end. Sticks Are Here to Stay There are now two distinctive types of departmental and school dress. The Laws have carried the historic cane since late in the 90's, and they were called the "Four Quart" but early last fall. According to sponsors of the new playthings of the editors, although they have been the last to swing in line, they are here to stay. Accusations made today by the law seniors that the swagger stick was an infringement and a copy of the law cane were emphatically denied by senior journalists today. It was assumed that their truth than it would be that the engineers adopted their cow-boy has in engines of the freshman cap. League Elects Officers Delegates Display Enthusiasm at State Convention John J. Stutz and Harvey Walker, of the Bureau of Kansas Municipalities, returned to Lawrence Thursday night from the state conference of the League of Kansas Municipalities at Pittsburg. Mr. Stutz reports that the convention was one of the largest and most profitable in the history of the organization. Unlimited enthusiasm filled the halls and gates. Sixty Kansas cities, from all sections of the state, were represented by 110 city officials. Among other things accomplished by the League was the sponsoring of two or three bills in connection with city government that will be placed before the legislature this year. The officers elected by the league for 1922-23 are: president, Rick McKell, Mayor; counselor, vice-president, C. F. Travelley, mayor - of Marvallice; secretary and treasurer, J. G. Stutz; of Lawrence; trustees, O. T. Jones, mayor of Pittsburgh; G. F. Bodine, councilman of Morganville; and Geo. S. Kreeck, mayor of Lawrence. Cakies Shine -But Not Their Noses The cake-eater is just as careful to see that his nose doesn't shine as he is to see that his shoes do. he carries a powder puff in his coat pocket to touch up his complexion, if we are to believe the evidence which is piling up at the clothes pressing establishments. Local pressing plants report they find an infinite variety of things in student clothes. Besides powder puffs, they find money, fountain pens, bills, duns, love-letters, hairmets, handkerchiefs, and cheeks. The proprietor of one local press plant says the number of powder puffs they find in men's clothes is too large to be explained any other way. Few of the Adonis have the temerity to claim their puffs. George Hodges, c'25, Paul Engborg, c'25, and 'Swede' Wanetecin c'28, attended a dance at Topeka, Friday night. Architectural Students Submit Class "A" Designs Five Class "A" problems in design were sent from the department of architectural engineering, here, to the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design in New York City. George M. Beal, Robert Bloomgarden, Homer F. Neville, Ora F. Nicholson, and Rose Midkleau are the Kansas students whose designs were sent to be judged. The subject for the problem was, "What should the designers' problems are sent in to the Institute from all parts of the country for judging and are awarded honorable mention according to superiority. Y. W. C. A. Will Meet Wednesday To Hear National Secretary Miss Blanchard Will Hold Conference of Kansas Officers at Henley Hall Miss Leslie Blanchard, national secretary from the Y. W. C. A. headquarters in New York, will speak at the regular meeting of the Y. W. C. A., which will be held Wednesday in Myra Hall, instead of Tuesday. Miss Blanchard is at the University for the purpose of having a conference of student Y. W. C. A. secrearies of Kansas, which will be held Thursday at Henley Hall. Secrets who will be present are Miss Elaine McCormack and Erica Nutritional College; Miss Grace Irwin of Emporia Normal; Ella Bennett, of Pittsburgh Normal; and Marie Rusz of the University of Kansas. In order that members of the board may become acquainted with Miss Blanchard, the Advisory Board of the luncheon Wednesday at Henley Hall, This conference is called for the purpose of discussing the problems associated with higher education universities, and methods of promoting work in the schools. Ad Club Hears Fassett "No large American city has occupied having some disgraceful governmental episode in its history, but conditions are improving," said C.M. Passett municipal consultant at the University of Kansas, speaking this noon before the Kansas City Ad Club on the topic, "Corrupt and Contented." "When Bryce wrote his 'American Commonwealth' he spoke of American city government as the consummation failure of a free, American citizens are paying more and more attention to their government." Mr. Passett stated. K. U. Professor Speaks Today in Kansas City "in searching for evidence of municipal progress, we must turn not so much to the larger cities, wherein the enormous budget are a constant temptation to crooks, but to the smaller cities, in which the people take a greater interest in their government," he continued. "The imposition of laws by small cities, both in structure and administration, in the past twenty years, has been nothing short of marvelous." Nation Will Honor Birth of "Rough Rider Teddy" This year will mark a nation-wide observance of October 27, in honor of Theodore Roosevelt whose birthday occurs this date. Sponsored by President Harding and the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the birthday of Theodore Roosevelt will be an event to commemorate the centennial of his birth, and his indomitable courage in standing up for his convictions. Alfred Alfred Post of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, which is made up of University students, will have charge of all preparations for the anniversary of his birth. Theodore was born on October 1st, the first V. F. W. Post in the United States, organized in 1898 at New York City. Robert Short and Lieut. George Boldizzar, U. S. N., were guests of Herbert Short, at the Alpha Tau Omega house Saturday and Sunday. Lieut. Boldizzar is at present stationed on the U. S. S. Texas, laying at anchor in the harbor of San Pedro, Calif. Lucille Koentz, c'24, spent Sunday visiting her parents in Topeka. 2,000 Attired In Evening Garb,Put Over Huge Parade Annual Negligee Scramble Was a "Go-Getter" From Start to Finish "A starched front, and I'd be in one of the evening dress," shouted one of the participants in the Night Shirt Parade, held Saturday night in celebration of Kansas' defeat of the Ichabons. While from another section of the weaving ranks of P. J.-clad men of the University came the admioration on Friday, with next down." It was a good-natured, hard-working impatient patient, which formed, sans culottes, in four outside of Robinson Gymnasium after a yell-fell had been inside. Led by the University Band back of the familiar figure of "Mia" with his baton, and that of the Chancellor of the University, the long, white, twisting line, winding like a great serpent down Oreda and to South Street, wended its way to South Street. Paul Miller, cheerless, called his troop to a temporary stop while the dissemblers of the eats on Massachusetts made their last preparations for the mux of ravenous men. Everybody Turned Out Jugging from the mob of spectators assembled, all of the city of Lawrence and parts of Eudora and Baldwin City, not mentioning a young metropolis of farmers, must have turned out to see the celebrated Night Shirt Parade of the men of the University of Kansas. They (the spectators) lined the "main drag" from Eleventh Street to Seventh. An eager crowding to get a good view evidenced the curiosity and interest toward townspeople as the paraders wound up in the tables upon which were loaded apples, full of cider, cookies, peanuts, cigars, and finally popcorn on the last skirts of the huge bonfire, built opposite the Zephyr Bakery. "And Not a Kick" "The parade was a huge success," commented Virg Miller, University cheerleader, this morning. "Not a word of dissatisfaction among the students or the townpeople was heard the whole evening, and that is a compliment for the men of the University." "I am sure the students appreciate 'the eats' which the merchants chipped in to furnish, and the whole banquet was good, too." Part of the motley mob couldn't resist the temptation of parading into the F. A. U. Hall where a Varsity dance was in progress, after seeing the shows at the Bowersock and Warner theaters. The dancers who were tripping the light fantastic didn't resent the intrusion. (They couldn't.) Second Box To Near East Crop Failures in Russia Will Result in Famine The second box to be sent to the Near East Relief from Lawrence will be packed at the Social Service Hall on Thursday and Friday of this week under the direction of Miss Mary Byrd. Bryden Setters sent to Miss Byrd from the American Friends' Service Committee tell of the great need for clothing in Russia. The people are insufficiently clutter even for summer, and the winters in Russia are bitterly cold. Because of the repeated crop failures there will be food this winter for only about 50 per cent of the population. The people have been compelled to kill their sheep for food, so there is practically no wool in the country, unless they receive outside aid they will be in danger of both starving and freezing, according to Miss Bryder. Freshmen Must Wear Bibs Among the freshman rules of the women's dormitory at Temple University, Philadelphia, is an order that each freshman wear a bib bearing her name at all meals. The first year students must also wear lase hose every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, and attend church every Sunday. On Tuesday and Thursday they use pink powder nail paint, and are forbidden to spell their hair. Miss Rachael Evans, of Topeka, spent Saturday and Sunday in Law- rence visiting Gladys Overfield, c24. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Campus Editor New York Sport Editor Editor-Career Associate Editor Balch Johnson Campus Editor Lewis Whitehall Sport Editor Glick Schultz Plain Talon Editor Perry John Regina Regina Richick Editors DeVaunno Francis BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS START Business Manager ... Lloyd Ruppenthal Ass't, Bus, Mgr... John Montgomery, Jr. Ben Hibbs Doreen Fleiss Ruth Carter Laura Cowdrey Chester Shaw Carlton Powers Merv Hart Caroline Harkudsen Subscription rate, $3.50 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 seconding mail matter September 17, 1919, at the last宴 at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1979. Published in the afternoon, five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the press of the Department of Journalism Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phones. K. U. 25 and 66 The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate students further than merely printing the news by standing for the ideas of the students; it is to be clean; to be cheerful; to be helpful; to be more seriousice to wiser hands; in all to serve to the best of its ability. MONDAY, OCT. 23, 1922 Peacock NEW MOTOR LAWS Wm. Lawrence Jones of Pennsylvania has had 40 wives in the past 32 years. Cheer up, the first hundred years are the hardest! Drastic measures to prevent speeding and careless driving in Kansas City have been taken to the extent of $100 to $200 speeding fines, for fortitude of driving licenses for rocklessness and imprisonment for drunken drivers. In spite of bickering over the interpretation of existing laws in McPherson, rigorous means are being used to catch up speed violators. The New York papers are agitating "more humane driving," being applied with the fact that 1054 children were killed in the city by motorists last year. This wide-spread reaction against disregard of speed and traffic regulations has come about at a most needed time when cars are made with miles per hour the underlying principle. That such stern motor laws are necessary should call the speedad American youth up to the realization of his obligations to the rights of others. The reckless driver should pull himself up short and consider the much abused rights of the pedestrians who are in constant danger of life and limb from the racing cars. University students are equally negligent in accepting the responsibilities which rest upon those who drive cars. Many of them are speed maniacs. Those in this class should not be surinured to find in Lawrence equally stringent enforcement $o$ speed and traffic laws. Statistics show that the average height of men in the United States is five feet, seven and five-tenths inches, and the tallest ones are found in Texas and the shortest in Rhode Island. Who doubts the law of equalization? ANOTHER STATESMAN PASSES The resignation of Lloyd George as prime minister of England marks the passing of the last of the great war statesman. Ex-President Wilson, Premier Clemenceau of France, and Premier Orlando of Italy have all gone before him. Lloyd George weathered crisis after crisis brought on by repeated attacks, but at last succumbed to the Tory faction supported by la bor. Lloyd George had been in power nearly six years, succeeding Herbert Asquith in December, 1916, when the world war was waging. He was one of the most spectacular figures in the long, stormy political history of England. He is one of the outstanding statesmen of the world war. Lloyd George is one of the most eloquent premiers that England has ever known, and in pleading the cause of communists, he has no peers. The little Welsh wizard, whose magnetism and clever insight had brought him through many a hard political battle, could not stem the tide of ever-increasing hostility, and fell just as many an English premier had done before him. David Lloyd George will go down in history fast as surely as did the great Gladstone, William Pitt, and Diarrell. The question of Christmas gifts for the children has been economically solved by Henry Ford. His well-known cars have been reduced fifty more dollars, and the total cost includes war tax and gasoline. A STEP BACKWARD If the congress of the United States should hark to the admonitions of Secretary of Labor, Davis, it would, with a single blow, destroy completely the United States Railway labor Board, created by the Eschmummings bill. The United States Railway Labor Board, declared Davis in a speech at Athens, Ohio, Saturday, is a "quasi-governmental, partisan institution." Again, he asserted that the board had "demonstrated that it is incapable of fulfilling the high hopes of those who proposed and supported it as a means to industrial power on the railroads." Now, those are strong statements, and, founded or not founded upon facts, deserve due consideration before any action for the dissolution if the board is taken. All things had their beginnings, even Life itself. Progress is maintained only by continually reaching out, more or less blindly, for something better than the present thing. The framers of our constitution and the drafters of the bill which created the Railway Labor Board are in one class. They have grapped for a solution to their problems. To have fallen short of their respective marks does not warrant the precipitation of the country's wrench upon the heads of these men. They need our faith and encouragement. Must we weed to bloodshed for the cessation of strike rebuses; must we turn the wheels of progress backward—merely because some men, casting out hopefully for Truth, have erred in their judgment? The Railway Labor Board may need reformation, but before this body is entirely destroyed something better to take its place should be found. Plain Tales From The Hill "You ain't got nothing on me," declared the foliage colored chap, discussing his social advantage. "I've corresponded to that boarding club myself." Chinning contests are popular over in Physical Ed's department now. Three to one on the women! What would Lawrence do if something would happen to the policeman? The woman from North Carolina who craves to go to heaven via congress, should obtain some shock abuses before she starts over the road. At least the Kaiser's coming war, which is to be solnizedm in the near future, will not be as wide in scope as his recent attacks, and still probably be more affected by it. An old-fashioned husking bee was held near Lawrence. It was an ideal place, no doubt, to get even with the handlers if the corn was all red! Will we have to resort to bombs, hammers, and clubs to keep the "old time jinnener" alive, as they had to do out in the Golden state? Jonah was down in the mouth at one time, but he'd have been there more than three days if he'd just had a quiz paper returned. "Cupid is very active at K. U."- Headline in the Kanass. Yes, the little cuss is too active for his own good. Black Mask and Pachacamac met yesterday when voters were few "Quite a nice little deck of cards you have there," said one. France is going to have a Home coming Day too on November 11 Why can't she be more original?" "Yes, but it's incomplete. Let me have one of yours for a joker." In love letters "XXX" marks the spot where the man falls. Official Daily University Bulletin SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING FACULTY: Copy received by Florence E. Bliss, Editor, Chewcellor's Office until 11:00 a.m. Oct. 23, 1922. Vol. II. The schedule for the Dramatic Club tryout plays is to be found in the Public Smoking office. WANTED—Man roommate, large room, moderate rent. 1038 Tennessee. Call 207 695. O-24 There will be a meeting of the Faculty of the School of Engineering at 3:30 Tuesday in the office of the Dean, Room 123 Marvin Hall. WANT ADS No.32. GARAGE FOR RENT—1345 Mass. $3 per month. Inquire High School Inn. —025 DRAMATIC CLUB TRYOUT SCHEDULE: the Public speaking course. CECILE BURTON, Instructor in Public Speaking. HYSICAL EXAMINATION FOR FRESHMEN WOMEN: FOR SALE—Three octave sheet xy- ophone equipped with resonators and case. Phone 609. — 024 LOST—Gold jewelled bracelet with jewelled ball hanging on its, later- day afternoon on hill. Finder will call 240—0-024 LOST—Gold jewelled ball on its, later- day afternoon on hill. Finder will receive liberal reward. Call 240—0-024 SPLENDN OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire ANNOUNCEMENTS Dramatics at the University of Michigan are being made more interesting to those concerned with that activity by the holding of a tournai, acts, a one-act plays, burlesques, pantomimes, music, and dances are included. The regular meeting of the Student Volunteer Band will be held in Myers hall tomorrow evening, Tuesday the 24th. It will start promptly at 7:00 p.m. and close promptly at 8:00 p.m. Everyone interested in putting life into foreign missionary work is invited to attend the band. The band will spend the hour in the study of the Mohammedan religion. —R. E. Stannard, Leader. The Democratic Club will meet Wednesday evening, October 25, at 7:30 o'clock in the old Chamber of Commerce rooms, over the People's State Bank. All Democrats welcome. W.-F. Thompson, President. MARTHA M. BACON, Assoc. Prof. of Phys. Ed. Meeting of all ex-service men interested in the passage of the Kansas Compensation Law in Green Hall Tuesday at 4:30. The Committee. FOR PRESSMEN WHO WILL All Freshmen women must have completed the required physical examination before November 14. Democratic rally in half of Chamber of Commerce rooms, over People's State Bank. Wednesday evening, everyone bank at 7:30 o'clock. Everybody well. On Other Hills The contract for the erection of a new hospital building at the University of Missouri has been let. It will be three stories high and constructed of red bricks and Carthage stone. It will have a capacity of fifty beds. The contract calls for the completion of the building by August 1, 1923. Horse back riding is the newest "subject" being taught at the Oklahoma State University at Norman. Popularity of the new "course" is shown by the class roll. Sixty coeds have signed up for the class. The class meets once a week for instruction given by the officers of the R. O. T. C. unit stationed there. R. O. T. C. artillery horses are used by the girls. The popularity of intra-mural indoor baseball has been demonstrated at Ohio State University. The sport has just recently been introduced there. Teams have been entered by all fraternities. A point system governing participation in college activities has been imposed on Whitman College men by recent action of the faculty. The nature of the system is to keep men from being in too many major activities. The development of a "super" cheering section is a feature of the 1922 football program at the Ohio State University. It will be composed of 1644 men especially trained to cheer for the corps of trained rooters will occupy the central section located on the fifty-yard line on the west side of the field. A freshman is leading the yells at the Kansas State Normal School at Emporia this fall. In a recent election, the students chose Orville James of Emporia, a freshman, as cheer leader and William Willoughby of Coyville, a sophomore, as assistant. to earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Please work; after school hours. Write J. F. Stats-Moore 3446 Wayey Ave, Kansas City-ST73 LOST—Gold fountain pen, with name "Helen" engraved. Please return 1116 Ind. or call 295. O-24 LOST—Sigma Chi pin. Name on back. Reward. Return to 1439 Tenn. O-26 DR. J. W. GWYONY, (Dentist) Special attention to prevention and treatment of pyrrorea. 304 Perkins Building. Tel. 507. PROFESSIONAL CARD LAWRENCE OFFICIAL COMPANY (Exclusive Optometric) inns. examined; glazer made. Office 1025 Mass. can be cleaned CAPS like new 35c each Thomas Shoe Electric Shop 75 Phone Oread Shining Parlor CHARLIE'S PROTCH The College TAILOR ↘ NEW YORK CLEANERS 836 Mass. St. WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods Best Shines in Town United Army Stores Co 706 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Army Goods Published in the interest of Electrical Development by an Institution that will be helped by whatever helps the Industry. Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 Ladies who desire expert Hair-Bobbing Patroness the That's My Business SCHULZ THE TAILOR 917 Mass. St. We make clothes. We do alterations on both women's and men's clothes, reining ladies' and men's overcoats, cleaning and pressing. Suiting you, anyway. Patronize the STADIUM BARBER SHOP "The Shop of Service" First Door South of Von's 2023年国家税务总局监制 Gustafson "GIFTS THAT LAST" THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DL TWO LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING A man is falling. This is you-at college How about the Football Player Tackling a Dummy? Isn't he typical of everything you do in these four years? SEEKING a symbolic figure to represent Knowledge, let us turn away from the muses of antiquity and the be-capped and be-gowned youth of our own day. You are the Football Player. The dummy is every knotty problem you tackle, every effort to earn your way through, every examination, every campus activity. Tackle the dummy hard, and you'll be ready for even bigger tests in the game of business or professional life. By his earnestness he seems to feel the thrill or combat. With set jaws and muscles tense he plunges at the dummy. For him it is alive, and the practice is a means to win the game. Do not say about this symbol, "How clever", and let it go at that. It is worth nothing unless it reminds you to get the spirit of the Tackler into your work. If you intend to help score touchdowns after college, he is a man to measure up to. Western Electric Company Since 1869 makers and distributors of electrical equipment Number 22 of a series "He came to spend the week-end and stayed fifteen years" That was the way Uncle Horace attached himself to the King family. His daughters and relatives kept dad buried under a "bunker of bills" so he ran away to South America. SEE Adam and Eva and laugh at the experiences of the family in trying to get along without "dear old dad." and laugh at the expierences of ar old dad." Reserve your ticket now for this Y. W.C.A. benefit--"Comedy of the New Poor." BOWERSOCK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7 Tickets - $1.00, 75, and 50cts Mail Orders sent to Elizabeth Dunkle at Henley Hall will receive Immediate Attention 31 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Germany Resents Attitude Taken By Foreigners There Travellers Buy Money by Bales And Flaunt it in Natives' Faces Berlin, Oct. 23 (United Press)—Americans and other foreigners will be unwelcome in Germany this winter. Already a keen spirit of resentment, especially among the working classes, is setting in against what are called "valu-alta strong foreigners." And part of this resentment, it may be said in fairness, is attributable to the conduct of certain traveling foreigners who have been swarming over Germany this summer. They have made it difficult for Americans and others whose business requires them to remain in Germany. They have flaunted in the faces of waiters and shoprigs their dollars and their cheap marks; they have boasted of how cheaply they can buy foods and goods in Germany; and they have boasted that they "glad to get rid of this junk"—meaning the marks they bought by the bake. The German has seen this; he has read, too, daily of how many marks the foreigners were "buying out" the country, taking along not only luxuries, but necessities. He has heard of the foreigner feasting with encaustic bread and with comparatively low when reckoned in American or British currency. Further, he has observed that many of the foreigners were leading a loose life—wine, women and song. And, along with it, he has gathered a sullen dislike for the foreigner. Then he has turned the page, and read how many hundred marks his meat and his butter and his bread cost. He has reckoned that up in terms of a weekly wage running between 2,000 and 4,000 marks at present and has come to the conclusion that the economic situation is all The result is a distinct spirit of hostility. A new cases have come to light in the last couple of weeks on the streets. English on the streets were hissed. The foreigner wonders at such treatment and presents it. On the other hand, though, the German resents the boorish impoliteness and laid-mothed braggadocia which too many travelers assume. Students Organize to Study Great Religions A group of students has been organized for the purpose of studying the great religions of the world, and the religious events have been shown lately in these meetings. this group will meet Tuesday night at 7:00 o'clock in Myers Hall to study Mohammedanism under the leadership of Miss Nora Siler. Anyone who is interested is invited to attend these meetings. Winona Thompson, fs'22, returned last week from her home in Ft. Smith, Ark., to take a position in Superintendent Shea's office. Science Bulletin to be Off Press in Short Time The University Science Bulletin, volume 13, part 2, will be off the press in a very short time, according to Prof. S. J. Hunter. Mr. Hunter, a few days ago, made a trip to Topoka for a conference with the CCSI team, bringing back the proofs on the Bulletin, and is now working on them. The Bulletin is an irregular publication containing researches on scientific subjects by faculty and advanced students of the University. Professor Hunter is Quinnam of the publication committee for the Bulletin. New Book Written By Prof. Blackmar Has Been Published Ustifiable Individualism" Title—Protests Against Exalting the Mass "Justifiable Individualism" is the title of a recent book by Frank Wilson Blackman, professor of sociology and former dean of the Graduate School of the University. The books has just been published by the Thomas Y. Crowell Company, New York. The thesis of Professor Blackman's book is implied in the statement in an early chapter, which reads, "The old theory that if the individual, sound in body, sound in mind, with sterling moral qualities, were propounded, we would never world the leaven of righteousness and leave the whole lump has been overshadowed by the gigantic mass play of social reform as a means of human progress. So the conclusion is reached by many reformers that individualism has no place in social procreation, and is conditioned by the rule of mass. The converse instils in repudiation of the individual instead of his resignation." In commenting on Professor Blackman's book, one writer says: "Certainly, in the beginning, the principle of democracy exalted the individual, just as the principle of Christianity—out of, or in harmony with which, democracy has developed—exalted the individual. Early Christianity did not condemn slavery, but it did accept the slave as a man, equal spirit." finally with every other. Many early Christians were slaves. The spread led inevitably to democracy, and it was a triumph of individualism which VENUS PENCILS The highest selling Quality pencil in the world FOR the student proof, of the superb VENUS outrivalls all for perfect pencil work. 17 black degrees = 3 copying. American Lead Pencil Co. 290 Fifth Ave. New York, NY. D. 9 VENUS Write for booklet on VENUS VENUS EVENPOINTED Grounded Pencil © 1908 Ed. V. Primo & Co. For Style—for Comfort Wear a tailored to measure Overcoat It guarantees a proper fit-individual style—the best wool quality. Prices, $25 and up. S. G. CLARKE 1033 Mass. Ye Taverne Next to the Standpipe DON'T BE A SLAVE! What you want to When you want to democracy was regarded as asserting. In our own country we have all ways interpreted democracy as digitive the individual man." Professor Blackman's book is an appeal to this doctrine and a protest against the tendency toward exalting the mass, against the "undue emphasis on social and economic organization, reform laws, and group activity as means of human progress." It attempts to turn back the sociolinguistic pressure stresses in the "moral and intellectual integrity of the individual." Wichita Y. W. A. C. Has Weight Reducing Class Wichita, Kans., Oct. 23 (U. P.) The local Y. W. C. A. announced recently that it would start a class for women weighing more than 200 pounds. The object was reduction of excessive fat. Wiseacres laughingly declared the class would die in its infancy, because no woman would admit weighing more than 200 pounds. J. Giddigher and C. Kidd, of William Jewell College, Liberty, Mo., were guests at the Alpha Tau Omega house over Saturday and Sunday. That Wichita women place comfort above pride is shown in the fact that twenty-six women, aggregating more than two tons of flesh are enrolled and working regularly to regain their sylph-like figures. Sue Bidwell, c25, spent Saturday and Sunday in Kansas City, Mo., visiting Charlotte Alken, c24. Filipinos Elect Officers Meeting Plans Made For Rizal Day at At a regular meeting of the Filipino Students' Association held yesterday, the following officers were elected for the current semester; president, F. V. Bermo; vice-president, F. Montano; secretary, N. B. Mayor, treasurer, S. Calica. Short talks were made by the officers—elect, telling what they believed to be the mission of the Filipino student in the United States. Mr. E. Barba, f'17 addressed the Association. Plans for the annual Rial Day entertainment were tentatively considered, but laid down to be carefully monitored by the committee appointed by the president. There are twenty-eight Filipino students in K. U. this year who are members of the Association. Agnes Schur, c26, who has been ill at Memorial Hospital recovering from an appendix operation, will be home on the home of her husband, Mrs. Will Grieza. Chairman of standing committees are: Rizal executive committee, S Viperas; program for regular meetings on the musical, P. Inovia; and R. Pimenta; Theta Phi Alpha sorority entertained their pledges with a dance given at the chapter house last Saturday night. THE BRIDGE --to give you the best in Laundry and Dry Cleaning service. Our workers are skilled and all our equipment is the best. The result is: We Guarantee Satisfaction. May we serve you? It is not extravagance to put your money into items of ornamentation that have imperishable value—It's your duty to look your best—it's thrift to invest your money in jewelry of value and elegance. Taste-Refinement-Value "Gifts That Last" Green Watche Jade Rings Onyx Rings Ear Arrops Combs Barretts Dorines Beads Hamilton Watche Waldemirs Cigarette Cases Gillette Razors Belts Conklin Pencils Dunn Pens Hancock Pens Gustafson BOWERSOCK ONE NIGHT TUESDAY OCTOBER 24 THEATRE ADOLPH. KLAUBER PRESENTS THE MOST REMARKABLE PLAY of the CENTURY EUGENE O'NEILL'S THE EMPEROR JONES with the amazing actor CHARLES S. GILPIN originally produced by the Provincetown players CORK, HERBERT IN PATRINE LEASON in THE PRINCESS THEATRE - NEW YORK AND LONG RUNS IN BOSTON - CHICAGO and PHILADELPHIA SECURE YOUR SEATS NOW Prices: 75c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 Plus Tax. Texas Student Finds Living Cheap in Europe Dallas, Texas, Oct. 23 (U. P.) "This land of the free" does not refer to education, according to Switzerland G. Schuster, a professor at Southern Methodist University, here. "I tote costs too much to go to school in America, so send my credits to me." McCray wrote R. L. Brewer, from University, university from Hamburg, Germany. McCrary, president of the junior class last year, worked his way to Germany on a freighter, to see the "Passion Play" Obermammerg. Finding it more economical* to attend in Germany, the youth decided to stay. E.Z. EZ. TRADE MARK REG. U. S. PAT. OFF. THE ORIGINAL WIDE GARTER You wouldn't wear a cowboy hat with the vocals and muscles with a garter that depends on adjusted tightness. No adjustments to the EZ. 450 to 81, everywhere, in single-circ and the N.Z. Corp. and the N.Z. Super Carter. Made by The Hua. F. Pyke Co., Biddeford, Can. After Every Meal WRIGLEY'S P.K. CHEWING SWEET The Flavor Lasts BELLS FLOWER SHOP Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS 825 1-2 Mass Phone 139 825 1-2 Mass. Kirby Cleaners and Dyers 1109 Mass. St. Phone 442 GE When your friends drop in unexpectedly an electric chating dish makes immediately possible a delicious Welsh rarebit or wholesome homemade candy. We have them in all styles and sizes Kansas Electric Power Co. 719 MASS. ST. We're Here--to give you the best in Laundry and Dry Cleaning service. Our workers are skilled and all our equipment is the best. The result is: We Guarantee Satisfaction. May we serve you? Phone 383 LAWRENCE STEAM LAUNDRY Water as soft as melted snow 1 Substitute Team Defeats Washburn On Stadium Field Victory Fumbles and Snappy Playing Alternate in Saturday's 32—3 Victory Playing second-string men more than three-quarters of the game, the Kansas Jayhawks easily defeated the Washburn Ichabods on Kansas field here Saturday, 32 to 3, turning in the first Kansas victory of the season. The lone Ichabod score came in the opening minutes of play when Euler, Washburn quarter, made a kick from placement from the 20-yard line after vainly endearing to score a touchdown. Make true his statement of last week, Coach Clark started the game with second-string men and the utility men played all of the game with the exception of about five minutes at the end of each half when the Jay-Z team were sent in in a body for a short scrimmage against the Ickabohs. Regulars Show Up Well The Kansas first team men made two touchdowns in the few minutes they played in the game. Coming in fresh near the end of the first half, the Jayhawker regulars took the ball on the Ichabod 40-yard line and advanced down the field for a touchdown, never losing possession of the ball until it was placed under the goal posts for a counter. Wisconsin kicked goals. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The first team replaced the utility men again near the end of the last half, and scored shortly after taking the field. The Washburns were unable to gain at all through the Kansas first team line and while the regulars were in the capital players were forced to punt time and again. Score on Jayhawk Fumble Washburn fought all the way and at times she played on equal terms with the Jayhawkers. The Ichabbs took the lead in the opening minutes of play. Recovering a Jayhawker fumble on the Kansas 40-yard line, a back buck and a 17-yard pass. Brewer to Jamison, the only pass which the Ichabbs completed during the whole game, placed the oval on the Jayhawker's foot. The Kansas stiffened and Euler dropped back to the 20-yard line and sent a kick from placement squarely between the goal posts. Coach Clark used twenty-nine men in the skirmish with Washburn, practically every man on the squad getting a trial. The inexperience of the Jayhawkers is shown in the Kansas penalties, a total yardage of 155 yards being assessed as penalties at times and never being eneded to be costly at times, when two 154ayard penalties were placed on the Kansans in two consecutive plays. The Washburn lead was short-lived, for a few minutes after the kabobs scored a Washburn man fumbled and Kinas recovered on the 50-yard line. Then Griffin snagged a pass flipped by "Son" Anderson and ran to the kaboh 20-yard line before being downed. Shannon went through the 15-yard line and on the next play carried the ball over for the counter. Three touchdowns were registered by the second team men and two by the regulars. Wilson kicked goal twice and Anderson missed his three trials. The Jayhawker regulars uncorked a series of dazzling passes while in the game, most of the completed flops being by the Wilson-MeAdams route. Burt was gaining consistently through the Washburn line, Passes Used Successfully The playing of Shannon at fullback was, without doubt, one of the features of the game. Time after time he went through the Washburn line for good gains. He was hitting two rickets to the ground when tackled. Shannon was removed from the game in the third quarter due to injuries. Brewster was the outstanding man in the Ichabod backfield while Blevins and Barstow stood the brunt of the attack in the line. The Line-ups The line-up: Kansas Pos. Washburn Heffin L. E. Schrader Hoffin L. T. Saxon Haley L. G. Blevs. Brace) Lonborg C. Bruce) Harris R. G. Morris Mosby R. T Barstow Boone R. E Jemison Anderson Q. Euler Calvert L. H. Sharer Hodges R. H. Sherman Simpson F. Brewer Substitutions: Kansas first team—Wilson, Burt, McAdams, Krueger, Weidlein, Higgins, Davidson, Cave, Ivy, Black and McLean. For the second team—second team for the first team—Baldwin for Boone, McDonald for Anderson, Theis for Harris, Thompson for Theis, Pierson for Shannon, McDonald for Hodges. Washburn-Hindman for Schrader, Davison for Jenkins for Juniors for Jemison, Davis for Euler, Blauk for Bruce, Fowler for Morris, Laniery for Barston. The summary: First down, Kansas 24, Washburn 11- Yars from scrimmage, Kansas 273, Washburn 65, Punts, Kansas 8 for 205 yards, Washburn 12 for 325 yards. Forward passes, Kansas 6 complete for 106 yards, 10 incomplete; Washburn, 1 complete for 17 yards, 3 incomplete. Intercepted, Penalties, Kansas 17 for 155 yards. Touchdowns, Shannon 2, Wilson, McAdams Anderson. Try for placem, Wilson 2 dropkicks. Field goal from placement, Euler for Washburn. Referee, Grover, Washington University; umpire, Dr. Reilly, Georgetown; head linesman, Butler, Minnesota. Cross Country Men Will Have Second Try- Out Tuesday All Men Not Among First Five in Last Run Will Compete For Sixth Place A second try-out for all but five of the cross country squad will be held Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 p'clock starting form the variety sheds, according to an announcement made this morning. Coach Koch said he hoped the try-out be for the purpose of selecting the six man for the cross country team. Coach Schadleman expressed himself as very well pleased with the showing made by Wilson, Schaub merrill, Gredy and Patt in trial at Washoe Valley. Kwanisha Washoe game. All other men will be given another trial tomorrow afternoon and Coch Schadleman announced that the first man in the run tomorrow would probably go to the cross country team 'eam Saturday. The men finished the run Satur- day in the following order: Wilson, 29 minutes, 47 seconds, Schaub, 28; Merrill, Grady and Pratt in the trial Merrill, 28:03; Grady, 28:41; Pratt, 28:28; Meng, 28:46; Tharefall, 29; Warden, 22; Kennedy, 30:62; Klemp, Huches and Wunsch. Lewis finished the run last Saturday in 28 minutes and 18 seconds, but he is insoluble for variety competition. Wihson's time was excepter, as well as his promise to be one of the best cross country men in the Valley. Everett Bradley, A.B.22, spent Saturday and Sunday in Lawrence. Josephine McDonald, fa'26, and Elizabeth Testard, c'26, spent Sunday in Kansas City. That modern chemistry will enable the United States to maintain itself in a state of preparedness for war with much less waste and expense than in the past, was one of the views set forth Sunday morning by Prof. Hermann Furmer of the department of Chemistry in the Student forum in the Uritarian Church. Modern Chemistry Brings Low Priced War Preparedness Werner Tells Forum That Inter- national Strife Is Prob- ably Not Ended Other kinds of armament are maintained at great expense and are worthless in time of piece, he said; while chemical plants which in war time turn out phosgene and other deadly gases may easily be converted for the manufacture of dyes and other economic products. The first green cloud of chlorine gas which the Germans sent rolling over no-man's-land was of great value to the United States in that it led to the organization of a chemical war. At the beginning of the war there were only a few chemical plants in this country; at its close we were manufacturing more phosgene than any other nation. Since then great progress has been made in chemical discoveries and no limit to the future of chemical warfare. in Kempner Hall. Prof. J. Wesley Sterberg of the department of economics will speak on "Paper Money" next Sunday. Professor Werner expressed the belief that the world has not yet seen the end of international war and that the frightfulness of modern methods of destruction will have little value in peace. Lee Wandling, fc24. is a student at Sterling College this year. If you like Cocoanut ask for $3.50 to $8.50 Slip-over Sports Sweaters If you don't, ask for SOME OI ER KIN $3.50 to $10. WIEDEMANN'S COCOA- SOME OTHER KIND They are plain or fancy weaves of Wool and Mohair and wool combined. Round or "V" shape neck. All the leading shades are in this collection. NUT TOPS but BE SURE IT'S WIEDE-MANN'S CANDY 140 We make forty different pieces in our own factory Brushed wool and Mohair are shown in the smartest styles in plain or belted Scarfs. You will find numerous occasions to wear these attractive Scarfs. that are smartly styled yet just the thing for Comfort. A big new selection of the newest Styles, Colors and Weaves just received. Fancy Sports Scarfs Wool Scarfs and Sweaters Innes, Bulline & Hackman Earl N. Manchester, director of libraries at the University, returned Thursday evening from St. Joseph, Mo., where he has been attending the regional meeting of the American Library Association. Mr. Manchester will discuss at the library round-table for colleges and universities. Librarian Returns From St. Joe A. L. A Meeting A feature of the meeting interesting to Kansans was the address by Mr. Milton J. Ferguson, librarian of the California State Library, on the occasion of a special operation throughout California. Last year the Kansans legislature passed an act making it legal for counties to levy a tax for the purpose of creating county libraries, but thus far has not been availed themselves of At a meeting of the Men's Student Council recently Oliver Kukle was elected as college representative to fill the vacancy felt by F. Kukle after retiring from the School of Engineering, were elected to take the place of Wallace James. Purchasers of SkofStadS Quality Overcoats $27.50 and $22.50 are convinced we are leaders in prices, as well as styles Why not take advantage of such opportunities? SKOFSTADS Five women medic and pre-medic students have organized a house and are managing it on a plan similar to that of the University co-operative houses. Frances Rosenthal is president and Dorothy Shelley is business other members are Pearl Matthee, Hollie Nicholson, and Ulandt Stoenkop. Medical Women Effect Organization of House A. G. ALRICH The apartment which the organization occupies consists of four rooms and sleeping porch. It is located at 1322 Massachusetts St. Although the organization is associated with Alpha Epsilon Iota, women's honorary medalocracy, only two members of the house are also members of the sorority. Homer Abercrombie, c' 25, has returned to his classes after having been out of school two weeks on account of sickness. Engraving. Printing, Binding Rubber Stamps, Office Supplies, PETER LANDSCHMIDT Beating Old Man Webster Noah Webster became famous when he wrote 70,000 words CAPITAL $100,000.00 Printing by any process 736 Mass. St. Ingersoll Pencil carries in its magazine 15 double length leads with a writing mileage of 540,000 words. It requires a new lead only once for every 36,000 written words and is so simply constructed that it always not cloy at the point. The GIFT—shown here—of Rolled Gold $3.00. In Rolled Silver $1.00. Ingersoll Redpoint Co., Inc. Wm. H. Ingersoll, Press. 461 501 Ave., New York City See this and other models at your stationery or cooperat- store. WATKINS NATIONAL BANK C. H. Tucker, President SURPLUS $100,000.00 E. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board Chairman of the Board. SURPLUS $100,000.0 Boston College D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. DIRECTORS C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Ahran, L. V. Miller, T. C. Green J. C. Mbore, S. O. Bishon Thousands of Students use the They have come to depend on it as a tried and tested bearer that lightens the burden of every writting task. Remington Portable So small it is never in the way — fits in case only you can tell, and the moment you can use it mware— even on your laptop. And it is the most complete of all portable Remington in quality—and covered with cases, $600. Price, complete with cases, $600. typewriter—with *Standard* Keyboard and many other "big machine" features. The Lawrence Typewriter Exch. 737 Mass. Lawrence, Kasque. Remington Typewriter Co., Inc. 107 W. 7th St. Topeka, Kas. Remington Typewriter Co., Inc. 1021-23 Grand Ave. , K.C. Mo. Paragon Ribbons for Remping Fortable Typewriter ecc each = 5s a dotm red Price, Four Elected to Scarab Four students in the department of architectural engineering have been pledged to Scrab, national professional and honorary fraternity of architectural engineers. The student is Raymond A. Coolidge, ae'23; Raymond A. Coolidge, ae'23; Gilbert Geery, ca'24; Phelps Cunningham, ae'25; and M. L. Sorey ae'24. Raymond Caulk, e24, who has been ill with influenza at the University hospital has returned to school. Phi Gamma Delta fraternity will entertain with their annual tacky party Friday, October 20. Alpha Chi Omega announces the pledging of Mary Louise Jones, Wichita. MEN'S WORKSHOP The Blue Shirt a New Idea Blue, that's the new idea in shirts, rich striking, alluring—but what's the use? You can't describe with mere words this new shirt that with thick eastern men are wearing. Come over to Ober S.' and see them. $4.00 Other Shirts $1.50 up Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS Lander's QUALITY JEWELRY Elmer's They Satisfy THE OREAD CAFE Famous New Orleans Box Chocolates Was Fortunate in Securing This Wonderful Line of Southern Candy Remember "Everybody Likes Candy" Varsity-Bowersock Mon. and Tues. Mon. Only Shows—2:30—4:00—7:30—9:00 p. m. in "DIVORCE COUPONS" A Southern girl who narries a Northerner for the sole purpose of divorcing him and getting a good income. A Johnnie Jones Comedy 'SUPPLY AND DEMAND' Corinne Griffith Adults 28c Charles Dickens' Last Complete Novel "OUR MUTUAL FRIEND" Millions of persons have read and continue to read this wonderful story by one of the world's greatest authors. A Sunshine Comedy "THE BARNSTORMER" Children 10c Wed. and Thurs. Wed. Only "BURNING SANDS" WANDA HAWLEY MILFORE CALIF. ROBERT CAIN, MARY WORTH A Geneva Picture GEORGE MELFORD PRODUCTION THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN --- VOLUME XX. NUMBER 33. "Phog" Allen Gives Speech Over Radio On Clean Athletics UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, OCT. 24, 1922. Sounds Warning Against Danger of Professionalism in Organizing College Teams Dr. Forrest C. Allen, director of athletics, talked over radio Monday evening at 6 o'clock from the Kansas City Star's station, W. D. A. F. The subject of his talk was, "Some Benevolent Athletes Need to Understand Literals." Under this, he told of the ideals and aims of college athletics. Doctor Allen warned against the danger of professionalizing football, and urged that administrative heads of colleges take precaution to thwart an assault on the heart of American athletics clean. Doctor Allen emphasized the fact that athletics develop those qualities of body, mind and spirit which make desirable world leaders. He directed attention to the disciplinary value of organized athletics and the training in the value of teamwork. He emphasized the need for persistent and determined and must fight harder when opponents threaten his goal than when in midfield. Stigmatizes Commercialism The K. U. mentor stigmatized commercialism in college athletics in no uncertain terms. "One of the commonest dangers to college athletics is the athlete who under the guise of anatomyism, wants to get paid for his athletic services. He is the chap from some locality where no possibilities are an athlete and he谊性 authority is to guarantee him his room and board only or he may be the presumptions Ld who wants even more. This gives rise to the so-called "athletic trump" who plays a one year at one college and the next year celebrates or where the abilities of this form of graft are greater. This type of person must be dedicated, a disorganizer and a menace to the welfare of the entire student body. He is the type who does not want honest work, but wants something for nothing. It is this type of individual who is striving to professionalize football and will, if success great honest work, but wants something for nothing. It is this type of individual who is striving to professionalize football and will, if successful, ruin the greatest of academic games. Then there is the common allied danger of proselyting among coaches and alumni for their respective colleges. Armored with “scholarships” and “self-help” talks these pseudoopposites of the schools go about in their respective states and elsewhere seeking desirable material, each trying to capture what they can apostose with the greatest personal magnetism and the biggest bundle of fairly-like promises of “soft job” gets the lad. "Professionalism in amateur athletics is to blame in part at least for the critical attitude that so many Easy Money Attracts Players "Too often, he is the lad who has in high schools the proper ideals of being a student, but I feel that henceforth he has a valuable commodity. With this event of graft introduced into his life, school spirit dies and his big purpose is lost. He becomes an 'altramp' trophy and is the type of man who agitates a situation to accomplish a serious criticism of its athletic teams. bringing toward the players who are representing them on college athletic fields. Criticizing the play of an individual or the team by fellow students or alumni should be a wrong attitude, the men represent their school and be giving their all, unquestionably, who is more than those criticizing it. "But the greatest and most menacing evil in athletics is gambling. It has wrecked every activity wherein it has sunk its fangs. Boxing, wrestling, horse racing, and base ball have had their turn. Football and other inter-college sports, except by careful administration on the part of the men in charge, will suffer the same fate. "A constant ideal of vigorous manhood, fair play, fair play, sport and love, of institution, will do most to offset this grave menace to college sports. An athletic sports must at all hazers be a player. The worst progress is a quarter of a century. The athletic heart of America is elementally clean, because it beats in the breast of the twelve-year-old American boy. Let us keep it so." Jacks Issues Warning to Men Who Want Training A warning that former service men who believe their military service was the cause of a vocational handicap must file applications for vocation training before December 16 was issued yesterday by H. S. Jacks, field agent of the United States Veterans' Bureau. No applications for vocational training can be filed after that date, according to Mr. Jacks unless Congress amends the act providing for vocational training. He said that the department should but urged that those who wished to file for training would profit by doing so before December 16. To Finish Art Work Of 1923 Jayhawker Soon, Says Editor New Pictures of Organization Houses and Read Show Reviews to Be Features Art work on the 1923 Jayhawker annual will be completed within a week, according to an announcement made by Ted Hudson, editor-in-chief. "And," he continues, "there will not be a cartoon in the whole volume. Caricatures will not be consistent with the beauty and spirit of this year's book which in truth is going to be 'an aristocrat of college annuals'." Instead of the cartoons, the editor says the book will be replete with cut drawings of an artistic nature and features and set off the their features. From all indications, this year's Jaghawer bids fair to outsell the 1922 volume by 500 copies, and the students are responding because of the value they are getting, according to the editors. "It has been the practice of Jay Hawkeye editors in the past to take the old cuts of organization houses," said Mr. Hedson, "and to use them, as they were, year after year, adding new pictures only of new houses. We have had taken with a special camera all residence of Hill organizations and these will appear appropriately in the annual." Another new feature which has been added to this year's book is the road section, reviewing and giving insights into the plays that shows playing Lawrence this year. To Stop Locker Thefts Will Allow Only Faculty and Students in Gym Recent locker thefts in the men gymnasium have necessitated the right enforcement of a new rule, G. B. Patrick, instructor of physical education, said this morning. Hereafter no one will be permitted in the gymnasium, locker rooms or swimming pool who is not a student of the Uni "As much is being done by the department as can possibly be done, to check depredations in the way of stolen gymnasium suits," said Mr. Patrick. Conditions are no worse than they have been in past years, and most of the lost suits and shoes belong to students who are careless and unintelligent. Any night in the week it is possible to find o dozen lockers left open, and parts of gym suits scattered all over the room. The new rule in regard to eligibility for entrance to the gymnasium except for social and athletic function is that it must be immediately according to Mr. Patrick. Leon Lundblade Married to Nina E. McCulloug Leon Landblade, LL. B., 222, and Miss Nina Elizabeth McCallough of Bellville, were married in Clay Center Saturday afternoon. Mrs. McCallough is the daughter of Mr. and Miss Melissa McCallough and for the past two years she has been teaching in the primary department of the Junior High School at Concordia. While in school, Mr. Landblade was very active in university affairs. She is a Phi Alpha Delta, professional law fraternity. He has been admitted to the state bar association and is now Republican nominee for county attorney of Cloud County. He is a son late John Landblade of Jamestown. Mr. and Mrs. Lundbilde will reside in Concordia where he will practice law. Mrs. Lundbilde will continue her work in the Junior High School. Gilpin's Rise To Prominence One Most Sensationa Maubar Was First t Discover Talent of Brilliant Negro Klauber Was First to Actor For the second time this year University students will have the opportunity of witnessing the performance of a play which made an instantaneous and smashing success on Broadway, and of seeing an actor who has played by prominent critics one of the first actors in America, Charles Gilpin. The "Emperor Jones" first made its appearance at the Princess Theatre, New York City, when Adolph Klunser signed Gilpin for the title role after witnessing the performance of Drinkwaters' play, Abraham Lincoln, which played Lawrence a few days ago. Immediately the New York Times, and other great papers in the cities where Gilpin appeared, burst out with quotations for the talented reggae actor, and national magazines, among them the American, paid tribute to him. Much has been written of the life of the man, which reads like a chapter in fiction, the bare facts being: he was born in Richmond, Va., and learned the art of elocution from Sisters in a Parochial school which he attended. Later his parents moved to Philadelphia and he secured a job at the musical firm where he singing and speaking enabled him to earn money at local entertainments and eventually he became a vaudeville performer. Later he joined a small stock company in Chicago where he obtained the necessary experience 8 Fame Came Over Night Play Written By O'Neill Play Written by O'Neill As for the play itself, The Empor- Jones was written by Mr. O'Neill, and his novel, O'Neill of Monte Cristo fame. It is of the adventures of a wily, deminicensing nrogue, once a Pallman porter, who imposes himself as svo- rever over a little island in the West indies. His subjects rob and torn year and the products of his imag- ery. Seats for The Emperor Jones at the Bowersock Theater are going rapidly, according to the manager, Charles Gilpin will speak this afternoon in the Little Theatre in Green Bay all students who care to hear him. Orpha Harding, president of the W. S. G. A., has announced that the date rule will be off tonight and for that event only. Dramatic Art Gives Plays Class Presents Plays by Gale Pillet and Isley The three plays given by the Dramatic Art class yesterday afternoon in the Little Theater were: "Two Crooks and a Snake," by Eugene Pugh; "The Neighbors," by Zona Gale and "The Holy Innocents," by Isley. The casts were as follows: In "Two Crooks and a Lady," Milton, the hawk, was played by Frank Husted; Lucille his accomplish, by Pearl Pugi; Mrs. Simms-Vane, by Lucille Haines; Miss Jones, by Catherine Crissman; police inspector, by Donovan Stetler; and Garrity, by Normile O'Brien. For "The Feast of the Holy Incensus," the cast was: Cornelia Milk Blanche Eckles; Electa, her sister, Lela Alica Belt; Mrs. Oblure, Louise Phillips; Jennie, Gladys Kaufmann; and Mrs. Oman, Lorrie Collins. Armena Rumberger, A. B., 229 is teaching in the high school at Kingman this winter, friends in Lawrence Saturday and Sunday. Engineers' Reception Wednesday The faculty of the School of Engineering will give their annual reception for engineering students in Marvin Hall at 7:30 c'clock, Wednesday. Oct. 25. Special musical numbers and skits are presented by Prof. John A. Dent, head of the entertainment committee. The cast for "The Neighbors" was Grandma, Miss Chilcote; Mrs. Abel, Miss Slaven; Ezra Williams, Leslie Baird; Peter. Mr. Clauseen; Izette Katherine Kennedy; Ms. Moran, Jean Bennett; Mrs. Trot, Mary Throcmorton; and Mrs. Ellsworth, Fern Hollingberry. An All-University Convocation is hereby called for ten o'clock Thursday morning in Robinson Gymnasium. Classes will be shortened to thirty-five minutes periods and the morning hedule will be as follows: 1st hour ... 8:30 to 9:05 2nd hour ... 9:10 to 9:50 3rd hour ... 11:00 to 11:30 4th hour ... 11:45 to 11:25 Chancellor. High Compliment Paid Exhibits Of K. U. Design Class Unavoidable Delays May Have Kept Kansas From Prizes Unfortunately the designs sent to the Seventh Annual Textile Design Exhibit, the Art Alliance of America, in New York, by Miss Rosemary Ketcham's design class, reached the day after the prizes had been awarded, because of delay in finish. Another prize, Miss Ketcham had set for their completion, and further delays due to the express company. However, in notifying the contestants that their designs were too late the jury stutted. "We were very much deturbed that your designs were not well done and you are lovely and should have been included when the prizes were awarded." It will be interesting for you to know that your designs have a very attractive place in the exhibit, and we hope that they will be admired by all." Aggie Game Seats Going The designs will be on exhibit to the public from October 24 to November 12. Athletic Office Has 900 Tickets For Sale Reserved tickets for the Agriculture game are now on sale, and may be obtained at the office of the Athletic Association or at the Round Corner Drug Store for $2.00. The seats are available on the thirty yard line in the new Stadium. *Seats in the old wooden bleachers may be obtained for $1.50.* Dr. F. C. Allen stated that the two soffits available for the K. U. rooters are selling fast, and all who desire to get their reservations in immediately. There will be two trains available Saturday morning for the game. The Santa Fo will operate a special leaving here at 9 o'clock and departing from Manhattan immediately after departure. The train to Union Pacific will have a regular train leaving here at nine. Those boarding this train may stay on Sunday if they so desire and return on same ticket. The round trip will cost one and a third fare, or $7.75, and slightly more on the Union Pacific. Nonchalant Nimrods Dubbed Gunbreakers "Burning midnight oil" has taken on a new meaning. Lights seen from students' windows at three or four o'clock in the morning do not always indicate that the occupant of the room is preparing himself for an 8:50 meal. That may be that he is only getting ready for a dawn-hunting expedition. It is not an uncommon sight, these chilly mornings, to see several ardent hunters making their way toward the ponds and sloughs where ducks are to be found. These men are usually supplied with the mechanical equipment for participation in the sport, but some mental apparatus is lacking. The Kansas City Star of October 2 contained a write-up and picture of Olive Horner who was graduated from the School of Engineering in 1913. Send the Daily Kansan home. "K. U. Guhbrenerkers" is the name applied to students who are inexperienced duck-hunters. This name results from stupidity displayed on the part of some would-be duck hunters, who attempt to kill ducks out of range, spoil the shot for hunters within gunshot. Interest In M. V. Conference Race Strong This Week Kansas-Kansas Aggie and Nebraska - Oklahoma Contests Hold Center of Stage Missouri Valley Standings Won Lost Tied Pct. Drake 2 2 0 .1.000 Nebraska 1 0 0 .1.000 Aggries 1 0 1 .1.000 Missouri 2 1 0 .750 Ames 1 1 .500 Kansas 1 1 .000 Oklahoma 0 0 1 .000 Montana 2 2 .000 Grinnell 0 2 .000 Kansas-Kansas Aggies at Manhattan. Games This Week Nebraska-Oklahoma at Norman. Missouri-St. Louis University at St. Louis. Ames-Washington at Ames, Grinnell-Coo, at Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Drake has no game scheduled. With Drake, Nebraska, and the Kansas Aggeres perched in first place in the Missouri Valley conference at Iowa State, the week centers around the Nebraska-Oklahoma game and the Kansas-Kansas Aggerie game. Drake, the present leader in the Valley, has no game scheduled for this week. Oklanoma May Upset Dope The Nebraska-Sooner game is one that is hard to forecast. Comparing the teams, the Cornhaskers should leave Norman Saturday night with another game in their won column. But games played in Oklahoma are never win until the final whistle blows, as the Jayhawk football team must play a game against main conditions may favor the Sooner huskies and with this advantage, the beef and skill of the Nebraskans may count for skill. The game last Saturday between the Sooners and the Aggies which ended in a tie, is indicative of a powerful Sooner offense, rather than a weak Aggie defense. It speaks of Owen Dowson or But Nebraska should win, placing the Cornhuskers and the Bulldogs in a tie for first place. Kansas Expects Hard Game Kansas Expects Hard Game the Jayhawker-confid ac贴 on Mason with a slightly favoring the Aggies but there is confidence in the student body at Lawrence that the Clark machine will win. There is no confidence among the coaches and pinyiners, and planning and planning for a hard game. Comparative scores mean little but they are nice to toy with. The Aggies beat Washington 47 to 0. Kansas won from the Ichabods, 32 to 3. The Titans beat Washington University by good scores while Drake also made the Jayhawkers take the count. So the Aggies have the dope their way. But there is a feeling in the Kansas student body, a trifle cocky perch, that the Jayhawkers had when playing Kansas and that the Jayhawkers will win despite dope. **GIG VETTER** by winnih will stay in a tie with Drake for first place in the conference race. The Kars suns, on the other hand, will register in the final. Aggie Victory Will Tie Drake The other Valley game is between Ames and Washington, at Ames. The Cyclones held Missouri Tigers to a 12-0 victory. They point also to an Ames victory. Missouri is not playing a Valley game this week, meeting St. Louis University at St. Louis in a more or less of a practice game. Grinnell meets Coe College in another non-conference game. The latter game is this year as Coe College has good material this year for a small school. Lawrence Rooters Will See K. U. Play Aggies The Lawrence High School football team goes to Manhattan Friday to play the High School, Sixteen Team Coach Coach Max Killen will make the trip The team and many of the Law- rence rooters will stay over in Manhattan Friday night to see the Jay- hawker-AGgle battle on Saturday. Miss Esther Humbarger, of Salina, spent Saturday and Sunday vising her sister, Elizabeth Humbarger, c'23, at the Theta Phi Alpha house. New Faculty Members Will Give Joint Recital Professor Waller Whitlock, tenor, and Miss Fanny May Ross, pianist, new members of the faculty of the School of Fine Arts, will give a joint recital Monday evening, October 30, in Fraser Chapel. Professor Whitlock took the place of Professor W. B. Downing, who is an leave of absence from the University for one year studying with Theo Whitlock and Professor Whitlock has studied with several well known teachers, among them are John Hofmann and Theodore Harrison. Miss Ross was first assistant to the Music at Stephens College, Columbia, before coming to the University. W. A. A. Committee Plan Program For Homecoming Week Association to Give Play, Pantomime and Stunts For Benefit of Homecomers Members of the University W. A. will be in charge of the women get-together home-coming week, a coving to Nestor Moore, presiden dating a number of con mites to work with a snappy and treating program The playlist is to be supervised by Mary Helen Hamilton. Miss Hamilton is to be assisted by Frances Martin, Gladys Snoyer, and Lella Python. Phillipa Phillips is chairman of the audition committee members of the committee are Jean Bennett, Bonnie Ramey, and Clare Ferugus. The stunts will be worked out by Olive Ashley, chairman of the committee, Dorolyn Boyd, Mona Foulk, and Charlotte Pearson. A committee was appointed to consider arrangements for a W. A. A. picnic. Marjorie Ashby, chairman of the committee, met Mary Harley and Margaret, Baird. Lela Duncan, assisted by Mary Minis, is to conduct the songs and yells Speeches for the program are being arranged for by Grace Darby. Gladys Snoyer is chairman of the committee appointed to prepare and present at the next meeting of the W. A.契 an amendment to the W. A.契 constitution concerning the awarding of sweaters. The members of the committee are Charlotte Pearson, Margaret Walker, and Mary Hoover Hamilton. The committee is to meet with Miss Barto and Miss Hoover, instructors in the department of physical education. K. U. War Veterans Meet "Trainees" Hold Convocation at Blake Hall "Trainers" of the United States Veterans' Bureau at K. U. met in their annual convention yesterday several talks of interest. Chancellor E. H. Lindley was the principal speaker. Others were George Sechrist, employment representative from the Kansas City office of the Veterans' Bureau; John H. Dykes, national chairman of the rehabilitation program for veterans of the Veterans of the World War; and H. S. Jacks, field agent of the Kansas City office of the bureau. John R. Dyer, dean of men, presided. Mr. Dykes, the D. A. V. representative, is a former K. U. man. He left school in 1917 to enter the first officers' training camp, but finished his work toward an A. B. degree after the war. W. S. G. A. Tea Postponed On account of the special meeting of the Y. W. C. A. tomorrow, the W. S. G. A. tea has been postponed and the following day there will be a Halloween' ten, at the usual hour in Henley House. The social committee has been elected and the following girls will be in charge; Margaret, Marion Walker, Laura Treston, Betty Testad, and the Thaler Kaster. Organize Reading Club Miss Clara Johnston who attended summer school at the University in 1921 has organized the "Sunday Evening Reading Club" in Topeka. The club meets each week and books by very good critics, such as Mr. C. J. Massex who was on the program last year Varsity basketball practice will be held this evening from 6 to. 7:30 o'clock—Dr. F, C. Allen. State Penitentiary Band To Play Here Thursday Morning Warden Armine Will Address Convocation on Phases of Penal Ward Work An opportunity to hear the famous thirty-piece band of the state penitentiary will be afforded the students of the University at Thursday's Convocation. An Aimline will bring forty persons by automobile to Lawrence for the occasion. Preceding the concert, Warden Annirine will give a talk concerning some of the phases of the work done at the institution at Lansing. There are other speakers, including the Chancellor and officials of the peninsularity. Convocation Worth Attending According to Dean Kent, of the School of Education, this will be a convocation well worth attending. "I believe that this event will prove to be really worth while to the students and to their families," he said in a statement this morning. "We know very little of the most of our great state institutions and what they are doing and this will afford an opportunity to see one or two of the phases of the work done in one of the real important of them. We must not forget that this university is not the only place where educational facilities are to be had. The concert was a welcome addition and is an evidence of real work and interest and we should show them that we appreciate their work by attending convocation. Concert Will Be Feature The main feature of the program will easily be the concert which is given by the excellently trained penitentiary band. The following numbers will be rendered: Overture, Norma...Belleni Untied, United...Podewarenz Walzt, Blue Danube...Strass Fantasia, A Spanish Festival. Demerssman "K. U. Has 1200 Students" Says Auto Sign Goodyear Co. Can't Count That the "University of Kansas has 1200 students" is the important-if-ftrue statement on a large Goodwin sign at the University of Missouri. Drew McLaughlin, editor of The Republican at Paola and president of the Kansas Editorial Association, in a letter to Professor Flint Hodgson, of The University of this harrowing bit of information. A few miles west of the town a large United States Tire billboard records that Lawrence was founded with that of the "New England Maid Society." "Current history is more important than ancient, in this case, and the New England maids aren't suffering; but somebody should persuade the Goodyear people to multiply by four," said Mr. Flint. Cosmopolitan Culb Will Hold Open House the 29th The Cosmopolitan Club will have open house Sunday afternoon, October 29, from 3 to 6 clock. Members of the faculty, students and guests are invited by the members to visit the museum and beana and was formerly the home of Prof. B. M. Allen. It was purchased by the University housing committee and is operated on a co-operative basis, any surplus which remains after the interest and operating expenses are paid being turned in on the purported site. So that ultimately the house will become the property of the club. At present there are twenty-two members living in the house, representing six different nationalities. They are: one American, one Japanese, one Greek, 3 Chinese, 4 Hindus, and ten Filipinos. Snooner Is Crowded Spooner Library is crowded nearly to capacity every day, according to Mick McDonald, secretary to E. N. Manchester, director of libraries. There are now 145 seats in the main building, but there are added except at cost of severe crowding. The upstairs room is also filled to capacity. Alpha Gamma Delta announces the pledging of Jessie Edmondson, of Lawrence. THE UNIVERSITY. DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAPP Associate Editor - Clare Ferguson Associate Editor - John Robinson Campus Editor Raymond Poyer Writers Raymond Poyer Sport Editor Glick Schultz Plain Tail Editor Perry Jones Domain Deanne Dewitt Exchange Editor Devaughn Francis BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager...Lloyd Ruppentin Asst.'s Bus. Mgr...John Montgomery, Jr. ROARD MEMRERS Ben Hilbs Doris Fleener Ruth Carter Laura Cowdery Chester Shaw Carlton Powerz Movi Hart Caroline Harack Subscription price, $25.00 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $20.00 for one semester; 50 cents a month; 15 cents a week. Entered as secondclass mail matter September 17, 1879, at the post office at Lawrence, Kannas, 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 Kanoan, from the press of the Department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phone: K. U. 25 and 66 The Daily Kansan aims to picture the students' lives and challenges the Kansan to go further than merely printing the news by standing for the ideals of education, justice, humanity; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be kind; to be caring; to be more serious science to wiser hands; to be more intelligent; to ability the students of the University. TUESDAY, OCT. 24, 1922 Peacock Fussfoot Johnson, the world's premier prohibition exponent, has started to campaign the continent of Europe. He intends to make the whole thing dry by 1950. THE AFTERMATH Well, he'll probably make his "mark" in Germany! "I wish I could buy a ticket to a distant point without being told where it was, and when I got there step off the train and lose myself. I wouldn't want to see anyone I know or have anything at all to think about. Just to forget." That remark, made by one of the professors on the hill, is echoed today by students, instructors, business men, housewives everywhere. Weariness is the strange new wolf that has come to stalk the footsteps of the world; weariness not of flesh but of spirit, the kind of weariness that befuddles the brain and deadens the heart, that makes men greet each new day with dull, unenergetic eyes. The thrill has gone out of things. The old glad zeat has left us, and we move about like drugged creatures in out little routines. The reason is plain. We are living in the aftermath of the strained, emotion-consuming years of the war when the vitality of civilization was drained away, leaving only hollowness and depression behind. A smoke barrage of ennui has settled over the earth and it cannot be blown away in a month or a year. Only the strong winds of a new life can break the cloud. That these winds will come in time we must believe, but from where no one can be sure. Socialists and scientists, churches and schools claim to possess the secret of their release. Perhaps they are all deceived. Perhaps a new star will appear in the East and lead us back over the hills of our tribulations to the peaceful valleys and sunlit hills of our fathers, to the land where we can again glory in the struggle, and feel that "God's in his heaven, "God in his heaven, "All's right with the world." Until that time we can only "hole fast." LIBRARY CLOSING HOUP LIBRARY CLOSING HOUR Students on the second floor of Spooner library have recently been experiencing no little inconvenience due to the fact that preparations for closing are begun fifteen or twenty minutes before the regular closing hour. Chaira are violently pushed into place, windows noisily lowered, and sometimes lights are switched or off, presumably as a signal b students that 10 o'clock is approach ing. Fifteen minutes is a short time but it may often be just the time needed to complete a particular task at hand. The library is there for the convenience of students, and as long as the closing hour is reported to be 10 o'clock, students should not be disturbed long before that time by the activities of librarians who are too anxious to get away. Bandits in Kansas City last week almost cut off a man's finger in an effort to get a diamond ring he were. Now such practices must stop. If bandits钳 their trade in a perfectly respectable manner without resorting to such human actions, someone really ought to pass a law of some kind. PRACTICAL IDEALISM The death of Lyman Abbott, theologist, editor and philipist, marks the passing of another of the old school of journalism in whose ranks have marched William Dean Howells, Charles Ransom Miller and a few others. These are the men whose lives and works have shaped the thoughts and opinions of thousands of American people—men whose deeds have been examples of high positions nobly filled—men for whose living, he world has been a better place. Lyman Abbott was editor in chief of "The Outlook" at the time of his death and was actively engaged as pastor of the Plymouth Church, Brooklyn—succeeding Henry Ward Beecher in this capacity. He has been prominent in civic life and altho his eighties, was in war work in france and received the knighthood f the Legion of Honor. His capacity for intellectual work was prodigious and a score of books bear his name as author. He was versatile and with power ful mental concentration. His idealism has shown him "on the side of the angels" and his beneficial and restorative deeds have marked him just as definitely for the cause of humanity. His life is a beautiful record of one whose civil life has meant an opportunity for good, whose journalism has been a torch of justice and whose religion has stood for a broadminded application to socia seeds of the country. Truly his has been the practical idealism. Headline: Jamaica Editor arraigned for Killing of Bartender. He will be fortunate if indignant crowds of tourists permit immediate action to stop there. OLD MAN NORTH Old Man North is still in a doubtful mood as to the correct time when he will make his appearance on the Hill. The last few days have been fore-runners of winter according to rumors; days when his delegates were in the field locating the cracks and crevices, and stripping the tinted colored leaves from the trees in order that he may have an unhamped path on which to wage his annual campaign. Then it will be time for him to pucker up and whistle, and then will rain, sleet, frost and snow divide their time between as and their Northern throne. The shortening of the cool days bring a notice from nearly every student, together with the disappearing of the sparrows from their sunny winter homes, the gathering of the harvest and the husking of corn, that the old fellow is just about ready to change his note from "fair and warmer" to "unsettled and colder." Some people have watchdogs so vigilant that they themselves can't get to the house after dark without losing a pants leg. Much the same thing might be said of nations' overvigorous policies. My feet like it wadn't worn! With outstretched limbs and half-closed eyes To My Cat Angeline Her hair of floss is night's own crown. In undulating curving line Her eatin skins alike slowly down Her brain of fish is slightly more sore. From `cumbent` skin to slender toes. Her satin skin slims slowly down That's secretly found adown the back. Where's it being found? somewhere in the back. almostly the ewe weaned. I am and store from widening oats of green. She stretches softly, my fair queen takes a seat in her chair. The while by diana wax laid hare her glaming teeth show white like snow and she opaacted before me. *o'nella bellechelles a gew* *she was a gourd divina* so I have found Angulie. > 1 have found from Angelica. —Hazel Eberhart, a.25. Official Daily University Bulletin ALL-UNIVERSITY CONVOCATION: Copy received by Florence E. Bliss, Editor, Chancellor's Office An All-University Convocation is called for Thursday at 10 o'clock in boston Gymnastics. A thirty piece hand from the Kansas State Penitentiary. Oct. 24, 1922. CATALOGUE COMMITTEE; There will be a meeting of the University Catalogue Committee at 2:30 friday afternoon in Room 112 Fraser Hall. E. H. LINDLEY, Chancellor Jayhawk Jaraon Mary's Little Lamb is all out of style in the East. It's a pet monkey now. Once upon a time the demure little things said, "You'll have to ask father." Now it is, "Step on her, Ted. The old man's gaining on us!" No. 33. "Train runs over girl; she buries on to school"—news item. It sounds like the old K. U. spirit when one fights his way across the corner at Spooner Library. The fellow who thinks the prof is cheating him is the one who tries to cheat the prof. A news item states that a certain Kansas town granted six divorces and issued six marriage licenses the same day, but issued a dozen of the other, so to speak. It is reported that no less than three University men said "Good morning, judge," early last Monday. One of our dearest friends has been informed by the doctor that he will have to give up "wine, women and song" if he intends to live after Jannah. He would have had the matter he replied that he has given up singing entirely. Special students will be required to take rigid examinations at Kansas State Agricultural College before being allowed to matriculate. Plowing a straight furrow, milking a prize Jersey, and husking corn, we suppose. Missouri, Washington and Washburn were among the "also rans" Iast Saturday. On Other Hills America is importing perfumed lip-stick from France! Well, in the first place, it's disadvantageous for a man—a fellow will be terribly confined on a dark night if he hates it when it should have been helenotlent! Twenty-five colleges are expected to participate in the Syracuse Invitation Run which is scheduled for November 4, at Syracuse. This meet will be the second of the fall season for the Columbians, as a meet will be run Oct. 28 on the Van Cortland course against Rutgers. Bare limbs have been permitted in vaudeville again. The censors say so. Well, it's about time for bare limbs; it's October. Classes at Columbia University, New York City, are to have football teams as a part of the plan to revive inter class sports on Morningside Heights. The Frosh, Soph, and Jr. teams will be held round robin and there will be four teams in the field next year when the 24 men become seniors. Washington State College new radio broadcasting station, which was installed this summer, is the largest in the northwest. A course in "How to Study" and "How to Take Notes" is offered at Ohio State University this year. The textbooks used are "How to Study," by G. F. Swain, and "Note Taking," by S. S. Seward. The course emphasizes that system in studying is essential. F. J. KELLY, Chairman College men and women of Kansas will give financial aid to the deserving foreign student next winter, it was decided by delegates from Alabama and Missouri at Emporia Oct. 22. Each school will make a campaign for funds. Manhattan house cats are under lock and key these days for it is considered quite unhealthy for them out of doors. The chief maniac in cat kingdom seems to be the small boys with sacks on their shoulders and the girls in school uniforms. Kansas State Agricultural College is paying 50 cents apiece for cats and zoology classes use them in experimental work. ANNOUNCEMENTS The Botany Club will meet at 7 o'clock Wednesday evening, October at the home of Prof. W. C. Stevens at the home of Professor W. C. Stevens must be present. Professor Stevens will talk on *The Mysterious Nature of Graft Hybrids Brought to You* The Women's Medical Association will meet at 7:30 o'clock Tuesday evening, October 24, in Dr. Martha Bacon's office to lect officers and discuss plans for the coming year. All pre-medic women are invited. The Bacteriology Club will hold initiation of new members Wednesday day evening, October 25, in room 241. All members should be there promptly. Kappa Pi will meet Wednesday evening, October 25, at 7 o'clock in Myers Hall. Bennie Christian will meet Saturday at 10 a.m. and pledges are asked to be on time. Hail ye Republicans! "Morgan for Governor" mayh; 8:00 o'clock, Wednesday night at Myers Hall. Tom Harley will speak on the bonus. Everybody is invited.-Signed: "Morgan for Governor Club." The Christian Science Society will meet this evening from 7:30 to 8:00 in Myers Hall. All students interested are extended a cordial invitation. Regular rehearsal of Men's Glee Club in Central Administration Building. Wednesday evening at 7:30 o'clock. All members must be press The date rule is off for the play, "The Emperor Jones" at the Rower-tight. Suspension of the rule is hard, in Harding, president of W. S. G. A. For fully three months we have failed to notice in Kansas papers that age-worn, cobwebay gag, "Would Julius Caesar?" R. J. Dyer, Manager. WANT ADS LOST—Bunch of Adam and Eva ticketa. Finder call 1243 Red. O25 LOST—Eversharp pencil with name engraved. Finder please call 2138 Blue. -027 WANTED- Man roommate, large room, moderate rent, 1038 Tennessee. Call 276 White. O-24 FOUND—In Spooner Library small sum of money. Owner may recover same by satisfactory description of property and by paying for this ad.-E. N., Manchester, librarian. Q25 GARAGE FOR RENT—1345 Mass. $3 per month. Inquire High School Inn. —025 LOST-Gold jewelled bracelet with jeweled ball hanging on it, yesterday afternoon on hill. Finder will receive liberal reward. Call 240-0-042 FOR SALE-Three octave sheet xylophone equipped with resonators and case. Phone 607. —024 LOST-Gold jewelled bracelet with jewelled ball hanging on it, yesterday afternoon on bill. Finder will receive liberal reward. Call 244-00—024 SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire to earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Pleasant work; willing to work with Wrath. Writing 3,444 Wayne Ave., Kansas City, Mo. - S79 LOST—Gold fountain pen, with name "Helen" engraved. Please return 1116 Ind. or call 295. O-24 LOST—Sigma Chi pin. Name on back. Reward. Return to 1439 Tann. 0-26 PROFESSIONAL CARD DR. J. W. GIRONN (Dantz) Special attention to prevention and treatment of pyrrhhea. 394 Perkins Building. Tel. 507. LAWRENCE OPENS COMPANY (Ex- cusive Optometrists). Eyes examin- ed; glasses made. Office 1025 Mass. We make clothes. We do alterations on both women's and men's clothes, relining ladies' and men's overcoats, cleaning and pressing. Suiting you, anyway. That's My Business SCHULZ THE TAILOR 917 Mass. St. JULIAN BARRER'S STUDIO Wraps and Coats of enduring beauty and exquisite craftsmanship Coats that are different Blouse back and cape back Side trimmed and Straight lined Fur trimmed and plain. $34.75 to $150.00 Drescher's Correct Dappert for Women & Misses Thomas Shoe Shop Electric WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. United Army Stores Co 102 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Army Goods Ladies who desire expert Hair-Bobbing Patronize the First Door South of Von's STADIUM BARBER SHOP "The Shop of Service" "GIFTS THAT LAST" THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO LET LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING Gustafson BELLS FLOWER SHOP Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS Phone 139 825 1-2 Mass Wed. and Thurs. Wed. Only Varsity-Bowersock Shows—2:30—4:00—7:30—9:00 p. m. WITH WANDA HAWLEY MILTON SILLS ROBERT CAIN JACQUELINE LOGAN JESSE L. LASKY PRESENTS A GEORGE MELFORD PRODUCTION "BURNING SANDS" A Paramount Picture A warm desert romance of one long, breathless thrill. The story of an English beauty who sought love across the burning sands. A powerful untartent scale by the man who made "The Sheik." From the new and sensational novel by Arthur Weigall Scenario by Oliga Printzau and Walderam Young Also Late Sport Review Adults 33c. Children 10c. "Adam" Call Your "Eva" Now! for the Y.W.C.A.Benefit Play Adam and Eva BOWERSOCK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31 A Modern Comedy---Bright and Amusing The story of a rich American business man, who has a genius for making money, and not even a trace of talent for managing his own family. Prices — $1.00, 75c, and 50c Mail Orders to Elizabeth Dunkel, Henley Hall — Seats Go on Sale Friday at the Bowersock THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Economy Program In Germany to be Introduced Soon attempt Made to Curtail Luxuries by the Increase of Taxation Taxation (United Press Staff Correspondent) Berlin, Oct. 24—Once upon a time just before the war—one could buy a good milk cow in Germany for 400 marks. Today one is lucky if one can buy a couple of pounds of butter for the same amount. And everything 'else has risen in price in proportion. No matter whether produced in Germany or in foreign lands, the prices move only slightly in the value of the mark reckoned on a dollar basis. By the time this is printed they will probably have doubled. In the last two days the price of margarine has been artificially raised from 120 and 10 marks per kilogram to 289–for other reason than that the dollar has risen rapidly in the last few weeks. Prices are High Margarine, practically a home product, with some Dutch importations now costs as much or more than butter, and the German people—especially the "restless" press, are beginning to wonder why. Attempting to Check Rise Everyone who has something to sell or a service to give has followed the course of the dollar faithfully, boosting his price when the dollar was strong—and keeping it boosted when the dollar tumbled. Attribution. An artificial high level of prices has therefore resulted which in most cases have logical basis for existent prices. The prices double and treble over the course of a few weeks and wages hardly have a chance to catch up. Hence, the German worker and white-collar desk fellows with small pay feel the pinch which their own merchants are creating. The government is greatly concerned with the situation. Means to check the rise in prices are being proposed. The government proposes to regulate the use of grains and sugar in the food industry, in a tighter watch on the night life. Efforts will be made to see that all taxes are paid and paid promptly. To Start Food Rationing A curtailment of luxuries is being attempted by increased taxes thereon. food rationing will no doubt be resorted to before winter comes. The factory councils are demanding that there be less waste in business. A compromise between the old farm and the new program will be invoked. Deliveries of goods from the farm lands to the cities will be expedited. A genuine alarm exists in Germany over the coming of winter. With workmen forced to pay 25,000 mark for the winter's supply of coal, workmen are now paying yearly wages—the situation along that line especially looks gloomy. Blind Student Is Marvel For His Success Dallas, Tex., Oct. 24 - Jeff William Smith, student at Southern Methodist University here, does not permit his blindness to interfere with his ambition. Wonderful Memory Accounts For His Success Smith, a freshman, has been reported by his instructors doing work far above the average of his class. sible for Smith to master each day's assignments without any difficulty, it says. Being unable to read the textbooks, Smith has some of his fellow students to read the lesson to him. Only one reading is necessary for him to fully read it. Besides being a good scholar, Smith takes an active part in student activities. He is a member of the university band, and has attended all football games this season, and said he enjoyed them. Five Try Out For Club The first tryout play for the Dramatic Club will be given in Little Theatre at 7:30 on Wednesday October 25. The play, "Mrs. O'Nalky Telephone," is a short movie with a cast of four characters. Those who are trying out by reading to-morrow night are Stanley Pennell, Lois Robinette, Wilda Dobson, Elizabeth Hewderson, and Allen Chappius. Lane Dutton, Edward Riley, and Roy Linn spent Saturday and Sunday in Soldier, Kansas. Miss Dorian Parks of Kansas City Ma. spent Friday and Saturday in Lawrence. Fayetteville, Ark., Oct. 24. The University of Arkansas's youngest freshman this year is but fourteen years old and has received educational training students in forty-six. Lad of Fourteen is a Junior at U. of Arkansas Records of the registrar show that the junior student, Cleveland Buchan Hollobaugh, Jr., of Leslie, Ark, is one of the youngest students ever admitted to the institution. He graduated from Leslie High School last spring and is carrying a regular course in college. The oldest student is Robert Horton Angus of Fayetteville. He was married in 1911, and went through the world war, being wounded while in France. He is taking an engineering course. The youngest woman student is Miss Mary Elizabeth Smith, 15, of Paris, Ark. She is a regularly classi- sioned in the College of Arts and Sciences. Junior Women Will Hold Big Dinner To Create Class Spirit Games, Stunts, Yells Will Be Feature of the Program For the Evening "In this way," said Mary Rose Barron, junior W. S. G. A. representative, "we hope to create a better class spirit than ever before—that, in fact, is the main purpose of the dinner, although we also want the Junior girls to get acquainted at the same time." "You'll be sorry if you miss it, say the girls who are planning the Junior dinner which will be held Thursday evening, October 26, at the Promptly at 7 o'clock the girls will march to the Commons for dinner where Dean Blitz and Miss Barnen will talk to them. At 6 o'clock the girls will meet at Robinson Gymnasium to hold a "yelfest," play old-fashioned games, and entertain with a series of stunts under the management of Elizabeth Martin. Joins "Puddler's" Crew to Learn Business There will be no election of class officers this year, Miss Barrons said. Millionaire's Son Labors Business Chicago, Oct. 24 (United Press). A chip off the old block is Joseph Block, who is going to follow in his father's footnotes. Block, 22, the son of L. E. Block, millionaire chairman of the board of directors of the Inland Steel Company and the graduated from Cornell University. He is now learning the steel business from the ground up. For a month he was a member of the "puddlers gang" at the Inland Steel Company mill, at Chicago Heights. The "puddlers", b y the way, have the hottest job in the mill, stripped to the waist, they direct the course of the huge billets of molten metal which come from the furnaces. They are the most versatile, half hearted way, either. He eats, lives and sleeps with his companions at the mill. He shares a room with a brother worker, carries a dinner pail and joins in the evening and morning march of the workers. He earns 35 cents an hour. Block is a favorite among the burly, musculus crew. Long, clinging skirts, high heels, and narrow vamped shoes did not prove popular at a meeting of the decade of women's colleges in Illinois No Welcome for Clinging Skirts at Meeting of Deans Ed. White With Spokane Company Edin L. Wale, R. B. S. 22, is now working for the Washington, Population Center, Spokane, Mr. White expects to be with this company for the next three years. Mr. White was President of the Stu- dium of Agriculture and a member of a members of the Sigma Xi, honorary research fraternity. The heralded departure of the short skirt was deplored. Due to the present sensible type of dressing, the good effect of girls' camps and the greater Hilda Murdock, A. B. 22, who is teaching mathematics in Abileh high school this winter, visited friends in Lawrence Saturday and Sunday. Concern was expressed that a return to the "slinker" styles would mean that much that has been gained will again be lost. Good health was stressed as the all-important goal to be attained by all girl students. Ed White With Snokane Company effect of girls' camps and the growth emancipation of women, the 1022 high school class, more vigorous type than her predecessors of other years, speakers agreed. "English tramps are very democratic," said Prof. Victor Solberg, of the department of English when tell-tale stories were popular in Europe this summer. "I had nearly reached London, when I met one of these vagabonds, and taking me for one of his tribe, he offered to share with me his cannon of boiled pots." Democratic English Tramp Offers To Share His Can Of Slum With K. U. Prof "In some places the American front was perfectly preserved. There still remained the barbed wire entanglements that were part of the evidence of modern warfare." Professor Sohberg served for Europe, early in June and began his walking tour at Chaumont, which was the general headquarters of the first American expedition to Cattillon-Sur-Seine, headquarters of the second American army. He then went through Mont-baro, Fonteenay, Senur, Alesia, Flavigy, and Sombronor to Dijon. From here he followed the old Roman roads through the heart of Burgundy, the province noted for its wines. "I met no tourists here, and very few foreigners walking in any part of France. My friends warned me New $110,000 Dormitory For Pittsburg Normal Work was started last week on the dormitory for women to be erected at the State Normal Training school at Pittzburg. Contracts for the erection of the structure were awarded October 3. The building must be completed by July 1, of next year. The cost is to be $110,000. The site for the dormitory, which is just across the street from the campus on the South, was purchased by the university's administrative men. Plans for the admission to the dormitory which will accommodate 114 women have not been made, but it is probable that women status may be applied by application and in order of filing. William Benton, LL. B. '20, spent Saturday and Sunday at the Alpha Tau Omega house. before I started that it would be very dangerous to walk through France because everyone is so suspicious of strangers in that country, and I certainly found them so. There was a very interesting artists colony at Senur and another also in the old walled villae of Flavigny. The second phase of Professor Solberg's trip began at Dijon, from where he turned northeast and passed Bescouan, and then to Belfast. From here he went west and followed the coast that fortress almost to Soissons. Phi Delta Theta fraternity announces the pledging of Donald Ken dall, of Great Bend. After spending several weeks in France, he crossed to England and spend a week in London. He then walked west from King's College at Oxford to Warwick and spent a week visiting the Shakespearean country. "I was greatly impressed by the strip of valley surrounded by hills with Flovigyn on one side and the Roman ruins on the other. Alisa on the higher studies by Millet in the home of his daughter-in-law in Paris also attracted me as well as the battlefield of Hartmann-willerskoff in the Vosges Mountains, where 50,000 men were killed in one week." A. F. Oiney, A. B. 15, principal of the Abilene High School, requests that all graduates and former students be present at the Homecoming game between Abilene and Emporia Highs, on Friday, October 27, at Abilene. The game, which starts at 3:00, will be preceded by a parade starting at 1:30 and ending at the field. Moore and Knappen to Geologists' Convention Dr. R. C. Moore and Prof. R. S. Knappen, of the department of geology, will attend the convention of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists to be held in Denver October 25, 26, and 27. This is the second convention to be held this year, although previously the meetings were held annually. Discussion of oil drilling methods, location of fields, and the problems of the petroleum industry will occupy the delegates to the convention. The official publication of the Association, the Bulletin of the A. A. P. G. EVERYDAY Published in the interest of Electrical Development by an Institution that will be helped by whatever helps the Industry. is Send the Daily Kansan home. SUIT and HOUK-GREEN CLO. CO. OVERCOAT DAY $20.00 to $35.00 VARSITY THEATRE Today Only Shows: 7:30 p. m. and 9:00 p. m. Corrinne Griffith "DIVORCE COUPONS" A Southern Girl Who Married A Northern Man Who Divorces Adults 28c. Johnnie Jones Comedy "SUPPLY AND DEMAND" SOUND CONTROL Children 10c. ALL over the country the whistle is blowing for the kick-off, the start of that great game another college year. It will pay you to listen to this music Be on your toes when the whistle blows. A good start will carry you well on toward your goal. Let the aspirant for manager put in careful study of his team's needs, always eager to help — arranging a trip or carrying a pail of water. Let the football candidate start by working away till his muscles ache from bucking the line. Whatever activity you come out for, crowd a lot of energy into these early Fall days. Let the publications man be alert for news and tireless in learning the details of editorial work. Number 21 of a series And if a good start helps win camp honors, it helps win class room honors, too. The sure way to be up in your work is to aim now for regularity at lectures, up-to-date note-books and particular attention to the early chapters of text-books, thus getting a grip on the basics. This is best in the long run, and—selfishly—it is easiest in the long run. That is, if life after college is made easier by the things a bigger income can buy. Since 1869 makers and distributors or electrical equipment Western Electric Company WALK-OVER Plain What tweeds are in clothes this plain toe blucher is in shoes. The toe is wide—quite full. There's no leather better—browns or black. Price $8.50 BLACK MALE FASHION FOR ELC. DOB Otto Fischer's SHOES ARE GOOD SHOES Kirby Cleaners and Dyers 1109 Mass. St. An Overcoat Hat "The Record" See Our Window Display of Different Hats at $5 . This Hat has a rough, unfirmed effect. The texture goes well with the fleecy material of great coats. The color mixtures in stone and oxford gray, tan and brown are the latest hits. Welt edged, heavy rib bard, fulllined. Great values, too, at $5 HOUK-GREEN CLOTHING CO. Men's Gloves—$2.50 to $4.00 To match the color of your overcoat. BOWER SOCK 2 4 THEATRE TONIGHT OCTOBER BOWERSOCK THEATRE TUESDAY OCTOBER 24 ADOLPH KLAUBER PRESENTS THE MOST REMARKABLE PLAY of the CENTURY EUGENE O'NEILL'S THE EMPEROR JONES with the amazing actor CHARLES S. GILPIN originally produced by the Provincetown players COMING HERE AFTER AN ENTIRE SEASON AT THE PRINCESS THEATRE ~ NEW YORK AND LONG RUNS IN BOSTON - CHICAGO and PHILADEPMIA SECURE YOUR SEATS NOW Prices: 75c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 Plus Tax. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY RANSAN Missouri U. Asks For Appropriation Of Five Millions School of Law Receive Gift of $50,000 for Erection of Building Approximately five million dollars in appropriations for the University of Missouri will be asked of the Missouri State Legislature, which convenes in January. A budget was decided on at a meeting in Kansas City, Saturday, of seven of the nine curators of the school. As outlined, the building program calls for one and a half million dollars and includes these desired appropriations: $200,000 for a new gymnasium $250,000 for a new engineering building, $200,000 for another wing to the library, $250,000 for a new auditorium, $50,000 for addition to home economics building, $50,000 for an addition to Read Hall, the women's dormitory. In addition, an appropriation of $275,000 to complete the state hospital at Columbia is asked. Construction of the first unit of the hospital for which one-quarter million dollars already has been appropriated, is now under way. An appropriation of $300,000 for equipment, administration and *instruction at the hospital will be asked. Asks for Hospital Law Building Inadequate A gift of $50,000 for the erection of a new law building, given by Mr. and Mrs. Frank R. Tate of St. Louis, was announced. The gift is in the form of a memorial for the Tates' son, deceased, who was graduated from the University School of Law 'n the class of 1813. The curators made a dignified gift for additional $100,000 for the erection of the law building. It was pointed out by members of the board of curators that the present law building is not only inadequate but in that it is a free-rooftop structure in the in-building books valued at more than $100,000 is menaced. It was also announced at the meeting that John R. Lawson, former dean of the School of Law, who died recently, had bequeathed his private library to Mr. Lawson, and was said that Mr. Lawson's library was valued at more than $30,000. Miss Barto Head Of Physical Education Section At Topeka Teachers Plan High School Athletic Association For Kansas Girls Miss Margaret Barto, associate professor in the department of physical education, was chairman of the physical education section at the Toptoca devision of the high school State Teachers' Association which met last Friday. The section was represented by one hundred delegates. According to Miss Barto the meeting was especially successful. A Committee was appointed to see about organizing a High School Athletic Association throughout the State of Kansas. Uniform emblems are to be given in the association, transferable to the different high schools in the state is a part of the college's university organizations. The high schools of Illinois have already adopted the plan and Wisconsin is now taking it up. Virginia Haynes, who graduated from the University last year and is now director of the department of physical education in the junior and senior high schools at Ackhison, gave a paper at the meeting on "Physical Education versus Athletics for a High School Girl." Mr. and Mrs. Edward Park of White Cloud, Kan., visited in Lawrence Saturday and Sunday with their son, Ben P. Park, 23, and Mrs Park. Mr. Park, who is an archaeologist and collector of local Indian relics, spent much time inspecting the various University collections. The marriage of Mias Marie Jensen of Emporia, to O. C. Christenham, of Blackfoot, Idaho, took place in Emporia, Saturday morning, October 14 at 9 o'clock Mr. and Mrs. Christenham will make their home in Blackfoot, where Mr. Christenham is connected with the public schools. Mrs. Christenson was a special student in the University two years ago and while here she was a pledge of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Send the Daily Kansan home. University Club Will Have Court of Their Own Members of the University Club have formed a tennis club within their organization. A court is being finished at the end of Ohio street on the lot owned by the club. This lot is also the site of the future new home of the club. Men with teams from the club will haul dirt from the ground and making something of a level surface upon it. A Fordison roller was borrowed from the University and applied to the new court as well as the old one. Screened wall will be used to surface the screen to help it have to hold it in condition for playing by the end of this week. There are Plenty Of Jayhawkers In Bill's Town Kansas Alumni Engaged in Every Business in Emporia Although the Emporia Normal and College are competitors of the University of Kansas, a large representation of K. U. graduates and former students are connected with those schools. The Normal has the largest rep- resentative group, numbering eight while the College has only two. Frank J. G. Agrolles, 077, '07, is now Professor of Biology; Willis H. Carcuth- ter ational Administration; J. W. Mackenal, '01, g93', a teacher of Physical Sciences; Leonard A. Parke, '94 Professor of Business Administration; Wilbert D. Ross, '93, g93', who will be remembered as former State Superintendent of Instruction, is now in the department of education. Mrs Ross was graduated in '98 and their daughter, Marion, is now a junior in college. is head of the department of English. Luther H., Hangen, c20, is in charge of the publicity, and Anita M. Hostetter, c17, is a librarian. While in the College we do not have as large a representation, what we do have are of great importance Thomas W. Butcher, 94 is president and Raymond F. Miller, 123 is Professor of Physics. The Normal and College are not the only schools of Emporia representing K. U. L. A. Lowther, 94, is superintendent of the city schools, and Anna R. Manley, 121, is principal of the Roosevelt High School. William Allen White, f'1887-50, owner and editor of the Emporia Gazette, has on his staff four K. U. grades: Kalvin Lambert, f'13-16, man- aging editor; T. Lowther, 7, adveni- gent manager; John A. Mont- tray, 20, t簿 editor; editor, and Ruth Garve, A. B. 22, secretary to the editor. Other lines of business that graduates of the University are in are medical, legal, banking and a few miscellaneous ones. Roland E. Boynton, c'24, LL.B. 16, is the county attorney and it is interesting to Kanans to know that he is a nephew of W. A. White and it is his duty to swear out the complaint against White for violating the Kanas industrial court law. Other lawyers are "Skinny" Gilbert H. Fith, LL.B. 12, who was one of Kansas' football players. He has one of the most important corporation practices in Emporia and has had an success. Robert H. Hamer, LL.B. $^29$, was made the co-chairman of number years and led the K.U. Memorial Drive there. W. C. Screttingham,LL.B.$^28$ ,is an attorney, as also is Wilber W. Parker, LL.B.$^26$ There are two doctors that have had unusual success, Muri T. Capps, '14, and Fronce Fonconneau, '12. Dr. Fonconneau also was graduated from the University of Pennsylvania and received the Mayo Brothers. Kaiwin H. Newman, '90 is vice president and acting manager of the Citizens National Bank, which is by far the largest bank in Emporia. Kerneth Welch, LL. B. '21, on the football team of 1920, is also in an Emporia bank. A. H. Plumb, fs 87-90, is president of the Emporia Building and Loan Association. He is a son of former Senator Plumb. His daughter, Roxana, is attending the University at the present time. Curtis McCoy, e99, one of the foremost contractors of the city, has recently received contracts at Manhattan, Kane, and Columbia, Mo. Herman L. Smith, R. W. Thomas, LL. B., 77; Gomer Thomas, '77, and Luther Thomas, fa96-08, are members and officers of the Thomas Mortgage Company, with offices at Detroit, Mich. Dallas, Tex., Cal., and the home office at Emporia. Gridiron Gossip Glick Schuitz Washburn evidently sent a scout to the Kansas-Drake game, for the tech team to send an end run in the opening minute and play. But these tactics netted them few gains. Shannon was, without doubt, the star performer on the Jayhawker second team Saturday. He plunged through the line for good gains, running with his knees high in good form. Shannon showed lots of figh and only a mean tackle put him out of the game. There has been considerable criticism from Topeka papers concerning the pre-game that Kansas used the second team in the Washburn hockey team to win the "the same old stuff." Another paper calls such talk poor sportmanship. Of course there is not a regular first team. As long as there are more than eleven men on the squad there will be continual competition for places on the first team, the personnel of which is thus subject to change at any time. But Kansas has what can be called a first team. The second team did start the game Saturday and played most of the time. If there is any doubt that the team which started the game was not composed of second string men, just compare for a moment the play of these men and that of the eleven players, with which I end in end of each half for a few minutes. Such talk was far from being sportsmannish. In the first place, it was true. In the second place, Coach Boehner had the chance of having some of his best men injured in a game which had no benned on the Valley race. So he put the first team in the game for just a few games and to try out a new plava. The Kansas team was in a slump following the Army and Drake games and Coach Clark decided that the men needed rest. The first string men did not scrimmage at all last week preceding the Washburn game. It was part of Coach Clark's coaching system. As for the painting of the Stadium, the less said the better. It did not have the sanction of the student body at Washburn, of that we are sure, to whom small town staff?" Defacing the Stadium is the same as defacing a monument. Car Painted For Aggie Tilt Windshields Can Be Decorated Before Saturday Game “On to Aggieville.” This was the inscription appearing on the windshield of a Ford belonging to a Ioyal K. U, suporter. The car appeared on the Hill this morning decorated to fit the occasion. On one half of the windshield a large black hawk painted in crimson and blue. Anyone wishing the Bird painted on the windshield of his car before going to Manhattan Saturday can see George Hollingsby. An unusual Tobacco The gud hand of fashion! For dress or 'round town. We carry all kinds, from dress gloves to working mittens. Just your size, waiting for you here, at the following prices; 50c to $5 Gloves Dress Glove Value SKOFSTADS Buy a pair or two of President Guarderpa. A mighty inexpensive form of health insurance. And you can take your trousers hung just right. $1.50 Sanborn Back From Research Trig Prof. C.E. Sanborn, of Oklahoma Agricultural College, studying here for his doctor's degree, returned Monday from a trip of about two weeks duration in Southern Kansas. The professor of the search he is making on the biology of the different varieties of plant lice. Professor Sanborn, in addition to being on the faculty of the Oklahoma Agricultural College, is also State entomologist of Oklahoma. Has Women's Pep Club Jazzettes Will Work With Men at Norman Will Work at Norman Norman, Okin, Oct. 24 (United Press).—The Jazzettes, women's pop organization, and sister organization are organizing anized at the University this year. White skirt, red jacket, red jazzy tie and dinkie red cap pulled over one eye designates the jazzette. They are in the University. They appear at all athletic games and student meetings, injecting spirit and jazz everywhere they go. They have adopted a chant, a dance, a rough, a tough," of the rough nature. Newly elected officers are: Fredrere "Bill" Dewey, Norman, Madam Jazz; Inez Beaver, Holley, Recorder of Jazz, Wilma Whalley, Okhanna Hoover of the Shekels, and Evelyne Elmo, El Reno, jazz daze spiller. First Year Laws Elect Officers The first year class, of the School of Law, old election of officers, Monday morning, October 23. Those of Thomas Johnson; vice-president, Thomas Johnson; and secretary, Ralph Blake. Lois Burke, fc21, who is teaching at Bonner Springs this year, is visiting at the Sigma Kappa house. Marksmen In R. O. T. C. At the rifle practice held on the Kansas National Guard range last Saturday, five members of the local R. O. T. C. unit made score high enough to qualify as expert marksmans in the U. S. Army. These men were from the 200-ward A. A. Rinehart, C. U. Bradley, P. L. Harris, W人民法院. All of the men did exceptionally well. The shots were fired from the 200-yard firing points, and from the prone, standing, sitting, and kneeling positions. Local Unit Using Same System as U. S. Army Merchants Special Wednesday Only If It's Good Ice Cream You Can Be Sure The freshmen are being given preliminary exercises in marksmanship consisting of sighting, alining, and aiming with the Nebab and the celebrated McNab system for It Came From 29 Heavy, All Wool, Shaker Stitch, Slipover Sweater Coats—in plain Colors—and fancy Combinations- WIEDEMANN'S Phone 182 Sizes 34 to 42- $3.95 These coats sold from $7.50 to $12.50 Tomorrow for Notice Window ___ CARLS GOOD CLOTHES OUR AIM in both the laundry and dry cleaning departments is to give each individual customer the kind of service that suits him best. We also maintain an alteration and repair department under the supervision of an expert tailor. We Appreciate your patronage LAWRENCE STEAM LAUNDRY Phone 383 training expert rifleman, the same as is used in the U. S. army. From the results obtained so far, it is evident that there will be some freshman candidates for positions on the University Rifle Team. Miss Elnora Platz, of Abilene, visited her sister Ruth Platz, c24. Friday and Saturday. drainage engineers, of which Mr. Horner is a member, have been awarded the contract to build a large dike along the Missouri River. The project is one of the largest ever attempted in the Kansas City territory. Jae Massey, A. B. '22, is with the Stramberg and McGrevy Bond Company of Kansas City, Mo. HARRY POTTER Wooltex Silk and Wool Neckwear $1 The fall Four-in-hand in Wooltex Silk and Wool fabric has the snap of a whip crack. Not just a piece of silk and wool, but a masterpiece of silk and wool weaving. Wooltex do not winkle nor pull out of knits or light knotting—ways fresh and ready for wearing. Note the window display of Wooltex Four-in-Hands now showing. Ober's HEAD TO SOUTOUTZITTERS --- WATKINS NATIONAL BANK SURPLUS $100,000.00 CAPITAL $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. DIRECTORS C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Ashler, L. V. Miller, T. G. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishop SURPLUS $10,000.00 D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. Panders QUALITY JEWELRY GE When your friends drop in unexpectedly an electric chafing dish makes immediately possible a delicious Welsh rarebit or wholesome homemade candy. We have them in all styles and sizes Kansas Electric Power Co. 719 MASS. ST. 1. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XX. Artistry Conquers Racial Prejudices, Says Negro Actor Climb Star in "Emperor Jones Tells Interviewer of His Long Up-Hill Charles S. Gilpin, negro actor, who starred in the "Emperor Jones" at the Bowerstock Theater last night, did not begin his stage career with aspiration of being called the best new actress in the country, work and it is my work that I want to live," he told a reporter last evening before the performance. "Regardless of race, color, or creed, a man should strive to excel in what ever work he is doing. It has long been the opinion that the negro's place in society is behind men and dancing. I believe that the negro man's place is where he makes it. The spirit of competition makes the successful man or woman. To be a good actor one must have a high degree of self-confidence, but not too much of it." Giloin a Printer by Trade Near Richmond at this time there was a resort of questionable character. Charles and his pal often sneaked into the apartment to earn a dollar and a half for an evening's entertainment. Thus began the career of this great actor. Gibpin was a printer by trade. In his early school days he took part in small amateur theatricals, with no intention of making it his life work. Jerome Jeterone of the parochial school encouraged him to train his voice. Had Many Jobs After finishing school he drifted from one occupation to another, not satisfied with any. He was in vaudeville from 1890 until 1986 when he planned to quit the stage forever. But he found that a concert where they were few except for an occasional concert. In 1963 he returned to the road, where he has been ever since except during the war when he was in service. In 1919 he was discovered by Adolph Künker and was given the title of "Drinkerwaite" or "Abram Lincoln." Two of Mr. Gilpin's treasured possessions are an old English hand-bill of the play "Othello," dated 1833, and an autographed photograph of Irina Aldridge, his famous predecessor. These, together with a portrait of William Howard University, who presented them to the actor, are proudly exhibited. "I shall always remember my visit to Lawrence," he said to the reporter he started on the stage. "George Walker, one of my great benefactors and a teacher, gave us a leet to make making Bert Williams successful, was born here." When asked how he liked the part in "The Emperor Jones," he replied, "I am not particularly fond of it. The story deals with one of the most unpleasant phases of life. I want to depict a character that does not need to draw on the imagination of the audience." Civil Engineers Plan Theoretical Railwa The juniors of the department of civil engineering have been doing practical work for the last few weeks in surveying for a theoretical railroad which is supposed to run from a point on Mississippi Street around we hill, past Porter lake, then over the river, across west and toward the stone quarry. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 25, 1922 Everything is done as it would be in the case of the road were to be constructed. The amount of excavation and filling in that would be necessary is calculated and the material and needed are carefully worked out. The final steps are taken when the present prices of railroad supplies and materials are used as a basis for making an accurate estimate of the cost of constructing the railway. The railroad would be about a mile and a half. Later in the year representatives of the school will be sent to Parsons to make a survey and technical review. They will send the M. K. & t. reclamation plant there. Paul Miller, of the University of Missouri spent Saturday and Sunday at the Sigma Chi house. Mr. Miller is a son of Mrs. Miller, the chaperone of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Emporia Ministers Start a Campaign For Bonus Ministers of Emporia have stung firmly in line behind the adjusted compensation measure for ex-service men, the fate of which rests in the hands of Knoxes at the general election November 7. All Emporia ministers will devote part of their sermons Sunday to urging their congregations to vote for the bonus measure. The theme of the sermons will be, "Not in Charity, but in Justice." The sermons are the outcome of the recent unanimous indorsement of the measure by the Emporia ministerial association. Ex-Service Men Who Favor Compensation Call Mass Meeting Will Have All the Characteristics of Old Time Political Pow-Wow Music, red hot ovatory and all the appurpations of the old-time political meeting will characterize a mass meeting of former service men and those who favor adjusted compensation in Robinson Magnesium 730 oclock in Robben's Gymnasium. This was decided yesterday afternoon by ex-service men who met in Green Hall to formulate plans for educating voters in the murders of the Kansas compensation measure, which was at the general election November 7. The meeting will be *strictly nonpolitical* in the sense that issues of no political party will be discussed or mentioned. Nothing will be talked about by the election qualifications, and the like. It is planned to have the K. U. Band furnish music. Judge C. A. Smart of Lawrence will be the principal speaker. There will be other speakers and other entertainment. Wilgil Wigel will speak. James A. Kelsay, of Leavenworth will be another of the speakers. Leaders of the veterans at the meeting last night declared that some organized action must be taken if all University students who are qualified to vote go to the polls November 7. It is estimated that there are at least 20,000 voters in the coming election. State election laws provide that a voter must be at least 21 years old, be a resident of the state at time of registration, and a resident of the prefect which he registers at least two weeks prior to the date of the election. Registration books lose Friday. Both the registration and election laws and features of the proposed bonus bill will be fully explained at the meeting. All who are interested—both men and women—are invited to attend. 'oets to Admit Freshmen Phadamanthi Want All Who Have Literary Talent Freshmen may submit manuscript to Radhamathan, the K. U. poet club, in spite of an earlier announcement that only upper clauses were eligible. This change in plans has been made by the club because of the large number of disappointed Freshmen, who have participated in Rhadammathi, who added, "We want to give everyone who has any literary talent a chance to show it." "Each manuscript must contain at least twenty lines of poetry," Miss Bishop continued, "but these may be into any number of short poems." NUMBER 34. All menuscripts be submitted by Thursday, October 26. They may be left in the Quill Club box on the first floor of Fraser Hall. Kansas Postal Workers Are to Meet at Topela Arrangements for the conference-convention of the postal employees of the state of Kansas to be held at Topka on November 10, have been completed. Speeches of welcome will be delivered by Governor Allen of Kansas and Senator Curtis and Capper. Postmaster Charles H. Sessions will preside and Postmaster General Work will hold an informal reception greeting personally every postal worker in attendance. Large users are welcome to attend a conference for the purpose of discussing their postal problems with the Postmaster General. Fassett Explains How Students Can Vote November 7 Required to Register Before Friday Evening to Cast Ballots Election Day Methods of registration for all those students who expect to vote in the general elections, state and county, to be held on November 7, inclusive of those students who care about their own election wish to vote by mail in other cities of the state, have been made public by Prof. C. M. Fasset of the department of sociology of the University. All students who wish to vote in the city of Lawrence must register at the city hall of Lawrence evening October 27. All those voting in Lawrence, of course, must claim as their residence this city. And all those intending to vote through their respective home companies must register in person at the city hall of the community before Friday. Following this registration, such a voter must go to any of the polling places in Lawrence and make out an affidavit to the effect of his voting by mail. Three ballots—one for the state election, one for the soldiers' office, and one for the mayor—so he will be tendered the individual upon making up the affidavit. Must File Affidavit After the student has voted, the judges will seal the ballot in the presence of the voter and will mail it to the county clerk of the county in which the voter is registered. The state election ballot and the soldiers' compensation ballot are the same for every county in the state, but the names of the candidates in a county will have to be obtained from the voters. The third ballot and these names may be inserted on the blank line provided on the Douglas county ballot. Must be Registered Soon It was pointed out by Professor Fassett that only students from first and second class cities need to register. Also it is to be understood that students from other states than Kansas cannot vote by mail at the polling places in Lawrence. They must vote in their home community. The votes sent to the county clerks of the various counties from the city are counted. The county clerks who vote by mail will not be counted in the election if the voter is a resident of a first or second class city and register in person in his home county. 20. Knaus, women voters are not required to pay the poll tax and receipts are not required of men voters at the polls. The collection of the vote is entirely subject to the casting of ballots for county and state elections. Pre-Medic Women Change Their Organization Name Friday, October 27, has been designated as Navy Day by the Navy Department and will be so observed throughout the United States. Though in the past war no great naval battles were fought, the anti-submarine patrol, the convoy, and the mine barrage helped greatly to win the war and it is the intention of the sponsors of Navy Day to honor the personnel of the Navy both of the present and past. The following officers were elected at the meeting last night: Frances E. Rosemboll, president; Jessie Uttinger, secretary; and Elaine Egane, secretary; and Eleanor Egane, secretary. An important meeting of the Ku Ku Klan is called for 7:30 tonight in Fraser 394—Signed, Bredburg. Friday is Navy Day The name of the Women's Medical Society was changed to K. U. Women's Pre-Medical Association at a meeting of the organization last night. Hereafter the association will be primarily for pre-medic women, but as the group organizes a sorority, Alpha Epsilon Iota. The association will meet on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month in Dr. Bacon's office. Some of the meetings will be social and some business. The program committee has planned to bring outside speakers to the meetings at various times during the year. At the next meeting a revised constitution will be adopted. An All-University C. Ocation is hereby called for 10'clock Thursday morning in Robinson Gymnasium. Classes will be shortened to thirty-five minute periods and the schedule will be as follows: 1st hour : 8:30 to 9:05 2nd hour : 9:15 to 9:50 Convocation : 10:00 to 10:50 3rd hour : 11:45 to 12:50 4th hour : 11:45 to 12:50 E. H. LINDLEY. Chancellor. Housewarming Held By American Legion For New Quarter Major McClain Brings News and Advice From New Orleans Doughnuts and elder were served in realistic style by Red Cross girls and Salvation Army lasses after the program. The new quarters of the American Legion were dedicated with a successful "at home" last night, in which Legionnaires and Auxiliary joined. The new rooms, which are located just above the People's State Bank, are those recently vacated by the Chamber of Commerce when the latter took over the old Y. M. C. A. building. The time set for the opening was 7:30, and by that time the hall was filled to overflowing with members and their wives, mothers, and sisters. An interesting program consisting of recitals and vocal and instrumental works together with a grade-school gymnastics troupe, was given at about 8:30. new state commenter of the Legion, was the principal speaker at a town hall brought back some interesting bits of gossip from the national convention at New Orleans. Pointing out that it was the duty of every Legionnaire to be a good citizen in all that the name implies, he urged that the local post become a factor in civile development. And these young boys look up to 12-3 men as heroes and that anything you do will have its influence on them. And remember also, that you can't make a citizen or a member member of a man by simply giving him a button. The members are a few dollars." Major McClain said. Major McClain, of the Topeka Industrial School, the new state com- Frosh Contests Continue Four Basketball Teams Remain Undefeated in Class League With the schedule of games about half completed, the race for honors among the freshman gymnastics basketball teams is narrowing down. Only four teams remain with a spotless escutcheon. Two of these are in the 4:30 class, one in the 9:30 class and one in the 10:30 class. Ten teams, scattered among the various classes, have lost only one game. These teams are considered very much in the running. The team that has won all four for premier honors with six teams yet to taste their first victory. The Union Pacific Railway will run a special, all-steered train directly to Manhattan Saturday morning, leaving Lawrence at 9:45 in the morning and arriving at Manhattan at 11:45. The train will leave Manhattan at 7:00 in the evening and arrive in Lawrence at 9:00 o'clock. MacDowell fraternity will meet Thursday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock in the German room, third floor of Fraser Hall. Initiation will be held on Saturday and Tuesday dates who successfully tried out before the fraternity two weeks ago. The "begame" ends its season with elimination contests just before school closes for the Thanksgiving weekend. The team allowed for several years, and the finals are usually productive of real competition. Many candidates for the freshman basketball team are ranked among the gymnastics teams. Contrary to previous reports, the round-trip fare will be $8.75, and the return ticket will be good Saturday and Sunday, on all U. P. trains. Kansas Bonus Bill Will Not Bankrupt Finances of State Money to be Expended For Compensation Will Improve Public Works And. Reads And Roads "From a purely financial standpoint, the State of Kansas could easily afford to pay her ex-service men a bonus amounting to fifteen or twenty millions, or even more," declared a member of the economic faculty. "The state is at the present time absolutely free from debt," he continued, "and would not be materially affected by the expenditure of such amounts." Of course, there are several other factors that affect the state feel, and quite naturally, that it would be more fitting for the so-called war profiters to pay the bonus. Another way which has been suggested is a tax on such luxuries as automobiles, furniture, etc., this is merely an evasion of the issue as everyone knows that, were the soldiers to wait for some such plan, they would never get a cent in all probability. If it comes at all, they can draw from the pockets of the tax payers." Necessary to Postpane Improvement Necessary to Postpone Improvements “There are other aspects which present themselves. A considerable plan for improvements in roads and public works would have to be temporarily postponed. In that event, it would mean a choice on the part of the staff who are responsible. If they think that these improvements cannot afford to wait, that is their question to decide.” "As to the statement that the bankers of the state are opposed to the Bonus, I am afraid that is not correct. A banker would be the first to see the advantages of placing that much money in the hands of a class which spends perhaps more freely than any other. No Economy in Bonus Defeat "So to me the question would appear to be rather more one of choice between two expenditures than between saving the money and spending it." It was pointed out in conclusion hat while the state improvements might be done on an extended credit axis, the Bonus would have to be raised immediately, in the event of that measure's success. New Bible Teaching Class Baptists to Start Instruction For S. S. Teachers Because few men and women leaving universities with their degrees are prepared to take an active part in church activities, particularly in the teaching of Sunday school classes, the Rev. Frank Jennings, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Lawrence, the Baptist Witchcraft assistant pastor, have devoid plans for instructing University students in the rudiments of teaching. "A student just leaving an educational institution to start into business sometimes feels at a loss when they are going out to boys or girls in the Sunday school. He realizes he is unprepared to do so, and for that reason we are instituting a course in the rudiments of teaching," said Mr. Witcraft. Classes are meeting on Wednesday evenings for a brief time, only, in order that the University students will not take time from their studies. Dictographs Save Time In University Offices A system of digitocams has been installed at the University of Washington. There are three master inquiries to facilitate the meetings to outfit the administration offices. The master boxes can be used for private conversations like a telephone or for loud speaking like a concert. They can be heard in any part of the room. This system relieves the burden of local calls, it is said, and saves a great deal of time in the communications between departments. The Ku Ku Klan will leave Friday afternoon for Aggieville. They will make the trip in cars in order to be there for the rally at 7:30 o'clock, and to extend compliments of K. U. After the rally they will be arranging and preparing for the stunts on Saturday. Phi Sigma Holds Annual Election of Officers Phi Sigma, national honorary biological society, elected the following officers at their meeting last evening: Irna Hogg, of the anatomy department, president; Miss Mary Larson, department of zoology, vice-president and Honor Paris, of the department of anatomy, secretary-treasurer. Prof. W. S. Hunter, of the department of psychology, spoke on "The Relation of Psychology and Biology." He emphasized the fact that the more we learn about it, the more to make use of psychology in his diagnosis of disease. Many Musicians To Come to U. S. From Russia This Winter Contracts Are Being Arranged Through the Agency of the Red Cross Moscow (By mail to United Press) —The United States will have some of the best musical talent of Russia to count on this coming winter. A degree of the People's Commission for Music, signed, names the Russian Red Cross in America the agent of the Department of Education to arrange all contracts between American managers and dramatic or musical artists who may be granted permission to leave Russia for American tours. Already arrangements have been started by cable for the placing in America of the famous balalaika orchestra of Andriev, which several years ago made a tour of the United States, and for a season of the former Imperial "Capella," a choral oratorio by Mozart. The repertory includes Lizsä's Grand Mass, Moazzat's Requiem and Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. The Russian Red Cross in America is to receive from all contracts made in pursuance of this arrangement a percentage of profits, for relief purposes. The Ubinov quartet of artists or ancient Russian instruments, including the "domra," which was the great grandfather of the guitar, of the Moscow Conservatory of Music, is preparing to give a series of concerts of old Russian folk songs in the United States, for the benefit of the functionaries of the Ubinov quartet is the basso, Dolly, who is superior of Chailinan. Negotiations are now pending for an American tour of the Gabinma company of Russian Jewish players, who play in Hebrew and who are known throughout the Jewish world, while a further Russian attraction under the same auspices is expected to be the Baroness Xenia, Alexandra Nogradkina, who will be the head of harp instruction in the Petrograd and Moscow Conservatories of Music and who is now on tour in Czecko-Slovakia. Three W.S.G.A. Vacancies Will be Filled Next Montl Election of one graduate students and two freshmen for representatives of the W. S. G. A., to hold office for the school year, in school year 19 will be held November 8. All petitions of candidates must be turned in by 5 o'clock, Wednesday, November 1, to Louise Doree, secretary to Dean Biltz, who will have the permission of the Dean and turn them over to Cecil Wheat, who is in charge of elections. Each petition must be signed by fifty members of the association twenty-five of whom belong to the organization, and the representative is being elected. Must Reserve for Entire Season All those who have student activity tickets should have their seats for the remaining three football games reserved as soon as possible, said Mr. Charles Montgomery, who is in charge of the sports teams at these places will be reserved under any condition on the day of the game, and all those who fail to comply with this requirement will lose out. To Broadcast School News A 200-watt wireless set, and a large consignment of new material for the school of electrical engineering has been ordered, Walter said. Norman, Okla., Oct. 25—School news from the University of Oklahoma will be broadcasted by wireless regularly in the near future, according to O. W. Walter, assistant professor of electrical engineering. Legion Leader Will Deliver Address At Dedication Services Lemuel Bolles, National Adjutant Will Speak at Stadium Armistice Day Lemuel Bolles, national adjutant of the American Legion, has consented to deliver an address at the dedication of the Kansas Memorial Stadium on Armistice Day, November 11. Mr. Bolles comes to speak at the invitation of W. P. McLean, Kansas state commander, and Frank E. Samuel, Kansas adjutant of the American Legion, who met him at the recent national convention in New Orleans. Auction at 11 O'Clock The dedication will take place at 11 o'clock, November 11, on the Stadium field in Columbia. The 1918 armistice. The service will be preceded by a parade, headed by E. Lori F. Dense post of Lawrence and the Topkea post of the American Legion, followed by the University R. O. T. C. three local national guard units, from Indian, University, and Fraternal Aid Union bands, the Disabled Veterans of K. U. and the G. A. R. The ceremony will be in honor of the 124 University men and two University women who died in service during the World War, to whom the Stadium will be dedicated. According to Mr. Samuel, Holles is an excellent speaker and well known, havoc-taking author, journalist, and member of the legion, year after year. His office is located at Indianapolis, Ind. Speaker Is Well Fitted-Hill "The Memorial Corporation is well pleased at the acceptance of Mr. Rolls to speak at the dedication service. We feel that he is more titled than any other speaker through his associations with the American Association of Occupation," said Alfred G. Hill, secretary of the Memorial Corporation. Owing to the fact that the entire day has been given over to the dedication ceremonies, the plans for the regular Home Coming celebration will take place the day before. Those who contemplate being here for this year's programs are urged to attend the 10th, the schedule calling for two fall days of speeches, parades, the final dedication, and the Nebraska game. Plan "Bum" to Manhattan Students Prepare For Freight Top Accommodations Plans for the storming of a local freight Friday night, bound for Manhattan, are being formed, although in a slightly underground way, due to the attitude adopted by the school authorities last year. It will be recalled that at the rally before the Washburn game last year, Dean Dyer urged that he be no one at the game who was forced to get there by "bumming." However, the 11 o'clock local which, by the way, pulled out sometime after 12 o'clock, carried a heavy compliment. The players are approximately five hundred "unloaded" at Topake, and saw the game the next day. Very few rushed the gate. A great many are planning the same manner of traveling this week. Freights leave at practically all hours after dark, according to whispered questions and answers now floating on Twitter. It was the easiest to ride in previous years, but since the recent shopper's strike, the two lines serving Lawrence are equally strict. Practically every automobile in Lawrence will make the trip, if indications hold out. The distance is approximately ninety miles, and can be made in a "Universal" in about three and a half hours. Large cars are used as time; the record recently is one hour. Roads are good all the way, according to travelers coming from Salina this week. The football team of the Hutchinson High School spent Saturday in Lawrence as the guests of the K. U. Athletic Association. John Baum, a former student of the University, who is now attending K. S. A. C., spent Saturday and Sunday at the Sigma Nu house. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University Associate Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Canada Editor New York Sport Editor Glencoe Plain Talc Editor Editor Editor Exchange Editor Clare Ferguson Ralph Johnson Devaughan Fraser Liewellyn White Glück Schalis Perry Johnson Ferry Johnson Devaughan Fraser DeVaughan Fraser BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager...Lloyd Rappenthal Am'd, Bus, Mgr...John Montgomery, Jr. BOARD MEMBERS Ben Hilbe Dionice Florex Ruth Cutter Laura Cowley Chuster Shaw Carlton Powers Moll Mart Caroline Harkrazer Mirl Hart Subscription price $4.50 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 correspondent mail matter September 17, 1916, at the post office at Lawrences, Kannau, 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, from the press of the Department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Jhume, K. J., 21 and 66 Lawrence, Ralph Phones, K. U. 25 and 66 The Daily Kannon aims to picture the understated life of the University of Chicago, and to inform the news by standing for the ideals it represents; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be kind; to be more serious to wiser heads; to have more serious questions; to ability to the students of the University. WEDNESDAY, OCT. 25, 1922. Peacock SEND FOR DAD Subscribers to a fund for completing a girl's hotel in Kansas City were tagged with the name of the fund, which is "Have A Heart." Was it a present command or a future invitation? It's Dad's time of year. The crispness of frost in the air, the browning fields, and the brilliant foliage all these bear witness to that. What American boy's blood does not run a bit faster when the north wind brings down the first flurry of snow and when football elems meet on **adirons**. And what is Dad but an American boy—a bit older perhaps, but still loving the autumn and a good football game? And now, like Mother and her day in the spring, Dad is to have his day in the fall. Moreover, it is to be his privilege to see two of the best football teams in this section of the country meet on a perfect gridiron. Kansas plays Oklahoma at Stadium FP1 on November 4, and Dad is to be the honor guest of the day. That evening Calhoun and their K. U. sona will be entertained at Dad's Dinner. Dad's Day is beginning to be observed throughout the country; many civilians have already held Sunday services this fall, in much the same manner as they honor Mother in the spring of the year. That is all right in its way, but the University of Kansas has a better method of paying tribute to Dad. Dad is a man, and manlike he appreciates a good football game and a day, looking about the University more than he does flowers and church services in his honor. The University has provided a day for Dai—a day that he will appreciate more than any experience he has had for years. Have you, as a student of the University and as a son or daughter of the "best Dad that ever was," done your part? Have you made every effort to get your father here for the occasion? Dad's Day, instituted here for the first time this year, is to be an annual affair—one of the big functions of the school year. The co-operation of the students is necessary in order that the University may pay proper tribute to the fathers of its students. Send for Dad! Help him to enjoy his time of year! Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is a demon controls Arthur Stilwell, builder of the Kansas City Southern railway. So that is the explanation. A POOR SENSE OF HUMOR Last night the highly dramatic and splendidly acted tragedy of "The Emperor Jones" was given at the Bow erock. Gripping, intense—it lapped the terrible degeneration of a soul to its primitive beginning. Before our eyes the course of human development was polignantly traced. And yet people laumen. Surply the people who committed this slight breach of etiquette and breeding should be pardoned; their shallow minds must have been incapable of understanding. One can't blame people for doing things when they know no better; how did they know when it was time to laugh? Didn't they see a black man on the advertising posters, and aren't black men always comedians? Isn't the grusene spectacle of sweating, suffering men, writing in chains, always signal for hilarious laughter? So people in certain parts of the theater—notably the second gallery and the front row—must have thought last night. A little of the disturbance was perhaps the result of deliberate intention on the part of people—for the credit of the University it is hoped not students—who are capable of that sort of thing. But there are many whom trivial and pathos mean nothing; everything strange or unusual, unless it has been explained to them in advance, presents them with food for mitrith. It is probably from them that the most of the laughter came. It is to be hoped, as Mr. Gilpin remarked in his curtain talk, that some of the more crassly ignorant will spend three cents for a newspaper the next time a play comes to town, and thus learn something of its spirit and meaning. But we are afraid his scathing criticism was lost on the ones for whom it was intended—it was too subtle for that type of mind. Soviet Russia is unable to dispose of the late Zarai's gems because of their great size so she plans to send them to Warsaw in part payment of Poland, under the terms of the Soviet-Polish peace treaty. Now if Poland 'only owes Germany!' ABSENTEE VOTING With the November election less than two weeks distant, many students in the University are not aware of the absentee voting provision in the laws of the State of Kansas, which allows qualified voters to cast their ballot at the nearest polls. This law was especially designed for students and travelers who cannot be at their home on election day. All the absence voter need do is to fill cut an affidavit which can be secured from the election judges at the polls. After submitting the affidavit stating the voter's age, town, county, and length of residence in the state, the ballot is given out. On this absence ballot will be the state officials followed by blank lines, on which the voter may write his preference for the candidates in his county. The ballot when properly filled out is handed to the judges, who in turn seal it and forward it to the Douglas County clerk's office, from where it is sent to the voter's own county. The University seems to be very successful in taking the "hayses" out of the greenhorn but it will have to surrender its job to old man Hard Knows when it comes to taking the egosim out of the un-immaginative individual who thinks that the world was created to be his own private little domain. The only requirement in voting under the absentee provision, is that the voter must be a qualified voter in his home community. All university students who come under this classification should exercise their rights of citizenship and vote. It is his duty to the state as well as an expression of his individuality and every eligible student on the hill should see that he takes advantage of his opportunity. Alone on the Hill In the warm October noon. Alone on the hill And beyond their brilliance the son. The moment has come. The rapt still instant of being, When water and wood are gone. When water and wood are gone. There is nothing now. Now quick! Let me run on sharp stones, Let me strangle in surf choked with the There is nothing flow fictitious on-running fluid of hours Let me feel pain, feel torture, And the acid hunger of loneliness! Give not self, self— I hate not hurt Glancing with blue, yellow, crimson. Now, quick! Let me run, on sharp stones. In this madness of space eternal, bitter salt-water; let me feel pain, feel torture. in honor of dreaded Mr. McCreery. *Fredrick R. H. McCreary in Poetry.* Official Daily University Bulletin Copy received by Florence E. Blisz, Editor, Chancellor's Office until 11:00 a.m. Vol. II. ALL-UNIVERSITY CURVOCATION: An All-University Curvocation is called for 10 o'clock Thursday morning. ___ E.H. LINDLEY, Chancellor. ALL-UNIVERSITY CONVOCATION The regular weekly recital of the Fine Arts Music Students will be given in Fraser Chapel at 3:30 o'clock the afternoon. FINE ARTS MUSIC STUDENTS RECITAL: GAMMA EPSILON PI: a crack cheerleading a squad of eight men has been elected at Northwestern. University. An intensive training program has been given the cheerleaders. A meeting of Gamma Epillon Pi (Communicate Sorority) is called for 7:30 o'clock Wednesday evening in Fraser Rost Room. Important business is planned. Most people are afraid to look up their family tree for fear they will be hit on the head by a cocoon in the hand of a baboon. SOCIOLOGY CLUB: RUTH LENNEN, President. MRS. JENS P. JENSEN, Patroness. Ticket "scalpers" will be severely dealt with this year at the University of Illinois, according to President Harold Lewis of the Honor Commission. Expulsion from school will be the minimum punishment for offenders in accordance with the new policy. H. L. BUTLER, Dean. The Sociology Club will meet Thursday evening at 7:30 in Room 210 Fraser Hall... RHADAMANTH1: DOBOTHY BODDMAN, president. F. W. BLACKMAR, Faculty Advisor. DOROTHY GOODMAN, President. BILLY MACKENAY, Faculty Advisor. Rhadamanthi (Foetry Society) will meet at 8 a'clock Thursday evening in Prasar Rest Room. Manuscripts submitted will be considered and new Plain Tales From The Hill Melvin Bishop, A. B. 22, is teaching mathematics this year in the Rural High School at Stillwell, Kans. "I'm going to pass that algebra quiz a-flying," remarked a math shark this morning. "My head is full of logs." "I'll make the honor roll because I'm bright. "Aw, you know who Lizzie Wooster is, don'tcha?" Edythe Gould, A. B. 20, is teaching history in the Rural High School at Buergus, Kansas. Dorothy Stanley, A. B. "22, spent Saturday and Sunday in Lawrence, Miss Stanley is teaching in the Kingman High School. Good looking, keen withal, and a swel. dresser: Miss Kay Waring, 45'22., was a guest at the Gamma Phi Beta house Saturday and Sunday. I'll burn the midnight oil every night. In every class I'll vamp me a professor." Miss Laura Harkrader, c'22, who is teaching at ElDorado, spent the week end at the Gamma Phi Beta house. Ray Jones, 227, spent Saturday and Sunday at the Phi Gamma Delta House. Mr. Jones is employed in a mobile Hardware house at Atticaon. Paul Dunn, A. B. 22, spent Saturday and Sunday in Lawrence. "What you dudes try to do with those stocks? " a senior lawyer said to a ditto journalist. "Are you trying to kid our canes?" "Doctor, I have a very sore finger dropped a trunk on it." "Nothing like that,' said the s. j. "just your cigarette holders." Lenora Brownback, A. B. "22, spent Saturday and Sunday at the Kappa Alpha Theta House. Miss Brownbaum is touching at Staffordville this year. "go and get this man some thrua gargle, nurse, while I look up in the book and see what's the matter with him." Javhawks Flown Jack DeLaney, LL. B., 722, spent Saturday and Sunday at the Phi Gamma Delta House. Mr. DeLaney is practicing law at Troy. --- DAISY MARITA BISHOP, President. Mrs. HERBERT FEIS, Patroness. Harold Dietrich, c'22, is doing research work at Mellon's Institute, Philadelphia, this year. ANNOUNCEMENTS The Graduate Club will meet at Myers Hall for a Halloween'en party Thursday evening, October 26, at 8 o'clock. The Baptist Young People's Union will hold a masquerade party Friday night in the basement of the Baptist church. All student Baptists are urged to be present with their friends. 'the party will start at 8 o'clock.' The Democratic rally, under the auspices of the Democratic Club of the University, has been seeded for tonight at 7:30 o'clock in the Little Theater, Green Hall, instead of the Chamber of Commerce rooms down town, as had previously been planned. Henderson Martin, former lieutenant governor of Philadelphia, is one of the principal speakers on the program, and several of the county candidates will be present and will make short talks. E E.Z. E. Z. TRUDE MARK REC. U. S. PAT. OFF. THE ORIGINAL WIDE GARTER Look for the name "E. Z." to buy a wide-web online—the independent agency. the tomb site. ventilat 850 to M. everywhere, in quinquefort and the E. Z. goirly, and the E. Z. S. Greer Garter. Made by The Thun. F. Taylas Co., Bridgeport, Conn. Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Featured by All Leading Merchants Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 No Lectures No Written Work At Bkham Institute they make a commitment to work in the college trained men wish to fill positions of responsibility and and trust without spending years at the institution. Standard office equipment through the end of 2013 included business schools of work from 820 business school instructors led by men with years of business experience directed by men with years of business experience directed by men with years of business experience and office executives at their points. This program offered a theatrical stage and helped the student create an actor in a man actually engaged in business. Bashen institute, an educational institution for men for executive response training men for executive response training men for executive response booklet, *Training for Business*. BELLS FLOWER SHOP Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS Babson Institute Wellesley Hills, (district of) Mass. London. Phone 139 825 1-2 Mass Kaufman Campus logs On the Pointe of West CHICAGO ESTABLISHED 1871 —Clothes Designed by Kaufman A Smart Overcoat The loose fitting, roomy ulster type with colorful fancy back fabrics is favored This is an attractive model that is both good looking and practical. In choosing Campus Togs you will always find clothes of all-wool, durable fabrics that wear; stylish and correct in balance, drape and design; the better tailoring. $30-$50 We Guarantee our clothes Kaufman Campus Togs Clothes forYoung Men CHAS. KAUFMAN & BROS. NEW YORK BOSSTON SAN FRANCISCO Adam and Eva BOWERSOCK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31 A Modern Comedy In Three Acts Eva wears a gown like a song "Sweet and Low" Adam has an acute case of "Familitis" Prices -- $1.00, 75c, and 50c Mail Orders to Elizabeth Dunkel, Henley Hall — Seats Go on Sale Friday at the Bowersock Many Women are Out for Offices in Fall Campaign Twelve of the "Fairer Sex Have Successfully Weathered The Disaster Primaries Washington, Oct. 25, (United Press)--More women are seeking political office this year than ever before in the history of the country, according to information compiled by women's organizations here. Twelve of the "fairer sex" successfully weathered the primaries and are seeking to defeat men for seats in the senate, the house or other offices. They have stirred up warm military battles for men seeking minor offices. One Already in Senate The first woman to reach the senate is Mrs. Felton, "the grand old lady of Georgia," recently appointed to succeed the late Senator Tom Watson, until someone is elected next month to fill out his term. four women are running for the honor which Mrs. Felton received, while seven are seeking house seats and one wants to be a governor. On Every Party Ticket Miss Alice Robertson, the only woman member of the present Congress, wants to be re-elected, and came through the primary in good shape. A list of major women candidates for high offices follows: The hopes of the women for senatorial seats rest largely with Mrs. Peter Oleson of Minnesota and Mrs. Ben Hooper of Wisconsin, the only women to receive senatorial nominations in 1964, and both are Democrat. Senator La Foletta's unusual strength in his state, as revealed in the primary, will make it extremely difficult for Mrs. Hooper to win, but Mrs. Oleson is understood to be giving Senator Mitch McConnell in Minnesota that "worthy of any man." The Republican have two women seeking election to the House, while the Democrats have three, and the Prohibitionists and the Socialists on Pennsylvania; Rachel C. Robinson, Prohibition Party, of Wilkinsburg, is running for Senator Knox seat. Washington: Mrs. Frances Axtell, running for the senators against Senator Polindexer. Minnesota: Mrs. Peter Olsen, Democrat, is running for the senator- ship against Senator Frank B. Kellogg. Wisconsin: Mrs. Ben Hooper of Oakland, Democratic Party, is running for Senator against Senator La-Routte. Illinois: Mrs. Winifred Mason Huck, Republican, is running for the seat held by her late father, Representative W. E. Mason. Oklahoma: Rep. Alice Robertson, for re-election. Misouri; Mrs. Luella St. Clair Moss, Democratic nominee from Eighth Congressional District. (President, Christian College, Columbia.) Pennsylvania: Mrs. Ellen Dune Davis, Democrat, of Philadelphia, is running for Congress. (She is chairman Woman's Democratic Organization, 8th Ward, Philadelphia); Helen Murphy, of Philadelphia, running for Social Democratic ticket;莉尔 R. Hazelton, of Philadelphia, running for Congress; Jane E. Leonard, of Indiana, Pennia, Democratic Party, running for Congress. College boys are becoming better looking each year, Prof. L. G. Krantz, director of physical education of Northwestern University, declared Not All Beautiful Boys In The Movies physician examination of 300 fresh- in of the university. Professor Kranz attributed this advancement in beauty to the new plan adopted almost universally in the 1980s, with patients two years of health training. Improvements in physical condition of students since the institution of health training in high schools, as noted by Professor Kranz, are clearer today. Students receive education, better carriage, and posture, and greater interest in athletics. "High schools generally are devoting close attention to the health of their students and are requiring at least two years of physical training of all students," said Health Director Evans. "Prok. Dranz shows that the work of the physical education departments of our high schools is bearing fine fruit. As years pass, the physical standards of all incom- collegians will be higher because they public authorities are taking such keen interest in health matters." Disabled Vets to Meet at The C. of C. Tonight Japawk. Post of the Disabled American Veterans of the World War has called a meeting of the organization for 7:30 tonight in the Chamber of Commerce rooms in the old city of Vermont, where at Eighth and Vermont streets. Among other important matters, the part the post will play in the formal dedication ceremonies of the Stadium at the Homecoming Celebration is requested. A full attendance is requested by Harry Robbins, commander. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Doctor Smith Asks Students To Take Small-pox Vaccine Treatment Is Free to Those Who Have Paid Hospital Fee This Year "No one is immune form small-pox," says Dr. E. Smith, physician at the University Hospital. "Every person who has not been immunized with the disease has not been vaccinated successfully within the last three years should have this attended to at once. The trouble with University students is that they must until an epidemic starts and then all rash to the hospital at least." Treatment at the University hospital is free to all those who have paid the hospital fee, provided the patient has taken advantage of the offer of free inoculation and vaccination. Otherwise all hospital fees and treatment will be at the expense of the student. As yet there has been no indications of any serious cases of either small-pox or typhoid fever among the student body, Wichita and Topeka have few cases of small-pox, though these are not alarming in character. Within the last six weeks there has been 1736 hospital treatments. Of this number 44 have been inoculations for typhoid fever and 5 have been inoculated for cholera. The number of dispensary treatments is about equal to the number, for the same period last year, but is much higher 'than' in previous years. This indicates a decrease in general health care Dr. Smith did not say. Grace Gaskill, A. B. '21, is teaching at Clay Center. We make clothes. We do alterations on both women's and men's clothes, reining ladies' and men's overcoats, cleaning and pressing. Suiting you, anywav. That's My Business SCHULZ TAILOR 917 Mass. St. Philadelphia, Pa., Oct. 25 (United Press).—The finding of the tomb of Antichus, first crown of King Herod the Great, of Bible days, by the expedition from the University of Pennsylvania, has been announced by Dr George B. Gordon, director of the University museum. Pennsylvanians Make Important Archeological Discovery Find Grave [of Antiochus This is considered one of the most important archeological finds in many years, throwing as it does the first light on contemporary records of the time of Christ. The tomb was found at Beth Shan, Palestine, and is reported to be rich in objects of that period. Antichus is undoubtedly, the director said, one of those ordered by Herod to slaughter the children of Bothelem, as narrated in St. Matthew, in the vain effort to kill the Christ child. This is the first known sarcophagus of any of the Herod family, and credit goes to Dr. Clarence Stanley Fisher, leading the excavation. The remains have been found, so far at Both Shan and it is known that there are more below. Dr. Florence Sherbon will entertain Dr. Helen Moore and Dr. Eldenor Ernest of the State Division of Child Hygiene, and Miss Alice McFarland, of the Kansas Industrial Court, at her home on University Heights. Ladies who desire expert Hair-Bobbing Patronize the STADIUM BARBER SHOP "The Shop of Service" First Door South of Von's EVERYDAY OVERCOAT DAY is $20.00 to $35.00 Kirby Cleaners and Dyers HOUK-GREEN CLO. CO. SUIT 1109 Mass. St Phone 424 and See Jayhawk Posters Geo. Hollingberry Phone 1269 Red THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF AFRICING Gustafson "GIFTS THAT LAST" Kirby Cleaners & Dyers Driv'en to Manhattan? Driv'en to Manhattan? Let 'em know where you're from. Have the Jayhawk painted on your windshield. See Jayhawk Posters Dark Colors are popular this fall. Let us dye those old clothes and they'll look like new, Jimmy O'Briggs Phone 1507 Phone 442 Across from Court House Experts Will Address Classes in Child Care Two important speakers will ad dress the child care and home nursing classes now. Miss Alice Ms Farland, of the Kansas Industrial College, will speak next Monday. She will discuss the present State laws relative to child labor and will tell how the Industrial Court thinks they ought to be revised. Dr. Helen Moore, chief of the division, will discuss the classes on the following Friday. Her talk will be concerning the Child Hygiene Division of the State Board of Health and what uses are to be included in the Skewer-Town fund money WANT ADS LOST—Eversharp penel with name engraved. Finder please call 2138 Blue. O-237 FOR RENT - Furnished bed rooms, modern, $125 per month. Also light housekeeping rooms, unfur- fured, two for $20. Phone 1528 hours 4 to 6 or call at 931 La- rium 8 to 10. —O27 FOR RENT—Furnished rooms for SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire to earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Pleasant work, school hours. Write J. F. McCarthy, 740 Wayne Ave. Philadelphia. -S73 FOR RENT - Furnished rooms for girls, vacated by sororities. Four doors north of Jayhawk Cafe. 1325 Ohio. Phone 2208. girls, vacated by sorority. Four doors north of Jayhawk Cafe. 1329 Ohio. Phone 2293. -N- LOST—Sigma Chi pin. Name on back. Reward. Return to 1439 Tenn. 0-20 PROFESSIONAL CARD I VOL. E 1036 Attention to prevention and treatment of pyorrhea. 304 Perkins Building. Tel. 507. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive Optometrist) . Eyes examined; glasses made. Office 1025 Mass PROTCH The College TAILOR Vantisilk Vantisilk tedies, vests, knickers, and union suits in white or flesh color are highly recommended and shown only at Fall stocks have made lingerie shopping a delightful experience. Attractively simple garments have been created from a new silk material-Vantisilk. Woven to resemble a drop stitch, it has a wearing quality that the former lace effects lacked. Vantisilk has the charm that all Vanity Fair garments possess added to a durable quality impossible to obtain in the usual lace jersey. Weavers Yours in Style, Jeanne Marie. A. G. ALRICH Engraving. Printing. Binding Rubber Stamps. Office Supplies. Stationery Printing by any process 736 Mass. St. Varsity-Bowersock Thomas Shoe Electric Shop Today and Thurs. Today Only Shows—2:30—4:00—7:30—9:00 p.m. WITH WANDA HAWLEY MILTON SILLS ROBERT CAIN JACQUELINE LOGAN JESSE L. LASKY PRESENTS A GEORGE MELFORD PRODUCTION BURNING SANDS' A Paramount Picture A warm desert romance of one long, breathless thrill. The story of an English beauty who sought love across the burning sands and sent a beautiful scale by the man who made "The Sheik." From the new and sensational novel by Arthur Weigall Scenario by Olga Printzau and Walden Young Also Late Sport Review Adults 33c. Children 10c. HILDA ENGLUND W. B. HARRIS COMING November 3rd-4th ROBINSON GYM Friday Matinee "THE MARRIAGE OF KITTY" by Lennox Friday 8 P. M. "ROSMERHOLM" by Isben Saturday 8 P. M. "EASTER" by Strindberg THE GREAT QUEEN OF THE WEST MERCEDES DESMORE Great Plays Given by All-Star Casts Hilda Englund, one of the greatest Ibsen actresses of to-day, has created five of Ibsen's heroines in the original casts at the Royal Theatre, Stockholm, Sweden. Ibsen himself selected Miss Englund to create the role of "Mother Ase" in "Peer Gynt", of "Regina" in "Ghosts," and of "Gerd" in "Brand." Mercedes Desmore, an English actress who for the past eight years has been playing in America. Until recently she has been playing opposite Lou Tellegen and John and Lionel Barrymore. Robert Donaldson, direct from The Theatre Guild of New York City where he has played leading parts with such stars as Otis Skinner and Walter Hampden, will play the part of "Rosmer" in Rosmersholm. Ibsen and Strindberg, Like Shakespeare, Should Be Seen By All SEASON TICKETS $1.50 and $2.00 Send orders to Henry A. Shinn, Department of Public Speaking THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Jayhawk Eleven Makes Preparation For Aggie Clash Players Team Faces Possibility o Having a Shortage of Four Regular Players With four men on the injured list and facing the possibility that these men will not be able to play by Saturday, Coach "Dosty" Clark is putting his Jayhawk eleven through an intensive week of practice in final preparation for the clash between the two state schools Saturday at Manhattan. Present indications are that several players will appear in the Jayhawk lineup when the initial whistle is blown Saturday afternoon in Aviee town. Spurgeon is still bothered with his knee which was twisted in practice the night before the squad left for Drake two weeks ago. This injury kept him out of the Drake game and has handicapped him ever since Burt will undoubtedly take Spurgeon back in the game Saturday and this chance has not petted to waken the Kansas backfield. Holderman to Fill Cave's Place Tormerian to Fill Cave's Place Cave and Ivy are bearing souen irs from their tussle with the Drak Buildings and will probably not start against the Aggies. Cave has a bad leg while Ivy's ankles and knees are causing him considerable worry. Mony, a playful task, will take Ivy's legs, while Holdman who has been shifted from guard to tackle, will fill Cave's shoes. Holderman has been showing much better at tackle than at guard, while Moby has been pushing Ivy hard for a regular tackl position. Lee Weidlein, the veteran Jay-hawker lineman, may not start Saturday due to a "charlie-horse." His absence will probably be the most noticeable. Lomborg who will probably take his place in the center of the line, lacks Weidlein's experience and is considerably lighter. Weidlein has long been considered one of the best linemen in the line, and should be unable to play in the Wildcat game, the Kansas line may be weakened materially. The two dependables, Higgins and Davidson, are in good condition and will be ready for the clash. Black will hold down the other end while McAdams, Krueger, and Wilson will appear in the backfield. From present indications, Coach Clark may make another change in the line-up for Saturday. Following his showing in the Washburn game, Griffin has been working at end in place of McLean, who started the two major games with the Army and Drake. Gridiron Gossip Glick Schultz The varsity squad is being instructed in the Aggie style of play and for the last two nights there has been little scrimage, the men merely walking through the plays to better see how they work. The variety will probably go through a stiff scrimmage today and tomorrow and then run signals Friday in final preparation for the clash with the Wildcats. The team will make the trip to Manhattan in a special coach, leaving Lawrence Saturday morning at 9 o'clock. Nine hundred seats in the stonemath have been received at the athletic office and from present indications of the team to accommodate the Jahawk rooters. Six thousand seats will be available in the new stadium for the game Saturday. Temporary bleachers are to seat approximately five thousand Many sport followers have pointed out that playing in a new stadium is conducive to a victory. The Jay-hawkers have, so far, won game in their new Stadium, it is true. But there are many other cases where the players don't take. Take the Ohio-Michigan game just before Ohio State, in a dedication game before 70,000 persons, bowed to Michigan. We don't care to follow the parallel any further. We would like to win, but we don’t wish to pay the penalty that Michigan paid for her victory, three men out of the game forth rest of the season. The Kansas Aggies have the edge in dope, but we have the old Jay. hawker fight, which is worth a good deal. At The Theatre By Ben Hibba Last night, Charles Gilpin appeared before a Lawrence audience in Eugene O'Neill's play, "The Emperor Jones." The excellence of Gilpin's acting, together with the fanciful plot of the production and the ghostly throughout, fascinated the theater-goers of Lawrence and its University. After the initial scene in the palace, the drama is practically a monologue until the last episode when again the title role is relieved by the prose of *The White Trader*, and the prophecies of the native chief. The first scene shows the emperor in all his pomp and confidence in his palace on an isle of the West Indies. The conversation between the black ruler and Smithers gives the audience glimpse of the past life of the emperor. Smithers begins the melancholy heating of the tom-tom, each beat slow and distinct. The bush negroes are assembling—assembling to fortify themselves with native magic before starting after the domineering black emperor. The weird cadenade of the tom-tom, as it quickens little by little from slow beat of the first scene to the wild, pulsating rumble of the last episode is profound in its effect. At first it gives the listener a premonition of what is to come, and then, as the emperor flees through the jungle, it lends tenseness to the situation. It seems always as if the paranons are just In the attempt to exend his angry subjects, the emperor spends the night in the jungle. As the black man fights his way through the forest, his self-confidence slowly disappears; his conscience awakes; and finally the overtakes him, and he lives over again various gruesome incidents of his past life. Then, as the night wearns on the scope of his eyes, he finds that he have been experienced by his race; scenes of the slave traffic and necro bondage are paraded across the stage. The scene of the slave auction is, without doubt, the finest of the play. The lighting effects of this scene are nothing short of wonderful; the characters appear as perfect alloytes which serve as a guide for a few powerful phrases spoken by the emperor, the entire episode is done in pantomime. The episode of the hold of the slave ship, thrown into hold relief by the brilliance of the lights, is shocking. The light is not so bright as one feels. Intense realism -yes! But how much more effective would it have been had it been softened-made **DISCUSSION** Glibbic uses the concept of a very difficult part in an excellent throughout, and the play-goer leaves with a feeling of time well spent. K. U. Man to See Buffalo U. Chancellor Installed Buffalo, N. Y., Oct. 25—The University of Kansas will be represented at the installation of Dr. Samuel P. Capen, as chancellor of the University of Buffalo Saturday, October 28 by Frank A. Hartman, College of Medicine, this city, who finished graduate work at the University of Kansas and will participate in the academic process preceding the installation Dr. Capen, the new chancellor at the University of Buffalo, comes here from Washington, where he first was specialist in higher education in the United States bureau of education and later director of the American Council on Education. He will have been a development of the University of Buffalo which is expected to follow the successful completion of the endowment fund campaign in which more than $5,000,000 was raised. Tea Room Service Wiedemann's The Dining Service Supreme. Cross-Country Tryouts Promise Well For Kansas Six Men To Race Aggies Organize Hiking Classes For one Time Tea-Hounds Finishing in winning time in the final cross-country tryouts held yesterday afternoon, the cross country team should make a credible strong in the Valley race. These finishing ahead in the tryouts will make the trip to Manhattan Saturday and should be combined with the Argies during the game. One of the hardest fights of the year will come at Manhattan as the Aggies have an exceptionally strong team this year and are out for the championship. Kansas will enter six men in the race. In the order of place, Merrill, Warril (captain), Schau, Merril, Grady, Pratt and Meng. The squand will soon occupy the lockers at the training sheds, according to Captain Wilson, and new outfits will be checked out tonight. The Nebraska team had no trouble in out-distancing the Missouri squad but they had to be backed by the K. u.s. squad than that man at the K. U., squand in the tryouts, and Kansas should have an easy time with these teams. George Bach, c'26, spent Saturday and Sunday at his home in Kansas City. Hiking classes are conducted by the department of physical education at the University of Oregon. The walkers are divided into two classes, one, the tenderfoot walkers, and the other, old timers. It was thought advisable to give all those who get that back-to-nature feeling a chance to sative it by dividing them into two groups, the first the one time tea-hound and the girl who wants to and the second for those who don't. The rudiments of woodcraft will be taught so that the hiker will get the fullest enjoyment out of the outfits. Boy Scout knowledge is one of the first things to know as an aid in hiking. Howard Parker, fs., spent Tuesday in Lawrence visiting with friends. WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods United Army Stores Co 7006 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Distributors of Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise OUR AIM Army Goods Army Goods in both the laundry and dry cleaning departments is to give each individual customer the kind of service that suits him best. We also maintain an alteration and repair department under the supervision of an expert tailor. We Appreciate your patronage LAWRENCE STEAM LAUNDRY Phone 383 GE When your friends drop in unexpectedly an electric chating dish makes immediately possible a delicious Welsh rarebit or wholesome homemade candy. We have them in all styles and sizes Kansas Electric Power Co. 719 MASS. ST. Clifford Johnson, Irwin Levin, Arch Richards, and Charles Fratcher, for assistance of the University's program Saturday and Sunday at the Sigma Chi house. CHENEHU CHENEY CRAVATS Silk-tex made of silk and wool, it is the most servicable tie that can be made. $1 You should see our assortment of Chonchs wonderful kneewear, 65c to $1.50 S $ ^{K O F} S ^ {T A D} S $ "Goin' to Aggieville" We have the Clothes that will keep you warm—and mark you on this "occasion" as being correctly attired— Suits Top Coats Gabardines Whipcords Overcoats—now sellin now selling at prices that are easy— CARLS GOOD CLOTHES New Sweaters, Caps, Gloves, Reefers, Wool Hose, Ties for this Aggie Frolic Panders QUALITY JEWELRY CAPITAL $100,000.00 WATKINS NATIONAL BANK DIRECTORS C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. SURPLUS $100,000.00 SORBUS $10,000.00 D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Asher, L. V. Miffer, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishop "Go over to Ober's" BREWER Be well dressed and forget it Half the comfort of being well dressed is that you can forget your clothes. The other half is in remembering how good they look. As long as you wear a Society Brand suit you will have this double pleasure. Naturally we like you to get such clothes here; they always speak well of the shop that sold them. Style and fabric for any kind of wear—a wide variety of models to choose from. All new, correct, individual. $45 Others $24.50 up Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUT-FITTERS --- THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XX. Concert Given By State Prison Band Is Well Received NUMBER 35 Appreciation of The Student Body Amounted to An Ovation For Men A program of classical music by noted composers, interspersed with bits of jazz as encores, played by Herb's State Band of thirty pieces from the penitentiary at Lansing, was the feature of today's all-University convocation in Robinson Gymnasium. "We are proud of the traditions and history of Kansas," said Chancellor E. H. Lindley in introducing the band, "And we are proud of the way Kansas law deals with men who are in the courts for justice; theirs is a spirit of firmness and yet of humanity." "Great progress is being made at Lansing in the training and equipping of prisoners for work after they are released. Chancellor Lindley introduced the superintendent of the state prison, M. F. Amrine. Your Appreciate Sense “This band,” said the superintendent in instruction, “is my music musics, “ is an organ to achieve music success. Every man in this organization has learned to master and inter pret musical terms.” Men Appreciate Music "Ninety percent of the inmates of the state penitentiary are subject to training and reformation. We have 1200 men there, and but seventy of them are "illers". That means that no less than a thousand are coming to prison every year, and then them for that eventual return, so that they can be better citizens." "The concerts at the prison help to break the drab monotony of prison life within those walls, and the citizens of the state should not begrudge the men the pleasure of hearing good music." Of the eight clarinet players in the penitentiary band, only two of them had touched an instrument up to twelve months ago. In the interval they have fully masted their instruments. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, OCT. 26, 1922. "That takes pluck, grit, and deter- mination," continued the superinten- dent. "It takes a man to go up against him. It is good moral discline." The band music makes a great appeal to the prisoners, Mr. Amrine said, and the director, Mr. Herb strives to make it appropriate or concert occasions. These are hold in mind that the band lays outside the walls periodically. Are Really Learning Following is the program played under the direction of Mr. Herb who was formerly director of the K. U. Band. These numbers were interspersed with bits of popular music both kinds of music being received with tremendous ovations by the student body. Overture—"Norma" ... Bellini "Celebrated Minuet" ... Paderewski Concert Waltz—"Blue Danube" Strauss Fantasia—“A Spanish Festival” Dermeseman The band also played one of Mr. Hahn's own compositions, "Dance," which was well received. "The Shiek," was given as an encore. The prisoners at the state penitentiary, the superintendent said, have for recreational features, motion pictures, chapel hours, and outside en specially. When the prison band plays on the lawn on Sunday afternoons, the streets are crowded with townspeople and visitors who can get close to them. Bill Reilly made an announcement to the effect that all University students who intend to vote at the state and county elections are invited to attend a forum on nationalism tonight, at which time the bonus issue will be explained. Mrs. Ben Park, one of the secretaries to Alfred G. Hill in the Alumni office, will fill Miss Leo LaBrant's position as dean, and the latter leaves for her new position in Baldwin. Mrs. Park has attended the University for two years, besides having a business college education at Oak Ridge. In the office of the superintendent of schools and the principal of the main high school in Kansas City. McBeth Mims, of Manhattan, vis ited Saturday with friends in Law rence. Herbert Little Married to Miss Ruby A. Black The marriage of Herbert B. Little, A. B. 21, now named Press correspondent in Madison, Wis., to Miss Ruby A. Black has been announced. The wedding took place in Chicago and the couple will receive a graduate of the department of journalism and was a member of the Sigma Delta Chi fraternity. Mrs. Little is a graduate of the University of Chicago. She is a member of the Women's National Journalistic Register in Chicago. Before her marriage she was secretary of the Association of College News Bureau in September she took up teaching at the University of Wisconsin in the department of journalism. "Y" Man Will Speak To Industrial Group On Labor Unionism Ben Cherrington to Discuss Workers' Problems Tonight at Myers Hall. "The Why of the Labor Union" will be the subject of a talk by Ben Cherrington of Denver, and member of the international Committee of Y. M. C. A., when he meets with the Industrial Research Group at 8:30 each evening at ayers Hall. The president, presides of the local group which give a short outline of the work which will be covered this year. The purpose of the Industrial Research Group is to find the relation of university students to labor problems and to establish sympathy bonds between the manual and mental work of a WWI officer in the local group this morning. The work done by the summer groups that go into industrial work during the summer is a part of the general program. Dorothy Higgins, who spoke to the Women's Forum recent on her last summer's experiences in Colorado, was quite active in the summer group there. All those who have been in summer groups or those who may be interested in those next summer, are es s who may be all others who may be interested. Owl Gets Snappy Staff Makes Arrangements For Four Color Art Work The day is November 11—Homecoming Day—and a big grad is reading the "Who's Who" number of the Sour Owl. His background is solid blue, and in the distance can be seen the blue sky. A red sun is setting No, this is no seance, or day-dream- k's the picture which will appear in the cover of the "Who's Who" n the weet. And those black dots are miniature leaps leaping over the Stadium and swarming the field, at which the winning game, Nebraska versus Kansas number of the Sour Owl due to arrive on the Hill November 11, according to Roland Blanc, in charge of the art work. "The cover will be printed in four colors, and is intended to depict the spirit of Homecoming" he said. Blanc and "Ice" Shore, editor, tows *Topeks yesterday* to confer with the Capper Engraving Company, using the engraving for the Sour Owl. "We have some of the best cartoons even used in a Hill publication," said Shore this morning, "and some mighty clever stuff has been turned in." All drawings must be in by Sunday morning, and any other copy should be turned in at once, according to the staff. The Sigma Alpha Epsilon house was entered and robbed early this morning, for the second time this year. The robber is thought to be the same nego who was frightened into a Sigma Alpha house about midnight last night. Sig Alph House Robbed Second Time This Yea The robbery was committed between 2:30 and 5 o'clock this morning by someone familiar with the house, as only the rooms unoccupied by sleepers were entered, according to memoirs. The first robbery was money, but last night at least five witnesses were taken besides an unknown amount of money. Kappa Kappa Gamma announces the pledging of Kari Ness, of Springfield, Ohio. Engineers Gather In Marvin Hall For Annual Inspection Music, Speeches, Novelties And Refreshments Are Features of The Blowout The Engineers' Annual Inspection which was held last evening in Marvin Hall, went with a bang and a punch that only engineers can put into such a function. A get-acquainted period, combined with a few sips of punch, started the evening. The Boiler Makers' Chorus, "Acomas Orchestra" called the crowd into the room and sang softly entertainment. The program was cannocked so well that it made one expect a surprise. Burnett F. Treat, president of the School of Engineering, and acting president of the company, called for a statement of conditions to be read to the stockholders by the acting secretary, Dean P. F. Walker. Dean Walker gave some very annoying particulars about the valuations and贬值 of the stock, beginning to the present. Secretary Walker's report, was well received by his stockholders. Chancellor Makes Short Speech Chancellor E. H. Lindley, chairman of the organization, spoke for a few minutes, outlining some of the accomplishments of the engineers in the past and some he expected from them. He also shared his view of the stockholders, through his drawings gave some of his ideas for the good of the organization, pointing out some football plays and his version of the honor system. Clyde Luces demonstrated the "Utilization of the Squeal," by a piano number, followed by a couple of songs. "How Professor Johnson Ford was Made," he told a tour of his Ford motor plant. The faculty orchestra, composed on Prof. G. J. Hood, Charles Tuttle of the Journal.World, Prof. A.H. Stass, and Prof. G. C. Shaad, gave a few selections, showing that the engineering faculty took an interest in some of the finer arts. Prof. A.M. Ockerdam demonstrated the play of playing with fire brands. The stockholders and officials of the company joined in demonstrating "The Voice of the Shone." Time Out For Refreshments Time Out For Refreshment The engineers showed us their ability to engineer a new condition when they undertook the "Study on the Supply and Distributing System." The refreshments were deparished in taste, and Whiskey "warmed the signal for closing. Praise To K. U. Engineers Denny Walker requested the faculty to form a line near the door so that students and staff could see it. This checking out system was the close of the evening. "Make Vacancies For Kansas Men" Says Sauls An extension class in advertising which will continue for fifteen weeks was organized in Topoka Wednesday night under the direction of Prof L. N. Flint. The regular meetings will be held every Wednesday night Twenty-five were enrolled the first meeting. Business newspaper men were the ones most interested in taking advantage of the course. It is thought that the enrollment will be doubled by the next meeting. Kansas Engineers are recognized and highly respected by large construction companies, according to Charles De Sauls, general manager of the American Smelting and Refining Co. "Not in Charity but in Justice" In 1907 Mr. Da Scula was selected by Walter Camp to fill a place or his mythical All-American eleven. According to Mr. De Sauls, Kansas Engineers have the same chance of locating jobs as the graduate from an eastern or special education schools. "If a Kansas Engineer, with the proper credentials, comes along and you have no vacancies, find one. We'll help you get hired by the instructions Mr. De Saulis gave the superintendent of a company that is said to do more smelling and refining than any other company in the industry. Smelting and Refining Company. Organize Advertising Class R. O. T. C. Basketteers Will Have Snappy Garl Uniforms for the University R. O. T. C. basketball team arrived today and all candidates on places on the team may get them from Sergeant Gavigan. The suits are blue with two white stripes across the chest and standard basketball trunks. The first practice for the fourteen men who are trying to be well built is playing at the K. N. G. armory, Ninth and Rhode Island, and every Monday and Wednesday evening thereafter. The basic students in the unit have now received sufficient training so that the entire unit will hold parade drill with the colors on next Wednesday afternoon at the regular drill hour. There will be no riffle practice on the riffle range next Saturday on account of the K.U.-Ag game. Women's Swimming Club Adopts Name Of K. U. Quacks Beginners and Advanced Swimmers Will Have Chance to Make Club The swimming club which was organized recently among the women of the University, has adopted the name of "K. U. Quacke." Under the supervision of Marissa Mangan, the principal things accomplished at the meeting were the adoption of the name and appropriate symbols, 'featuring the duck'. The emblem is to be awarded to the beginners and advanced swimmers. The beginner's requirements which have been adopted were suggested and explained by Miss Ruth Hower of the department of physical education. They include four strokes for form, three dives, swimming a quarter of a mile, and floating or treading. In order to give the club a good start, the classes will be open to all applicants until Christmas. These classes are on Wednesdays of every other week at 7:50 clock. After Christmas only those who have gained entrance to the club will be allowed to practice on these nights, and others who suck admission must do so in regular gym classes. "Anyone who can swim fully well can start in now with the others and have a good chance to make the club. Of course we do want beginners; they must learn to swim before they work with the club," said Mins Hower today. Applicants for admission may wear their own suits at these try-outs although it is hoped that inter.a uniform suit will be adopted by the members, on which there will be the emblems they have won. At the meeting next Tuesday October 31, election of officers will be held and the requirements for the advanced class will be considered The rest of the time will be spent in swimming. Chances for a winning freshman track team look good with response to the posting of a card for applicants, in the men's gymnasium. The card calls for the candidate's name, age, weight, height, school, best event and time or distance in the event. Freshmen Sign For Track Forty Respond to Call For Try outs—Applications Still Open All freshmen desiring to try out for the freshman track squad must sign this card. Every man with ability is urged to try out. Russia Needs Discarded Clothing Famine sufferers in Russia are greatly in need of clothing. The country is making aaking for all discarded wearing apparel. They wish that contributions be taken to the southwest door of the hall which is at 6th and Massachusetts streets or that the donors phone us directly or Mrs. W, R. Robertson, 2074, who call for them. More than forty freshmen have already signed up, giving the above information. All events of a competition are indicated among the "best events" with the dashes and short runs having the most popularity. The field events such as the shot-put and broad jump come in for a number of "humps." Russia Needs Discarded Clothing Dramatic Artists To Present Series Of Modern Plays Alpha Chi Sigma will hold a Halloween party at the chapter house Saturday, October 28. Tickets For Festival in Rob inson Gymnasium Go On Sale Soon Tickets will soon be put on sale for the modern play festival featuring Hilda Englund and Mercedes Dessmor in "The Marriage of Kitty," which will appear at Robinson Gymnasium on November 3 and 4. "The Marriage of Kitty" will be a matinee play appearing Friday afternoon, November 3. It is a brilliant and hilarious comedy and is particularly attractive because the entire quantity of the festival will appear in it. Comedy Has Clever Theme The theme of this play centers around the difficulties in finding Miss Katherine Silverton a suitable husband. As the complications set in Kitty discovers herself in love with the same man as Madame de Seminio adores. This is his job. Weevil will welcome any scheme that will achieve her end. In this play Miss Deamples move the part of Kitty, Miss England that of Madame de Seminio. "Rosmoseholm," Henrik Ibeen's powerful drama will be given Friday night, November 3. It is a great and thrilling drama of the present, full of astonishing joy and interest because it is a part of our ourselves, expresses ourselves, and thunders a force and sweeping denunciation of evil in their build and ship. In this play Miss England is supported by Murice Drew, Franklin Ramey, Theodore Rosenk and Miss Alma Bunzel. "Easter" is Pleasing Play "Easter" by August Strindberg, is the last of the three plays to appear during the festival. It is said by critics that this play is written in a simple and lovable human vein, free from harsh and destructive statements. One line from the play, spoken near the end. "There is a virtue greater than justice and that is mercy," is said to express the feeling and understanding underlying the entire play. Hilda England and Mercedes Desmore both appear in this play and are supported by the entire cast. Dramatists Hold Try-Out Susanne Barr Is Selected For Admittance to Club The first try-out play of students outside the Public Speaking Department was given last night in the Little Theatre. Out of a cast of four, Sosanna Barr was the only applicant admitted to the club. The club decided last night that committees shall be appointed by the club president to manage try-out plays as it will be impossible for the entire club to attend all plays, owing to the large number to be given. Up to this time the Dramatic Club has always appointed a committee, composed of members of the club, to judge try-outs for the two big plays that have been voted to amend this rule and instead of choosing judges from the student body, appointed Miss Cecile Burton, coach of the club, and Professor Shinn to be the judges, and they may call other faculty members to aid them. Presentation of "An Hour's Trip to Foreign Lands with Kappa Phi Alumnae" by women dressed to represent various countries, was the principal feature of the lecture. Methodist women's organization, at its meeting last night in Myers Hall. Bernice Christian was leader of the meeting. Elson Hanson, Mary Harkey, Marie Walker, Elizabeth Peacock took the parts of nations. Kappa Phis Take a Trip Through Foreign Land Try-outs for the first big play, "The Admirable Crichton," will start the first of next week. Students expecting to try out for the play can secure copies, at the office, which they may check out for twenty-four hours. After the program refreshments were served and each member received a "traveler's guide" souvenir of the program. The election of sponsor and patroness was postponed until the next meeting. New Features Planned For Next Campus Day Campus Day next year will have great many new features, one of which will be the abundance of hot dog sandwiches; it was decided at a recent meeting of the various food committees called by Miss Anna Barnum to discuss possible changes and improvements over the recent Campus Day. Each chairman presented the difficulties with which his committee had to content. Plans were then discussed which would make the commissary organization more efficient next year. Those who gained experience will be chosen as captains of the groups for the next Campus Day. Committee Hands Violators Of Date Rule A Reprimand Regulations Are Outlined b Disciplinary Body of W. S. G. A. This committee is in charge of the vice-president of the W. S. G. A., who appoints the other members. Any one student who is reprimanded by this committee as many as three will be appointed vice-president, is expelled from the University. In an endeavor to put an end to the promissible breaking of the date rule as it is stated in the by-laws of the W, S, G. A., twelve known offen- cessors, and the Dispici- linary Committee of the W, S, G. A. and severely reprimanded. Interpretations of the regulations regarding the date rule are as follows: 1-All rules of the W. S. G. A apply alike to women living in rooming houses and at home. 2- University women should mkze no engagements with University men or men living in town for later than 8 p.m. on occasion, Saturday, and Sunday nights, or when the date is depended by the Council President. 4—An occasional exception may be made to the regular closing hour for out-of-town callers, who may the stay until 11 o'clock. This exception does not apply to regular out-of-town callers. 3- When the date rule is suspended by the Council President for events of general interest, it is suspended for that event only. 5- Easier directly home from the library is not considered an infraction of the date rule. However, this permit allows stopping for refreshments. The women of the University must these laws, and if the majority do not approve of them and wish them changed, it is in their power to have them amended at any time, but as they stand, any infraction of their calls for punishment from the disciplinary committee. Plan Program For Winter Gamma Epsilon Pi Will Bring Speakers to Lawrence Prominent men and women from outside the University will be invited here to speak to the regular classes in the department of commerce and before a series of Commerce Cozys teas which are to be given by Gamma Epsilon Pi, according to an announcement made by Ruth Lemon, president of the society, at its meeting last night. Members of the faculty and some of the business people of Lawrence will also be invited to speak before open meetings this semester. Daisy Marita Bishop was elected vice-president of the sorority to fill a vacancy in the office. Florence Chancellor, then the Chancellor, was named patroness. An informal discussion of "Woman's Ability and Her Place in the Business World?" was led by Mrs. JenS P. Jenson, one of the patrones. Scarab, national professional an honorary fraternity of architects, will hold initiation on Saturday, November 4, for four numbers, Raymond McGinn, John G. Cunningham, E.J. Sorey, and L. Sorey, e24. Ruth Terry has been appointed leader of the Presbyterian educational work at Haskell. She has a class of 110 students that meet every Tuesday evening between 7:30 and 8:30. Ruth Terry will teach that charge of that work at Haskell. Entire University Will Make Merry On All Hallow Eve Fortune Telling, Bobbing For Apples and Chamber of Horrors Will be Attractions Friday, evening the gayest, jolliest biggest, party of the year, a Hallowen Frolic, will be held in Robinson Gymnastium at 8:00 o'clock. The party is for everyone in the University, from the freshmen to the faceless, men and women admiring the party expects between two and three thousand people to attend. Plan Variety of Games Lights on the first floor of the gymnasium will be covered with yellow shades; and jack-o'-lauters, cornwallats, pumpkins, black cats, rabbits and chicks. Of the day will create a truly Hallowen's enish atmosphere. Every minute of the evening is to be filled with some sort of stunt or game. The committee has planned such a variety of amusements that, it will keep everyone busy all of the time. On the second floor will be any number of booths in which good old-fashioned attractions like bobbing for apples, fortune telling, Blueboard and his Wives, and the Chamber of Horrors will be exhibited. One of the big events of the evening will be a short play by the Dramatic Club, which is full of fun from beginning to end. Refreshements will help after the play, and the latter part of the evening will be spent in dancing. Only Party on Hill Both the Student Council and the W. S, G. A, are working to make this party a success, and all organizations on the hill have pledged their support. No other parties will be allowed Friday evening. The members of the joint committee are: refreshments, June Judy and Waldo Bowen; decorations. Geraldine Eisenberg, Davida Olinger and Marie Griffin. K. U. Graduates Marry Hunter-Monteith Wedding Held Last Night The marriage of Miss Geneva Hunter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Hunter of this city, to John N. Montiel of Kansas City, was solmized at 6:30 o'clock Wednesday evening at the home of the bride's parents, 1300 Ohio Street. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. R. A. Eusden of the Congregational Church, before a company of eighty guests. Attendants were Mrs. Frank Terrell of Kansas City, formerly Miss Lourette Chapman, a sorority sister and a graduate of Xavier Xenophon Smith of Omaha, Neb, fraternity brother of Mr. Montieh, as best man. Ribbon girls were Misses Helen Hungerford and Mary Allen. A wedding super and reception fol- Mr. and Mrs. Montiite are both graduates of the University in the class of '21. Mr. Montiite was a freshman and she graduated. She was a member of the University Daily Kansan board one year, having taken work in the department. Mr. Montiite, a Phi Delta Theta, was president for one year of the Mountaineer. Mr. and Mrs. Montieth will make her home in Kansas City, where Mr. Montieth is practicing law with the firm, Lathrop, Morrow, Sox & Moore. Dean Kent Goes to Meet of Summer School Heads Dean Kent will leave Kansas City tonight for the University of Iowa, at Iowa City, to attend the annual Association of Sampson School Directors. The matters for consideration in the Association are the organization and administration of summer school work. There are twenty-four members in the Association and they represent University summer schools from the Atlantic to the Pacific coasts. There will be an important meeting of Sphinx at the Delta U house tonight at 8 o'clock. Cecil Prettyman, Secretary. Cecil Prestyman, Secretary "Not in Charity but in Justice" THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF Associate Editor-In-Chief Associate Editor Campus Editor New York Sport Editor Clare Ferguson Ralph Johston Johnson Leonard Welsh Glick Schultz Plain Tale Editor Perry Johnson Dennis Reinhart Recharge Editor DeVaughn Francis BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager Lloyd Kuppehstel An't. Bun, Mgr. Marr John Montgomery Jr. BOARD MEMBERS Ben Hibbs Doris Floree Ruth Carter Laura Cowdery Chester Shaw Carlton Towers Mort Hart Caroline Hardrade Subscription price, $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $29.00 for one semester; $50 cents a month; 15 cents a week. Entered as second-class mail matter September 1, 1872, at the University of Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. Fublished in the afternoon, five times a month, by the University of Kansas, from the nature of the University of Kansas, from the date of publication. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phone, K. U. 25 and 66 The Daily Kanman aims to picture the undergraduate life of the University of Texas at Austin by lighting the news by standing for the ideals of integrity, honesty, and responsibility; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be helpful; to take more serious problems to whisper heads in all to serve to the best of its ability. THURSDAY, OCT. 26, 1922. Peacock Comes the surprising statement from Zion City, III, that shoes can be made to last as long as the uppers do by renewing the soles with sawdust and glue. They worry too much about souls in that town, anyway. PETERING OUT The football team that *starts* strong in the first quartar rand then got woken and weaker through the rest of the game would get the grand razz from the fans. But nobody in the K. U. ranks jeers when the "Thundering Thousand" starts out strong on the first stanza of the "Crimson and the Blue" and then gradually peters out until by the time the last stanza is reached the words sung are mostly "la in." It wouldn't be too great a tax on anyone's brain to commit the words of every stanza, and it would show that there exists a fine loyalty among the students. The Alma Mater is worth learning and it is worth carrying on down through the years with you when your days at K. U. are only a memory. Statistics show canaries are the most popular pets; cultivate your voice. "FOOLS RUSH IN—" The Kansas has many times in the past expressed its opinion of the prep-school tactics displayed each year by Washburn students before the annual Kansas-Washburn gridron contest. However the climax of indignity and ill-breeding seems to have been reached by this year's escapade. Two days before Saturday's game, Washburn students painted their "Washburn Fights" and "Beat K U." upon the Stadium. This in a memorial erected by the State of Kansas to its soldier dead, a structure raised to the honor and memory of World War heroes. As well might they paint their slogans upon the tombstones of a cemetery. This misguided spirit displayed so regularly by the Topeka school, always so decidedly sophomoric and pointless, surely has reached the height of discourtesy and sacrilege. Also the voracity of the Kansas coaching staff was bitterly attacked in Topeka papers when the announcement was made before the game that the Kansas second team would be used. After the game equally bitter attacks have appeared because the first team was used in a few minutes of the game. There is a strong sentiment among student lovers of clean sport in favor of the discontinuance of athletic connections with Washburn. There are other schools as good in the state with which to schedule practice games. The Jayhawk has tolerated the boirish indignities of the Ichabads long enough, and would do well to go elsewhere for its intra-state contests. No.35. Official Daily University Bulletin Copy received by Florence E. Bils, Editor, Chevroleur's Office until 11:00 a.m. BOARD OF DIRECTORS, K. U. MEMORIAL CORPORATION: There will be an important meeting of the Board of Directors and Finance Committee of the K. U. Memorial Corporation in Room 110 Fraser Hall at 10:30 Sunday morning. Vol. II. The regular meeting of the Sociology Club will be held at 7:30 tonight in Room 210, Fraser Hall. DOROTHY GOODMAN, President. F. W. BLACKMAR, Faculty Adviser. ALFRED G. HILL, Secretary. SOCIOLOGY CLUB; THE NEW ABYSSINIA The Industrial Research Group will meet at 8:30 tonight in Myers Hall. Mr. Bin Cherrington of the International Committee of the Y. M. C. A. will present his findings. Far away, romantic Abyssinian has at last awakened from its stupor, eons and eons old, and realized a few of its possibilities. The aged queen, old alenik's daughter, and a descendant of King Solomon, shed tears when she heard the story of the young country, the United States, being so strong and splendid while her land, so ancient, so noble, so full of possibilities, lies asleep after all its centuries. INDUSTRIAL RESEARCH GROUP: Now the queen realizes some of the short-comings of her father, the old Menelik, famous in all countries, intelligent, but lacking tact or perhaps the ability to meet people. His one big mistake was that he kept his front doors closed to white people; the ones who possibly could have made him a richer and happier man and his people better citizens. Now she is sending blanket invitations to the colored people of America, and special invitations to American engineers to come and dig out her diamonds. She thinks her leopards would look better made into rugs and ladies' coats, and she would like to look out over her broad expanse of Queen-of-Sheba land and see fields of wheat, corn, beets, and sugar cane. We say three cheers for the queen of Abyssinia. The old world is getting too small. A few out-of-the-way places where one can go and take a few deep, pure breath, and live and die in peace and plenty and have room to spare, is not to be sneezed at. Then one can have an eye on some of those African royal charms too. O Beauty! swift to heal and bless The heart assailed with loneliness. Yet grips a horse between her knees And finishes high a naked blade And dream of white roads in the shade Of little, whispering popular trees. WALTER MORRISON, President. JOHN R. DYER, Faculty Adviser. Javhawk Jargon They even had a yacht named Henry Ford in the Gloucester races the other day, and true to form the way they did, don't start when they got ready to go. In a couple of weeks 25 per cent of the eligible voters of the country will function as such, and from then on to the next election the 75 per cent will cuss the ones that are elected. Father of 17 an Inventor—News note. He ought to qualify as an umpire, too. The bandit who up and sneezed a bullet the other day and robbed the loctor of a fee probably wanted to explain just how hard he really was. Daily you summon me to mark Serene above the city's fret. Wonder if Bryan still kids Darwin? He should develop capital campaign odder on Darwin's hobby. And one loves children, sheep that go Slow-cropping, twilight, candle-glow. News item: "Canada will have a standing army." Where are they going to stand? Running a woman's face in the paper to see if she can guess who she is, all right, but how in the world are women? If the face of the woman is obliterated in the cut? graduated Trinity who greed the love Diana and the young Jeanne *d* Art. Elizabeth Hanly Danforth in N. Y. Time. When others fail, forsake, forget Two friends I have who greet me yet. Throw overcoats to the dogs on days like this. Friends The one a paraen creature is. Bare to the sun's exertion like, the dawn. It breathes in breast, the crawling, crowded earth she spurs. Hallows the stars to heel and turna ANNOUNCEMENTS The Graduate Club will meet at Myers Hall for a Halloween party Thursday, evening. October 26, at the Masks, and costumes are in order. Try-outs for the Dramatic Club play "The Admirable Crichton," by J. M. Barrie, have been postponed until the first of next week. Books of the play, published in the Public Speaking office, but they must not be kept out over a day. Miss Cecile Burton, director Rally for all men and women voters in the gymnasium tonight at 7:30 clock. The band will be there, everybody turn out and learn about he Kansas Compensation measure hat will be up for passage Nov. 7th. .OST—Eversharp pencil with name engraved. Finder please call 2138 Blue. —O-27 WANT ADS LOST- Phi Delta Theta pin; small, white gold, diamond points. "W, L. H." on back. Finder notify W. L. Huggins. Phone 248. —O-2 WANTED--Single room by student, close to hill. Leave address at Kansas台. O-31 FOR RENT—Furnished bed rooms, medium. $125.00 per month. Also light housekeeping rooms, unfurni- ded, two for $20. Phone 1520 Blues, hours 4 to 6 or call at 931 La. 8 to 10. O-27 'OR RENT -Furnished rooms for girls, vacated by sorority. Four loors north of Jayhawk Cafe. 1328. Phone. 2208. —NJ- SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire to earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Please work your hardest, make it worth it. Nearley 344 Wayne Ave., Wilkes City, Mo. - S78 FOR RENT - Furnished rooms for girls, vacated by sororities. Four doors north of Jayhawk Cafe. 1328 Ohio. Phone 2206. LOST—Wednesday night in South Park, small square-link watch chain with pocket knife attached. Please call 1011 Black. 30 Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. PROTCH The College TAILOR Thomas Shoe Electric Shop For a Good Complexion Boncilla Massage STADIUM BARBER SHOP "The Shop of Service" 1033 Mass. St. First Door South of Von's WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods Visit the United Army Stores Co 1003 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Army Goods FOR SALE—Top coat, size 35, very high class. Call 1011 Black 90 LOST—Sigma Chi Chi. Name on back. Reward. Return to 1429 Teen. O-29 PROFESSIONAL CARD R. J. W. OWRYON. (Dentist) Special attention to prevention and treatment of pyorrhea. 304 Perkins Building. Tel. 507. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive Optometrists). Exam examined; glasses made. Office 1025 Mass MA For Style, for Comfort—Wear a Tailored to Measure OVERCOAT It guarantees a proper fit—individual style—the best wool quality. You can be sure of all three in It's always a safe investment to buy distinctive tailoring like ours—clothes with a natural reputation for honest valuing. RIGHT NOW IS THE TIME TO ORDER YOUR OVERCOAT FOR WINTER. WE WILL DELIVER IT ANYTIME YOU SAY. S. G. CLARKE 1033 Mass. Phone 666 EL. V. Price & Co. © 1928 VARSITY DANCE F. A. U. Hall Saturday Night, Oct.28 Five Piece Orchestra Eva—"Adam, have a bite of my apple." SEE Adam and Eva BOWERSOCK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31 T. G. Wear, who plays the part of Adam, has studied under famous New York Artists and has played with Lionel Barrymore and Julia Arthur. Prices — $1.00, 75c, and 50c Mail Orders to Elizabeth Dunkel, Henley Hall -- Seats Go on Sale Friday at the Bowersock HILDA ENGLUND THE LADY COMING November 3rd-4th ROBINSON GYM Friday Matinee "THE MARRIAGE OF KITTY" by Lennox Friday 8 P. M. "ROSMERSHOLM" by Ibsen Saturday 8 P. M. "EASTER" by Strindberg THE BOYD'S BOSS. MERCEDES DESMORE Great Plays Given by All-Star Casts Hilda Englund, one of the greatest Ibsen actresses of to-day, has created five of Ibsen's heroines in the original casts at the Royal Theatre, Stockholm, Sweden. Ibsen himself selected Miss Englund to create the role of "Mother Ase" in "Peer Gynt", of "Regina" in "Ghosts," and of "Gerd" in "Brand." Mercedes Desmore, an English actress who for the past eight years has been playing in America. Until recently she has been playing opposite Lou Tellegen and John and Lionel Barrymore. Robert Donaldson, direct from The Theatre Guild of New York City where he has played leading parts with such stars as Otis Skinner and Walter Hampden, will play the part of "Rosmer" in Rosmersholm. Ibsen and Strindberg, Like Shakespeare, Should Be Seen By All SEASON TICKETS $1.50 and $2.00 Send orders to Henry A. Shinn, Department of Public Speaking THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Come to Manhattan Saturday FOOTBALL TROY DAVIS AGGIE-Wildcats vs. KANSAS-Jayhawkers Aggie Field, 2:30 P.M. (On New Stadium Site) The K. U.-Aggie Game has been the hot contest for years. It means a Gridiron Battle—and if you enjoy a Good Football Game, COME. Manhattan Business Men cordially invite you to visit their city. They are College Boosters and believe in friendly cooperation with K.U. THE HOME OF Kansas State Agricultural College. Good stores with fair prices and honest service.Live,merchants. MANHATTAN "The Beautiful City" One quarter million dollar new school system already voted Convenient street car service to the field DO YOU KNOW K. S. A. C. One of the best Engineering Schools in the world. An Agricultural School of world's respect.A $250,-000 stadium under construction. This publicity arranged for by the following public spirited, wide awake individuals and business firms of Manhattan in the interest of the college and the city: THE GILLETT HOTEL COLE'S DEPARTMENT STORE HAYE'S CAFE MANHATTAN CAFE THE BOOTERY THE DURLAND FURNITURE CO. THE VICTORY LUNCH STEVENSON CLOTHING COMPANY MADDOCK & ZERBY © Jewelers (Goods of Quality) THE PINES CAFETERIA (Agleville) HULLS HARDWARE BREWER'S BOOK STORE PALACE DRUG CO. PAINE FURNITURE CO. MI-LADY'S HAT SHOP KING'S CANDY KITCHEN BROWN'S MUSIC SHOP Direct Train Service "Spend Friday Night in Manhattan" Union Pacific Leave Lawrence Leave Manhat 10:00 a. m. 11:52 a. m. 5:45 p. m. 7:20 p. m. Santa Fe Rooters' Special "One and one-third Fare Round Trip" Leave Lawrence Leave Manhattan 9 a. m. 6 p. m. COME ON JAYHAWKS Manhattan is Open to You Drive "Every Corner Marked" Golden Belt Highway Victory Highway Red Line Route: Topeka—Hard Surfaced Road. St. Marys—Chart. Wanego—Excellent Dirt Highway. Manhattan—Improved Roads. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Aggie Eleven Is Handicapped By Loss Of Players Five First String Men Are On The Injured List From Oklahoma Game Reports from Manhattan since the Aggie-Oklahoma last Saturday indicate that the Kansas Wildcats may have team weakened by injuries to first string men. Five Aggie players were removed from the Sooner game on account of injuries and it is probable that they will not be in the line-up Saturday. Axline, Stark, Sears, Stahl, and Sebring are the casualties from the southern clash. Axline and Stark were carried from the field during the first half of the war, but men received minor injuries. Stark and Axline are the two regular half-backs and were the most consistent ground gainers during the first half of the fractures. These two men were commonly on line plugges and end runs. Other Men Injured "Susie" Sears, fullback, was also injured, but he will probably be able to play in the game Saturday. Sebastian O'Connor and other regulars who sustained injuries. The entire Aggie team is considerably the worst for the game, as the heavy Oklahoma battled the Wildcats on every play. The Sooner backfield averaged about thirty pounds more to the man than the Aggies score, and the Oklahoma defenses had an advantage of about twenty pounds. Shannon Hurt Last Night Walter Shannon sustained a broken bri in practice last night and will probably be out of the game for the rest of the season. Shannon's play in the Washburn game caused concern among sport followers here. The line-ups for the intra-state elast: line-ups for echoes Kansas Black l.e. Holderman l.t. Higgins (Capt.) l.g. Lonborg l.c. Davidson r.g. Mosby r.t. Griffin r.e. Knox l.q. Xkrueger l.h. McAdams r.h. Burt f. Aggie Wobe Weber Nisbih Sbrinderd Hutton Hahn (Capt, Hahn Sebring Swartz Wardley Burton Sears Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Gayford of Salt Lake City, Utah, and Mr. Herbert Gayford of London, England, have been visiting in Lawrence for several days. Mr. and Mrs. Gayford are the parents of Dovothy and Muriel Gayford, who are both students at the University. SHOES Florsheim Florshiem builds shoes with the style young men like Florsheim Shoes $9 Student Volunteer Group Hear Lecture Discussion THE SPOT CASH SHOE STORE. An interesting discussion of the lectures of Dr. Zwewer, who has made a life study of Mohammedamianum, was led by Nora Siler, f'07, a returned missionary from the West Indies, at the Student Volunteer meeting Tuesday night. Important difference and kenken between the Middle East and the Mesopotamia were discussed. This group of students will meet regularly every other Tuesday to discuss work in foreign fields. If you happen to be down town at noon time make it a point to go to WIEDEMANN'S TEA ROOM for your lunch. American style. 50 Cents a Plate EVERYDAY is SUIT and OVERCOAT DAY $20.00 to $35.00 HOUK-GREEN CLO. CO. John Stewart, a former student of the University, spent Sunday at the Phi Mu Alpha house. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Gilbert, of Kansas City, Mo., attended the football game Saturday. 100 Make you gift to the bride One of distinction, one of extraordinary quality. It should be accepted by the most fashionable. You can select her such a present from Gustafsson's set line of unquestionably correct wedding gifts. Gustafson Copy by Norman Hem The College Jeweler A HERE IT IS! A Sale of Luxite Silk Hose $1.95 A selling event eagerly watched for by thrifty shoppers Black, Brown, Beige, Grey, No. 1350 Luxite premium thread silk Hose full fashioned with lise tops and feet. Regularly Priced $2.25 Friday and Saturday Only $1.95 Buy these values for Christmas Gifts, Miss Lacey King will be at our hostery de- signer. Outer Fischer's STORES ARE GOOD STORES SANTA FE—ROCK ISLAND OFFICIAL ROUTE-THRU STEEL TRAIN Football Special Train Kansas vs Aggies Manhattan, Kansas, Saturday,October 28, Athletic Department Officials, the Team and the K. U. Band (50 pieces) will be on Santa Fe special—leaving Lawrence 9 a.m. Saturday-Returning leave Manhattan 6 p. m. Special Lunch and Dinner at McFarland, Kans.—Rock Island Dining Room and Lunch Counter. Tickets on sale at Santa Fe station and K. U. Athletic Office—Final return limit Oct. 29. Good on all Santa Fe and Rock Island trains. SPECIAL ROUND TRIP FARE $3.75 Ride on the Official Train and be with the Bunch For further information ask W. W. Burnett, Agent Santa Fe, Phone 32 SantaFe We make clothes. We do alterations on both women's and men's clothes, relining ladies' and men's overcoats, cleaning and pressing. Suiting you, anyway. That's My Business SCHULZ THE TAILOR 917 Mass. St. $27.50 Buys The Very Best Suit Overcoat Gabardine Stock Why Pay More BELLS FLOWER SHOP Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS SKOFSTADS Phone 139 825 1-2 Mass Varsity-Bowersock Today Only ^ GEORGE/MELFORD PHOTOGRAPH BY JEFF L. LANG A Diamond Cinderella GEORGE MELFORD BURNING SANDS" WANDA HAMLEY, MILTON SILLS, ROBERT CANT JAQUELINE LOAN Sport Review and Comedy Shows: 2:30; 4:00; 7:30; 9:00. Rose Dione Tully Marshall in "SILENT YEARS" Adults 33c. Children 10c Comedy "CHICKEN PARADE" Adults 28c Children 10c A story of outdoors. Brilliant cast. A unique setting-St. Lawrence country. A tense thrilling drama all like to see. Friday and Saturday Viota Dana in "A $500 BABY" Tom Mix in "TRAILIN" "Beat the Aggies" "Beat the Aggies" Tailored carefully smartly styled Of course you want quality clothes there's no lasting satisfaction in any other kind. That's why we have Society Brand—they are so carefully tailored, so smartly styled. We know them, from A to Z—and we assure you of this: your suit will have style to the last day of a long life. $45. Others $24.50 Upwards Are you going to the Kansas-Aggie game Saturday? If so your wardrode will need a few additions—such as a woolen nuffler, gloves. woolen hose, warm sheep lined coat, leather coat, knitted vest or an extra warm Obercoat! Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUT-FITTERS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1 VOLUME XX Bonus Bill Means Small Tax Boost, Says J. A. Kelsey Measure Speakers At Student Rally Explain Terms of Much Mooted Message A small but enthusiastic crowd of students attended the rally at Robinson Gymnasium last night and heard the forceful address of Judge C. A. Smart and the graphic explanation of the Adjusted Compensation measure by J. A. Kelsey, member of the American Legion compensation council. After a few well received selections was the University Band Mr. Kelsey has introduced. Stating at the outset that he was not there to deliver an address, but simply to explain the various phases, of the compensation measure, he proceeded to touch on some of the most important facts. "The bill," said Mr. Kelley, "provides for the raising of $25,000,000 in bond issues at a rate of not more than 5 1/2 per cent. These bonds will be redeemed over a period of five years. Many voters are staggered by such a huge increase in borrowing that considerable tax burden. The taxes last week were (wenty dollars on every thousand dollars worth of assessed property, and the bond issue would mean an addition of thirty-nine cents on the thousand, that as the bill stands it could be called a financial matter at all." "I wonder how many of you knew that Kansas is one of two states in this country which does not have one red cent of bonded indebtedness outstanding Oklahoma. Oklahoma has a bill pending which would mean the raising of fifty millions, or just twice as much as we are planning." NUMBER 36 Present "Bill's "Case Present "Bills" "Case" Judge Smart was then introduced and endured the way presented the case of "Bill," the serviceman man, against Uselm. Sule. "This is not a bonus; it is adjusted compensation," the judge pointed out. "Uncle Sam said, 'Bill I need you, give you thirty dollars a month.' and you went. While Bill was over there prices, wages—everything—went up out of sight. But Bill continued to get his thirty dollars. And he came back to find a world and a country gone mad with extravagance. He came back to rub shoulders with men who had been hit by a bullet—a hundred dollars and two hundred dollars, to stay at home. And now says Babcock: 'Unele, I'm not asking for charity. I just want a square deal that all'." A committee of ex-service men was organized to act as informants at the polls with instructions, not to ask for votes for the bonus, but to point out illegal actions in the ballot is clearly marked, it is considered as against the measure. Fine Arts Students Give An Instrumental Recital The following program was played yesterday: Piano numbers predominated in the program given by students of the School of Fine Arts in Fraser Chapel yesterday afternoon. Next week a more varied program is promised. Four of Miss Privat's voice pupils will sing, and there will be other interesting numbers. Miano: Fileuse ... Stolpowsk Edna Brown Violin: Schoen Rosmarin ... Kreisler Fleshbait Coin Piano: Novelette in E ...Schumann Agnes Adams Piano: Eroton E 1 ... Syogrer Piano; Concert Eude ... MacDowell Harp; Dugong ... Organ: Toccata ...Crawford Mabel McNary Ruth Gould Jano: Fiedermans Waltz... ... Strauss-Schuet Ruth Gould UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, OCT. 27, 1922. Dakota Frosh to Do Unusual Stunts Recalcitrant frish at the South Dakota College are required to do some anunus stunts. Among other feats performed by the yeilings is the taking of a dog and ccat census, milk drinking, chasing squirrels about the campus, and sweeping around the armeny, as asked to pick leaves on the campus, and some of them wear necklaces of fruit as an indication of an unusually sweet disposition. Cosmopolitan Club Holds Open House Next Sunday The Cosmopolitan Club house at 1353 Indiana will be open to visitors Sunday afternoon, October 29, from 3 to 6 o'clock. The members of the club wish to meet socially all who are interested in them, to show their appreciation for the friendship shown among other acquaintances among Americans. The house at 1633 Indiana is the new home for foreign students attending the University of Kansas. At present there are twenty-two living in the house representing six different nationalities. Architects To Have Joseph M. Kellogg As New Instructor Former Student Is Pleased With Improved Appearance of the University Prof. Joseph M. Kellogg, f03-05, is a new member of the faculty of the department of architecture. He returns to the campus after an absence of seventeen years. He was graduated from Cornell University. "I was surprised and pleased to find so many of the faculty members still here," said Professor Kellogg in commenting on his return to K. U. "I am further pleased to see the increased attention which is being given to the tress and shrubs around the campus." "There was no Kankan here when I was a student." he continued, "I like to read it. I have seen few college papers so alive and interest in Even the most prosaic topics are written up in an interesting manner." Professor Kellogg is a native Kanada man who teaches with the Normal School at Emporia His brothers, Vernon Kellogg and Fred Kellogg, and his sister, Mary Kellogg, are all graduates of K. U. Professor Kellogg taught at Cornell University after his graduation and later at the University of Illinois. For the three years before coming to K. U. he taught in the Texas A. & M. College, near Houston 1923 Annual is Seller Unusual Result of Sales Cam paign Due Special Offer ing contest had closed, according to the records. "We have more orders for Jayhawker on our ledger right now than there were last year at the time the books were printed," said Bill Brehm, business manager of the 1923 Jayhawk this morning. These orders exceed those of this time last year by 250 per cent, and that was after the sell-off. "Much of this increase in sales is owing to our offer to stamp the buyer's name in gold leaf on the cover," said Mr. Brehm. "We had to place a deadline on this offer, and all those who failed were dealt with." We will have to pay a fee of fifty cents if they want their names on the covers." The orders to date total 1875 and the managers expect to reach the 2,600 mark by the time the books are printed. "There will be no sales direct from the office," said Mr. Brehm, "so it will be necessary for everyone who wishes a Jayhawker to order in advance." "We will from time to time establish deadlines on certain sections and these will be rigidly enforced. This will greatly increase our efficiency, and that's what we make this the "Aristocrat of College Annals." Proof-reading Is Blamed For Delay of Director Because the material for the 1922-23 Student Directory has not been proof-read as yet, the directory will probably not be in the hands of the students before November 18, 2002, from the office of registrar, George O. Foster, Aumnonnce of the arrival of the directories from Topeka will be made in the Kannan, and all students will be free at the Kannan, and free at the office of the registrar. All the copy which was sent in to the state printer at Topeka, was fully corrected in accordance with the last-minute information handed in by the students, assuring a com- Katherine Bennet, A. B. '21, is visiting at the Alpha Chi Omega house today. Reduce Rail Rate To K.U.Grads For Homecoming Game Invitations To Be Sent Tomorrow to All Former Students For November 11. An invitation to all K. U. grads to attend Homecoming is extended in a University news letter to be mailed tomorrow to 15,000 grades and former students of the University. The letter is being published by the Alumni Association and the Athletic department, giving in detail the two-day program being arranged by the Homecoming committee. ember 11 In addition, a review of the strength of the Kansas team is given, paying tribute to both the team and their coaches. A short review of the Nebraska and Oklahoma teams is given, showing their strength as "done" will allow them to substitution of previous games between these teams and the Jayhawkers. Railroads Grant Rebates Persons coming to Lawrence for the homecoming game may obtain one and a half fare round-trip rates according to the newsletter, if at the time of purchasing their railroad ticket, they receive yellow certificates which must be validated in Lawrence in order to permit a one-half fare return rate. Railronds Grant Rebates Whether you attend Homecoming in person or in spirit, you can take part alike in the K. U. Radio Homecoming," says the letter, which takes up the plans for this big event for December 11. The radio message will go out from Robinson Gymnastics between 8 and 10 o'clock, by wire to the station's building. A 400-meter wave length broadcasting station which will broadcast the program and reach receiving stations in every portion of the United States Plan Big Radio Program Among the speakers on the program are Chancellor Lindley, Paul Kimbail, president of the Alumni Association, and Dr. F. C. Allen, director of athletics. The K. U. glee clubs the band, and the orchestra will say it with music. Then, about 10 o'clock, the entire student body will join with the cheerleader in giving the Rock Chalk. On page of the letter is taken up with instructions of how to order tickets for the three remaining football games to be played on the Staples game. An order blank for the convenience of the graph and former students. To Analyze K. C. Charter Fassett Invited by Mayor t Make Study When Mr. Fassett was in Kansas City last month making a talk bekend about the new law, the mayor and other officials to come back and analyze the new char- Prof. C. M. Fassett, of the department of political science, will go to Kansas City, Mo., some time next week to meet with city officials for the purpose of analyzing the new city charte and comparing it with other cities. Several new German and Greek books have been placed on the shelf above the card catalogs at Spooner Library. This shelf always carries the latest one hundred to one hundred copies which have arrived at the library. New German And Greek Books Added To Librar All new books except those which are wanted immediately for the reserves or departmental libraries, are added to this row at the left end and a corresponding number are removed before the arrival get a short run of publicity before it is buried in the stacks or the departmental libraries. come back and analyze the new charter. "Not in Charity but in Justice" Professor Fassett will go to Philadelphia on November 23 to attend the national convention of the Municipal League and the American Academy of Social and Political Science, which are the leading organizations of their knd in this country and which are holding their meetings together this year. Professor Fassett is a member of both of these organizations. To University Students: It is my understanding that plans are on foot among the students of the University for the forming of a "bumming" expedition to Manhattan this Friday and Saturday, and I am grateful to this opportunity to express my disapproval of such practices. In the first place, the stalking of rides is absolutely unfair to the railroads. This year the railroads have made liberal concessions to the students in order to allow only fair that those who wish to see the game Saturday should pay for their transportation. And secondly, there is no small amount of physical danger for the students themselves in such a "bumming" It is my sincerity desire that students play fair in this matter, and I hope that the railroad will take measures to prevent overcharging rights, "Bumming" expeditions reflect no credit on K. U. Survey Committee Makes Report On Kansas Education E. H. Lindley, Chancellor. Give Only Fragmentary Statement now—Would Center Architecture at University Fragments of the report made by the survey committee, which was appointed last winter by the United States Bureau of Education, upon the request made by Governor Allen, have been printed in the Topeka papers, but the entire report has not been made public and probably will not be for some time as it will come from Washington. The purpose of this report was to g.t. an outside point of view as to education in Kansas. This committee was made up of leading educators who have served in the headhugged by Dr. George Zook of the United States Bureau of Education. The report recommends that a new board of seven or nine non-salaried men be appointed to govern the institutions of higher learning, replacement administration. The board would be appointed by the governor for a term of six years. The long term will remove the members from allegiance to any particular administration, and then unrestrained by public opinion. Another part of the report recommends that architecture be centered at the University and that architects are required to be limited to its rural aspects. The report approves the business manager system of purchasing supplies and administering the finances of the schools of the state. Discuss Student Relief Men and women delegates from a dozen or more colleges in Knanass met at Emporin, October 22, and discussed the matter of raising funds for the deserving European students next winter. Sweet Higgins, c23, and Walter Morrison, c24, who were the leaders of the campaign, say this is part of a large campaign to be put on all over the United States. Kansas Colleges Plan Fund For European Scholars Several college men who traveled through Europe last summer gave interesting talks on how badly the students in Europe need funds in order to complete their education. They taught them how to wear clothing and clothes a student and also pointed out the squallied conditions under which some of them have to live. Tickets may be secured at Manhattan after these special tickets are sold, but the location probably will not be so good. Reservations may be secured at the athletic office on or at the Round Corner Drug Store. Good Seats in Rooters' Section Of the 890 tickets reserved for K, U rooters at the K. U-Aggie game Saturday, 240 remain. The seats are all in the rooters' section and are good seats. Carl Duffee, Shad Janicke, and Chet Shore were in Kansas City Thursday soliciting advertising for the "Sour Owl." Y.W.C.A. Promises An All Star Cast In 'Adam and Eva Tickets on Sale Today at The Bowersock—Reservations Made By Mail "Adam and Eva," a three-act modern comedy, will be presented under the auspices of the University Y. W. Bowery, on October 31, at the Bowery Theater. The cast is composed of University talent and according to reports from the play management, an all-star cast will be seen carrying the roles. "Ted" Wear, who pays the part of Adam has studied under famous New York artists and has played with Lionel Barymore and Julia Arthur, Madeline Donnymer, who has played in several former campus productions, will play the role of Eva, opposite him. Leads Well Supported Promise is given that the leads will be well supported. Albert Kerr will take the role as the American business man, James King, who has a genius for making money and not a trace of talent for managing his own home. Mr. King is bored to death by his relatives and family and flees to Brazil, leaving his checkbook and family under the jurisdiction of his young business manager. The last act is near an apple or The last act is near an apple orchard where the whole tribe is driven back to Eden after the reincubation of the offspring to invent a successful calamity. Cast Working Hard The play is progressing very successfully, according to Mrs. Myrtle Blair, who is coaching the production. "Each member of the cast has been working hard and they handle parts very well," said Mrs. Blair. Seats went on sale today at the Bowersock Theatre. Mail orders may be sent to Elizabeth Dunkel, Henley Hall. Dinner For Junior Women Games, Readings, and Talks Feature Program Hallowen decorations left a festive note to the Junior women's dinner which was held Thursday, Oct. 25. Nights were attended. The women first met at Robinson gymnasium where they played games and listened to a program. Eliza Lazarus, an English teacher, gave readings, and Miss Barnes, of the department of English, gave a talk in which she emphasized the need of more friendliness among students between members of the same classes. "I was amused," said Miss Barnes, "when I heard we were going to have hello' day. Every day should be that." She urged each girl to do her part in meeting the stranger half way. After the program, the women went over to the Commons. Upon entering they found the lights turned out of the building and four huge jack-o-lantrans. Little Joo Dunkle, dressed as a girl and resembling his sister to a remarkably extent, sang and danced. During the dance a three piece orchestra played. Y. M. Will Revive Weekly Noonday Luncheon Plan The first of a series of four noon day luncheons at Myers Hall will be given by the University Y. M. C. A next Thursday, November 2, at 13:03 o'clock sharp. For these luncheons some of the best speakers in the state have been procured, and the accompanying "eats" are said to be well Noon-day luncheons for the men of the University were weekly affairs during the fall and spring of last year. Because so much interest was generated evidence bnd the attachence wied to go, the Y. M. C. A. has decided continue them. Their review this year means an important addition to the University program for the promotion of good fellowship in the situ- Tickets for the luncheons may be purchased at the Y. M. C. A. office in Myers Hall at any time, and will be distributed by the HL by members of the organization. "Not in Charity but in Justice". Spooner Library Has Many Kansas Weeklies Nearly one hundred weekly papers are on file in Spoon library. These papers are gifts from the editors to the library. To the right of the main reading room door in a large filing cabinet, they are found; arranged alphabetically according to the name of the paper. Often only one or two people from a certain town or county are attending the University. But, owing to the kindness of the editors, most of the students are there for them, or towns in Kansas are there for their readers, whether few or many. Faculty Members Give Second Recital Of Fine Arts Series Prof. Walter Whitlock and Miss Fanny May Ross Appear in Concert Monday Prof. Walter Whitlock, tenor, and Miss Fanny May Ross, pianist, of the School of Fine Arts, will give the second faculty recital of the season in Fraser Hall Monday evening, October 30, at 8:20 o'clock. Mr. Whitlock is a graduate in voice and piano from the Cincinnati Conservatory. He has also studied voice under John Hoffman, Edgar Schofield and James Terry, and in the past five years he has taught voice in well known colleges, coming here from Lansing Conservatory, where he was head of the voice department, to take the place of Prof. W. B. Wheatley, who has a year's leave of absence. Miss Ross is a graduate of Christian College, Columbian, Mo., Shaded one year in the New England Conservatory in Boston with Caudell, and two years in employers in Boston with Mine Hopekirk the well known concert pianist an educator. Miss Ross is very artisti and plays with good style and There will be no admission charges for this recital, and the public is cordially invited to attend. The program follows: Miss Ross Cielo e mar ("Gioconda") Ponchielli Mr. Whitlock Fastoriste ... Scarlati-Tausig Kreisleriana, Nos. 1, 2, 7 Schumann Caprice at the Airs de ballet from "Alceste" Gluck-Saint Saens Miss Rose Respitti ... E. Wolf Ferra a. "Im verde prati cello senza niente" b. "Jo die Saluti ve ne mando mille." "E. Tanto Ce pericol ch'o t Lero!" Sotto il ceil ... Gabrielle Sibella Mr. Whitelock Mr. Whitlock Noel (A modern setting of "Good King Wenceslas") ... Gardner La Cathedral engloutie ... Debussy A Maritime Show ... Goessens .. John Alden Carpenter Miss Ross Seanleen ... S. COLORdeer-Taylor Where my dear lady睡 sleepy The Crying of Water Campbell Pitton Song of the Open ... Frank Lafarge Fantasie ... Chopin Miss. Roeg Graduate Students Hold Jolly Hallowe'en Party The Graduate Club entertained the graduate students with a Halloween party Thursday evening at Myers Hall. Witches, wizards, and palmists told fortunes, past and future, creating much merriment among the guests. Refreshments of pumpkin puree and gravy made for eighty guests. The guests of honor were Dean E. B. Stouffer and Mrs. Stouffer. Those in charge of the entertainment were: Assistant Instructor Donald Helmet, Prof. Oscar Irizary, Nellie Lynn, Lueretia Swisse, Mist Hackman, assistant instructor, and Miss Doring. Shewin F. Kelley, president of the Graduate Center at the University of Montreal, extended trip through Canada, the West, and Southwest, but was unable to attend the mixer. Twenty-six men have been selected for the Kansas State Normal golf club by Frank A. Beach, dean of the School of Music. Trips over the state are planned for the club. Recently the club has received calls for dates. They will take their first trip soon, according to Mr. Beach, and arrangements for a two weeks' trip will be attempted for Christmas vacation. Defeat of Aggies Promised Rooters Who Made Rally Virg Miller Leads Jayhawk Fans In Warm Old Rally This Noon Noon a hen-pecked Aggie cow which begged for mercy and deliverance from the sharp heak of a victorious Jayhawk bird was one of the features impropriate rally, held for the purpose of giving the team a roaring send-off. The Bossie Is Wary A dilapidated motor car, a sickly-looking brindle cow, and the enormous, fantastically-colored Jayhawk bird, led the parade which formed in front of Green Hall and marched to Snow gathering en-reinforcements as it progressed. The melodious strains of cowheels, the antics of the Kansas State University, the Aggie emblem, together with their party at Kannwa, did their part in generating the pop necessary for a successful rally and cheer-fest. From all indications, the placards carried by Bossie, reading "Keep that bird away from me," and "This guy is the worry of my life," expressed the sentiment of the student body. The parade then made its way back to Green Hall where a circle was formed. In the middle was a car in which Vigg Miller, with his head protruded through its well-worn top, tied in characteristic fashion, "Oh me, the Cow's eye." That was followed by the Thunderbell and the Rock Chalk. Phog Allen gave a message from the Chancellor which expressed hearty disapproval of any attempt at bumming to Manhattan or rushing the gates there. Phog Discourages Bumming "The admission to the game is fair at $1.50 and $2.00," he said. "Furthermore, the railroads have made a fair proposition. This institution teaches law, and the chancellor and the entire faculty are against lawlessness. What the student body wants is a concentration of the Kansas spirit. Pay your gate receipts or stay home." He also read a letter from George Monta, a Manhattan editor, in which an Argie victory was predicted before he could spirit and determination to beat K. U. "Unless K. U, has the better team it is time for the Jayhawk to look to its tail feathers," was one of his most prominent statements. But the Kansas spirit was summed up in the words of the crowd when it dispersed, "Will we beat the Aggies? Hell, yes!" Kent Gives Radio Lecture "Necessity of Education" Is Subject Discussed "Good teaching is a fine art," said Dean R. A. Kent from the Kansas City Star broadcasting station, W. D. A. F., last night, in a speech on the necessity of education. "It is mastered by the maturity of mind that has been developed or by knowledge that comes through study." Dean Kent then pointed out that, in order to be a physician, one must have certain University training, and add to that from two to four years of medical training before one is permitted to practice medicine. It requires two years of training as a nurse in one or another profession. But almost anybody can be a teacher. According to Dean Kent, there are in the United States today over 300,000 rural teachers, and not more than a half of them are old enough to vote. One out of every five has had training for his work, while in England, four out of every six have had that sort of training. "If it is necessary that the doctor or lawyer, whom one as an individual consults, should have such an education, how much more necessary it is that the teachers to whom thousands of children between the ages of six and ten are entrenched, from five to six hours a day, be trained. Dean Kent concluded." Next Monday, Prof. A. J. M. of the department of botany, will give a talk on "The Eradication of the Dandelion" over the radio. The date rule will be suspended for "Adam and Eva," Tuesday, October 21, and for this event only—Orpha Haira, President W. S. G. A. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN I UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University or Kannas EDITORIAL STAFF Associate Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Associate Editor News Editor Sport Editor Plain Tale Editor Designer Exchange Editor Exchange Editor Clare Parrago Ralph Johnson Robin Cook Llewellyn Schila Glick Schulta Perry Johny Angel Guest DeVaughn Francis BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager ... Lloyd Rappenthal Anst', Bus, Mgr ... John Montgomery, Jr. ROARD MEMBERS Ben Hills Doris Fleece Ruth Carter Laura Cowley Chester Shaw Carli Powers Myrl Hart Caroline Harkrader Subscription price, $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.00 for one semester; 30 cents a month; 15 cents a week. Entered in recordering mail matter September 1, 2014. Vice President, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1979 Published in the afternoon, two times on the Kansas State Journal, a national nation of the University of Kansas, from January 15, 2014. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Hannah K., J. 55 and 66 Lawrence, K. U. 25 and 66 Phone: K. U. 25 and 66 The Daily Kanzaan aims to picture the elite Kanzaan to go further than merely printing the news by standing for the ideals of humanity; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be strong and more serious services to white heads; in all to serve to the best of its ability. FRIDAY, OCT. 27, 1922. peacock It has been suggested that seniors in the School of Education adopt the rule as their distinctive emblem. THE GOOD LOSER One of the strongest arguments which have been advanced for intercollegiate athletes is that it develops a spirit of "Give and Take" which affects not only the team but the student body as a whole. The knack of being able to take defeat and victory with the same good grace is not an easy one to learn, but once learned, it is one of the finest attributes a college graduate can have. The spirit which was manifested at the Washburn game is a case in point. The Kansas second team, as eager and nervous as a schoolboy making his first speech, was continually infringing on the rules laid down in the Book of Hoyle and were as continually being penalized. While the Jayhawker fans were booing and shouting at the referee because he did not see fit to allow a man to be off-side, and with the score overwhelmingly in our favor, Sooner fans at Norman were watching a referee rule them out of two perfectly good touchdowns, either one of which would have won the game, and taking it like sportsmann. In this respect Kansas has not always been above reproach. We like to feel that we are doing the right thing—we are quick to resent any inference to the contrary. But the fact remains that a spade is a spade and Kansas lands, sometimes a bit too careless of appearances, suffer a slump in the rigid discipline of good sportmanship every once in a while. Quits aside from the reflection on the University is the impression a visitor could not help but get, that those who are guilty of chronic "razzing" are not used to towns the size of Lawrence, and inagine themselves still in their high school teens. If we never turn out a winning team in the next twenty years, we can still be champions of the Valley in good sportsmanship and courtesy if we persistently discourage those individuals who feel that they are obligated to assist the officials in the discharge of their duties. NAVY DAY Today has been designated as "Navy Day." It has been set aside to honor the men and officers of our navy, both of the past and the present. It is not to be observed merely in the seascape states, but in all the States. The Navy belongs to Kansas just as much as to New York and should be just as patriotically and proudly considered. During the past war no spectaculair naval battles were fought but the army rendered vital and incalculable service to the nation and to humanity. The convoy, the anti-submarine patrol, and the mine barrage were essential factors in the winning of the war. So it has been in the past; Official Daily University Bulletin Vol. II. BAND TO MERT IN SOUTH PARK: All members of the K. U. Band will report at South Park at 8:15 Sat numbers. Oct. 27,1922. Copy received by Florence E. Bliss, Editor, Chancellor's Office J. C. McCANLES, Director. SECOND SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS FACULTY RECITAL: Professor W. Waller Whitlock, tenor, and Miss Fanny May Ross, pianist, will give the second faculty recital of the School of Fine Arts, at 8:20 Monday evening, in Fraser Chapel. SECOND SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS FACULTY RECITAL: in the Revolutionary War, in the War of 1812, in the Civil War and in the Spanish-American War, the navy has not failed. The navy has played no small par in America's progress, and whil America today has one of the large navies in the world, it carries with it no threat. Our navy lends authority to America's voice and speaks for al trusim, law, and justice. The tacful refer to fat people as plump and to skinny people as slender. THE GREAT AMERICAN THE GREAT AMERICAN "Keep up the fight for Americans!" H. L. BUTLER, Dean. Such is the legend placed under the portraits of Colonel Theodore Roosevelt which were unveiled in all the New York state armories today as a tribute to his memory. Had he lived he would have been 64 years old today, a man virile, strong and in the prime of life. A certain author defines advertising as the "graveyard of literary aspirations." Even such gruesome thought as this fails to remove the glamour from a iterative death. Plain Tales From The Hill Professor Bayton (in class lecture): "The other day I was in Kansas City and asked a salesman to show me some shoes. He wanted $13 for the pair that sat under me, and I knew he didn't know the war was over." Roosevelt does not live in the body but his spirit is still here; he is still a directly felt influence for progressive good in the nation's politics, he is still and will always be the Great American. He has risen above the criticisms of a few and stands as a splendid example of clean cut, red-blooded Americanism. He was a man who was a leader, not a governor of the people, he was a loyal friend, not an unapproachable official, he was far-sighted, not blinded by the glare of publicity—he was the great American. Interested student: "Well, did he?" A number of geology students were in Colorado this summer surveying. It happened at one time that they were only a few miles from the penitentiary. One day a prisoner escaped, and the purging party passed camp. A prison guard approached Henry "Hudson" Widener and said: "Sonny, where do you Boy Scouts have your camp?" It is said that one of the musicians from Lanning, after looking over the students hurrying to classes, and the students hurrying to the gym, said in a melancholy voice: "Take me home to the coal mines." The still of the dawn—can it be more As it comes up frightened with the store Of the day to come. Can it promote one, than clouds or sun Can it promote another, that course is run. That the sunset coming then may show Beauty arise still than dawn's first glow "Well, I understand that her old man has some fir trees." Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 The Still of the Dawn The down of a life—can it be more As it step, expectant, on the shore Of its youth's first dream, That may bear you a gentle waves That may bear you a daily sweepave To its sunny bay where light there lives Greater far than by yours' hide eyem From the sea. Thomas Shoe Electric Shop PROTCH The College TAILOR For a Good Complexion Boncilla Massage Boncilla Massage STADIUM BARBER SHOP "The Shop of Service" 1033 Mass. St. First Door South of Vons' First Door South of Von's VARSITY-BOWERSOCK Friday and Saturday WELCOME STUDENTS "The $500 BABY" Irwin S. Cobb's story of life in New York's Ghetto as its setting. Story ran in Saturday Evening Post. Pathe News Fun From the Press Viola Dana Shows—2:30—4:00—7:30—9:00 p. m. THERE IS SOMETHING NEW AT K. U. Army Goods Army Goods Visit the Adults 28c United Army Stores Co 706 Massachuetsts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Army Goods THE $500 BABY" (Oskaloosa, Kansa, spent Saturday and Sunday in Lawrence, Tom Mix in "TRAILIN" HALLOWEEN DINNER, TUESDAY. OCT. 31. In which the theory that East is East and West is West is shot full of holes. YE TAVERNE A St. John Comedy in "A VILLAGE SHEIK" Children 10c Reservations and Dates Should Be Made Early Ye Taverne Next to the Standpipe Harry Farris, A. B. '22, who now teaching in the high school Are You Pressed Up for the Varsity? Kirby Cleaners "GIFTS THAT LAST" Phone 442 1169 Mass. St Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING ST. PETERSBURG COUNTY CITY HALL UNDER-NOURISHMENT SPELLS FAILURE IN PHYSICAL, MENTAL, OR SPIRITUAL LIFE. The First Baptist Church vites you to enter into all of its services. TONIGHT BIG HALLOWEEN PARTY at the church BUILT on VALUE : GROWING on VALUE In Royal Shoes a Man Gets Genuine Calfskin Royal serves the real article, men! No ubtertuffe! The calfskin in many a Shoe is more alleged than real—usually only side leather. Royal Calf skin is guaranteed—every Royal Shoe—lid leather throughout—true skole soles—Goodyear welt stitch. "Ludgate" broad, flat English sole of Reuping or black. flat heel. $5 "Ludgate" ROYAL SHOES for MEN—$5, $6, and $7 for the FINEST New Fall Brogues The kind of Shoe a man's proud to show his friends. In genuine tan Eric grain Calfakin (not the bootlegger variety), glossy and long wear- ing. Heavy sole; clever punch- ing and stitching; midgest brass eyclote; real Good- year welt sole. They're knockouts at $5. "Foxhall" At All Five Stores Royal ShoeStores Inc. Mail Orders Proposed. Lawrence, 837 Massachusetts. HILDA ENGLUND THE HARVEY BROTHERS. COMING November 3rd-4th ROBINSON GYM Friday Matinee "THE MARRIAGE OF KITTY" by Lennox Friday 8 P.M. "ROSMERSHOLM" by Ibsen Saturday 8 P.M. "EASTER" by Strindberg . MERCEDES DESMORE Great Plays Given by All-Star Casts Hilda Englund, one of the greatest Ibsen actresses of to-day, has created five of Ibsen's heroines in the original casts at the Royal Theatre, Stockholm, Sweden. Ibsen himself selected Miss Englund to create the role of "Mother Ase" in "Peer Gynt", of "Regina" in "Ghosts," and of "Gerd" in "Brand." Mercedes Desmore, an English actress who for the past eight years has been playing in America. Until recently she has been playing opposite Lou Tellegen and John and Lionel Barrymore. Robert Donaldson, direct from The Theatre Guild of New York City where he has played leading parts with such stars as Otis Skinner and Walter Hampden, will play the part of "Rosmer" in Rosmersholm. Ibsen and Strindberg, Like Shakespeare, Should Be Seen By All SEASON TICKETS $1.50 and $2.00 Send orders to Henry A. Shinn, Department of Public Speaking THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A Filipino Lover Has To Court His Lady's Family Too U. 's Woman Studen From The Islands Contrasts Filipino and American Marriages "Filipino girls, and the men as well, learn to make eye," says Mrs. Martina Agcailo before the Women's Forum yesterday afternoon in her talk on Filipino customs. "They cannot express themselves in plainer language, because all the countryside with all the girl's family present." M. Agascani also told some other tricks of the lovers that are commonly performed under the eyes of many chaperones, such as passing notes with the handsake. Letters by mail will not always reach the girls. Are a Hospitable People "My people are very hospitable," said the charming little Filippino woman, "for besides having large families there are usually one or two visitors, and strangers found there they contact themselves as one of the family." The girls wear the American dress until they are 18 years old and then they adopt the native garb which consists of a long dress with train and short sleeves. In concluding, Mrs. Agnacoli said that Filipino girls were sweet and girlish, and in womanhood and motherhood faithful and true. Speaks of Customs The women at the meeting asked her many questions about the food and entertainment of her country, showing their interest in the topic. Mrs. Agracuilli told me that she is land last December. She is enrolled in home economics. Lucile Stewart, president of the Women's Forum, announced that in the meeting in four weeks there will be open discussion rather in the form of an informal debate, on the topic of the industrial court. The girls are asked to read up on the case before them and to inform Virginia Kurtz, on which phase they would like to talk. Carl Eckel, B. S. 20, is employed in the Santa Fe shops in Topeka. Specials for Saturday Butter Scotch Buns Sunday Night Hot Biscuits and Honey Tea Room Service Tea Room Service THE FOOD SHOP 1126 Tenn. Hours: 3-9 p. m. We make clothes. We do alterations on both women's and men's clothes, reeling ladies' and men's overcoats, cleaning and pressing. Suiting you, anyway. That's My Business SCHULZ T THEAILOR 917 Mass. St. Mr. and Mrs. Miles Gates, of Kan- doors north of Japhawk Cafe. 182 sas City, Mo., attended the football Ohio. Phone 2203. —N- game Saturday. WANT ADS OST—Evershard pencil with name engraved. Finder please call 2188 Blue. -O-27 LOST- Phi Delta Theta pin; small, white gold, diamond points. "W. L. H." on back. Finder notify W. L. Huggins. Phone 248. —O-2 WANTED—Single room by student, close to hill. Leave address at Kansan office. 0-31 FOR RENT—Furnished rooms for girls, vacated by sorority. Four SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire to earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Pleasant work, after school hours. Warehouse for 2443 Way Ave., Wake City, Mo. - S79 FOR RENT - Furnished rooms for girls, vacated by sororites. Four doors north of Jahwak kafe. 1328 Ohio. Phone 2203. LOST-Wednesday night in South Park, small square-link watch chain with pocket knife attached. Please call 1011 Black. 30 1234567890 Paris breaths novelty gauntlets and Miss United States does them immediately. Gauntlets of unusual styles, in various combinations to blend with the frock, suit, or wrap are shown at WEAVERS. Long kid gloves for dress, in brown, black, white, and grey with the Chanut and Steinburgh & Lobe signature, are now for sale. But best of all—the new wool ganttlets, which are such an excellent protection for the hands, has been heartily condoned by Parisian style mongers. Yours in style, Jeanne Marie The Tree --- Varsity Dance! F. A. U. Hall October 28,1922 Schreiber's Orchestra Four Pieces LOST—Sigma Chi pin. Name on back. Reward. Return to 1439 Penn. O-26 FOR SALE—Top coat, size 35, very high class. Call 1011 Black 30 R. W. R. OWHYON, (Dentist) Special attention to prevention and treatment of pyorrhea. 304 Perkins Build- Tel. 507. PROFESSIONAL CARD LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Ex- clusive Optometrist) eyes examined: glasses made. Office 1023 Mass. POPULAR PRICCES $1.00 — 75c — and — 50c Jayhawker appointments should be made Now Squire's Studio Photographers to K. U. Students. MIXTURES SEATS ON SALE At the Bowerstock Box Office on a frosty night with steaming hot chocolate and cinnamon toast is a pleasure without competition. With an electrically heated chafing-dish of Gustafson quality especially designed for the collegian, the mid-night lunch is a treat, easy and economical to prepare. A Mid-Night Lunch Assembled the chafing-dish is a thing of beauty, a thing of quality, in plated nickle. The double pans of the dish detach from the base that the electric grill may be used for many other purposes. Annual Y. M. C. A. Benefit Play Priced at $12.50 Gustafson The College Jeweler Adam and Eva AND ALL K. U. Copy by K. Constant CAPITAL $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President, Chairman of the Board. WATKINS NATIONAL BANK BOWERSOCK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31 SURPLUS $100,000.00 D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. CAPITAL $100,000.00 G. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Ashker, L. V. Milfer, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishop KODAK Give the kind person a reward. You'll be glad to keep the Kodak pictures so easy to make—they're an accurate record of the season's activities. We have all the Kodaks, Brownies and Eastman supplies. Picture the squad on its return and jot down the score on the film—you can with the autographic feature of every Kodak. is Give the big team a rousing send-off—and get the story telling picture with your Kodak. THE DATE RULE IS OFF FOR Autographic Kodaks $6.50 up Oread Shining Parlor CHARLIE'S SUIT Best Shines in Town THE DEADLY TROLLER ROUND CORNER DRUG COMPANY 301 Mass. Lawrence, Kan and EVERYDAY $20.00 to $35.00 OVERCOAT DAY HOUK-GREEN CLO. CO. UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD FOOTBALL SPECIAL TRAIN Account K. U.-K. S.A.C. Game Manhattan, October 28 All Steel Train Leave Lawrence 9:45 a.m. Arrive Manhattan 11:45 a.m. Leave Manhattan 7:00 p.m. Arrive Lawrence 9:00 p.m. Also Five Regular Trains Each Way Daily Also Five Regular Trans Each Way Daily No Change of Cars on Regular Trains Leave Lawrence 2:15 a. m., 9:56 a. m., 11:52 a. m. 5:45 p. m., 7:20 p. m. Arrive Manhattan 4:30 a. m., 12:55 p. m., 2:15 p. m. 8:35 p. m., 9:25 p. m. Leave Manhattan 5:36 a. m., 7:45 a. m., 1:21 p. m. 3:05 p. m., 5:43 p. m. Arrive Lawrence 8:03 a. m., 10:27 a. m., 3:26 p. m. 5:40 p. m., 8:20 p. m. Tickets on Sale Oct. 27th and 28th Final Return Limit Oct. 29th Tickets Good on All Trains Special Round Trip Fare $3.75 AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC BLOCK SIGNALS ALL THE WAY For Information Ask J. H. ROBINSON, Agent U. P. R. R. Phone 76 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Jayhawkers Ready For Battle With Aggies Tomorrow Coach Clark Will Take Entire Squad of Thirty-one Men to Manhattan "The Kansas Jayhawks are ready for their feast on Wildcat meat at Manhattan tomorrow," said Coach "Potsy" Clark this morning. The varsity squad after a week of light work practice, will take a light work preparation for the intra-state clash at Argyleville tomorrow. "We have an even chance to win," said Coach Clark, "and I do not see that the Aggies have an advantage over us." Entire Squad Makes Trip The entire varsity squad of thirty-one men will make the trip to Manila. The group will leave Lawrence at 9 o'clock to tomorrow morning over the Santa Fe while Coach Schlademan, the cross country team and the freshman squid will leave at the same time via the Manila airport. Present indications point to a large representation from K. U., at the game. Despite the fact that several regulars may be out of the game because of injuries, the Jayhawk student body is confident of victory over the University men seem to had over their farmer brothers. Shannon Not Seriously Hurt Shannon Not Seriously Hurt It was ascertained last night that Walter Shannon's injuries, received in practice Wednesday, were not serious and Shannon may get a chance in the Aegie game. During the twenty years that the two state schools have maintained athletic relations, the Aggies have only carried off one victory, winning in 1965 by a 6 to 4 score. On one other occasion, in 1916, the Farmers were able to hold the Jayhawks scores, the game resulting in a 0 score. In 1938, the man triumphed seventeen times, the highest score of any game being a 44 to 6 score in 1904. The highest score which the Aggies have been able to make against the Jayhawkers was a count of 10 in 1907. Jayhawker-Aggie Scores Year Kansas Agrigent 1902 16 0 1903 34 0 1904 44 0 1905 28 0 1906 4 0 1907 29 10 1908 12 6 1909¹ 5 3 1910 No game 1911 6 0 1912 19 6 1913 26 0 1914 27 0 1915 19 6 1916 0 0 1917 0 0 1918 13 7 1919 16 3 1920 14 0 1921 21 7 Visiting Librarian Here Visiting Librarian Here J. A. McMillan, librarian of the University of Washington, at St. Louis, was a guest of E. N. Man chester. Tuesday. Wishing to look over the library plant at the University of Kansas, he stopped for a few hours on our campus, on his way to St. Louis, from the regional conference. Criminal Studies Law in Texas County Jail Dallas, Texas, Oct. 27 (Unite Press)-Denied the opportunity to go to school while a boy, W. S Scrivener, confessed robber, has borrowed law books and is spending long hours in the federal ward of the technicalities of the profession the technicalities of the profession which administers justice. Servirer admitted complicity in the Jackson Street post office robbery here on January 14, 1921, and furnished information which resulted in his arrest. In three besides giving the names of three other alleged bandits. Sixteen of Marvin Hall Faculty Attending Aggieville Meeting Arrow Sixteen professors and instructors for the School of Engineering will attend the meeting of the Kansas-Nebraska section of the Society for Tis a Fact Pander's FOLLORITY JEWELRY Engineers To Manhattan Clothes S. O. S Phone 75 Toasted sandwiches, just crisp enough to please, we offer for your approval after the dance or show. NEW YORK CLEANERS 836 Mass. St. Try a toasted bacon with sliced tomatoes. You will like it, we assure you. De Luxe Cafe the Promotion of Engineering Education to be held in Manhattan today and tomorrow. Dean P. F. Walker is the chairman of this section and will be in charge of the sessions. A group of the faculty members left this morning by auto for Manhattan, where they will remain for the K. U.Agge game Saturday. Those who will attend the meeting are Dean P. F., W. C. McNown, Prof. W. R. Neerman, W. A. H. Stuiss, Prof. J. A. Dent, M. B. Jaslow, Prof. M. E. Rice, Prof. N. Raymond, Prof. R. S. Tait, John Bunn, F. A. Russell, Prof. F. M. Dawson, Prof. F. L. Brown, Prof. O. M. Ockerblad, and Prof. H. A. Rice. WIEDEMANN'S ICE CREAM The Cream Supreme For this week we offer: For this week we offer: Ice Creams Orange-Pineapple Nestlerode Vanilla Chocolate Strawberry Brown Bread Special Sunday Bricks Orange-Pineapple and Vanilla Nestlerode and Vanilla Ice Pineapple Phone 182 $27.50 The Industrial Discussion Group, led by Waler Morrison, met last night in Myers Hall. "Professor Jenny Stern," wrote the article, "Why Labor Unions." You cannot buy a Quality Overcoat for any less at the end of the season sales, so why not get the use of the coat as well as your choice of selections by buying now, at NEWMAN'S $9.00 SKOFSTADS Men's better grade shoes of black and tan calfskin. Just one of the many values now here at e Spanish Combs $2.50 and $5.00 All wool coats of exceptional tailoring, also at $22.50. An entire new selection of the newest Spanish Comba, to be correct they must be large and gay with richly colored rhinestones. These you will fill fill every reemergence of fashion. Special assortment of $3.00 values for ¥50 Special assortment of $6.50 values for $5.00 $21.50 THE TURN OF THE CENTURY New style features, many shown for the first time, are offered in these new Dresses of wool materials. The Basque with circular skirt with Matelasse combinations and strait line effects are shown. Draped Coat Dresses, trimming of beads, embroidered and cabason ornaments. Colors are navy and brown in sizes from 14 to 42. An exceptional bargain at $21.50. 50c Palmolive Shampoo 39c Your hair will retain the soft silky lustre that nature intended if your Shampoo is correctly done. The blend of sham and foam in Fahrenheit provides the solution shampoo possibly. Try the product provided by Shampoo you will be delighted with the result, special 50 bottle for $39. Special Purchase Sale Newest Wool Dresses For Two Days Selling Friday and Saturday PALM OLIVE 10c Palmolive Soap 7c For a limited time we offer toilet soap at this very attractive price, the cake 7c. A. G. ALRICH Engraving, Printing, Binding Rubber Stamps, Office Supplies, Stationery Innes, Bulline & Hackman Printing by any process 736 Mass. St BELLS FLOWER SHOP Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS 825 1-2 Mass Beat the Aggies to-morrow! A man is being taken away by a police officer. Their style never wears out ITS'a fact about Society Brand-style is a part of the Suitor Obercoat as long as the fabric lasts. That's the true test of quality clothing. Only the best of tailoring meets it -but that's the only kind we can recommend to you without qualification, so we recommend Society Brand. $ 45 Others $24.50 to $60 Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUT-FITTERS SANTA FE—ROCK ISLAND OFFICIAL ROUTE-THRU STEEL TRAIN Football Special Train Kansas vs Aggies Manhattan, Kansas, Saturday, October 28. Athletic Department Officials, the Team and the K. U. Band (50 pieces) will be on Santa Fe special—leaving Lawrence 9 a.m.Saturday-Returning leave Manhattan 6 p.m. Special Lunch and Dinner at McFarland, Kans.—Rock Island Dining Room and Lunch Counter. Tickets on sale at Santa Fe station and K. U. Athletic Office—Final return limit Oct. 29. Good on all Santa Fe and Rock Island trains. SPECIAL ROUND TRIP FARE $3.75 Ride on the Official Train and be with the Bunch For further information ask W. W. Burnett, Agent Santa Fe, Phone 32 Santa Fe THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Jayhawkers Ready For Battle With Aggies Tomorrow Coach Clark Will Take Entire Squad of Thirty-one Men to Manhattan "The Kansas Jayhawks are ready for their feast on Wildcat meat at Manhattan tomorrow," said Coach "Potty" Clark this morning. The varsity squad after a week of gruelling practice, will take a light work-ignition in preparation for the intra-state clash at Aggielove tomorrow. "We have an even chance to win," said Coach Clark, "and I do not see that the Aggies have an advantage over us." Entire Squad Makes Trip The entire varsity squad of thirty-one men will make the trip to Manhattan. Coach Clark and the squad will leave Lawrence at 9 o'clock tomorrow morning over the Santa Fe while Coach Schlademan, the cross country team and the freshman squad will leave at the same time via the Union Pacific. Shannon Not Seriously Hurt Present indications point to a large representation from K. U., at the game. Despite the fact that several regulars may be out of the game because of injuries, the Jayhawker student body is in confidence of victory (the game) or U. Jax which the University men seem to hold over their farmer brothers. Shannon Not Seriously Hurt It was it ascertained last night that Walter Shannon's injuries, received in practice Wednesday, were not serious and Shannon may get a chance in the Aggie game. During the twenty years that the two state schools have maintained athletic relations, the Aggies have only carried off one victory, winning in 1966 by a 6 to 4 score. On one other occasion, in 1916, the Farmers were able to hold the Jayhawkers scorless, the game resulting in a 6 score. However, more triumphmed seventeen times, the highest score of any game being a 44 to 6 score in 1904. The highest score which the Aggies have been able to make against the Jayhawkers was a count of 10 in 1907. Jayhawker-Aggie Scores Year Kansas Aggie 1902 16 0 1903 34 0 1904 44 6 1905 28 0 1906 4 0 1907 29 10 1908 12 6 1909' 5 3 1910 No game 1911 6 0 1912 19 6 1913 26 0 1914 27 0 1915 19 6 1916 9 0 1917 9 0 1918 13 7 1919 16 3 1920 14 0 1921 21 7 Visiting Librarian Here J. A. McMillan, librarian of the University of Washington, at St. Louis, was a guest of E. N. Man chester, Tuesday. Wishing to look over the library plant at the University of Kansas, he stepped for a few minutes on our campus, on his way St. Louis, from the regional conference. Criminal Studies Law in Texas County Jai Dallas, Texas, Oct. 27 (United Press)-Dried the opportunity of going to school while a boy, W. S. Scerviner, confessed robber, has borrowed law books and is spending long hours in the federal ward of the county jail in mastering the tech- profession which administs justice. Tis a Fact Servirien admitted complicity in the Jackson Street post office robbery here on January 14, 1921, and furnished information which resulted in their arrest. Three men, besides giving the names of three other alleged bandits. Pander's QUALITY JEWELRY Engineers To Manhattan Sixteen of Marvin Hall Faculty Attending Agglieville Meeting Toasted sandwiches, just crisp enough to please, we offer for your approval after the dance or show. ↘ Sixteen professors and instructors for the School of Engineering will attend the meeting of the Kansas-Nebraska section of the Society for Try a toasted bacon with sliced tomatoes. You will like it, we assure you. Phone Clothes S. O. S 75 De Luxe Cafe NEW YORK CLEANERS 836 Mass. St. the Promotion of Engineering Education to be held in Manhattan today and tomorrow, Dean P. F. Walker is the chairman of this section and will be in charge of the sessions. A group of the faculty *members left this morning by auto for Manhattan, where they will remain for the K. U-Aggie game Saturday. Those who will attend the meeting: Dean P. F. Walker, Prof. George Shaw, M. McNown, Prof. W. R. Numan, Prof. A. H. Blum, Prof. J. A. Dent, M. B. Jaslow, Prof. M. E. Rice, Prof. F. N. Raymond, Prof. R. S. Tait, John Bunn, F. A. Russell, Prof. F. M. Dawson, Prof. F. L. Brown, Prof. O. M. Ockerdair, and Prof. H. A. Rice. WIEDEMANN'S ICE CREAM The Cream Supreme For this week we offer: Ice Creams Orange-Pineapple Nestlerode Vanilla Chocolate Strawberry Brown Bread Special Sunday Bricks Orange-Pineapple and Vanilla Nestlerode and Vanilla Ice Pineapple Phone 182 The Industrial Discussion Group, led by Walter Morrison, met last night in Meyers Hall. "Professor Jenner will be the speaker," the Why Labor Unions." $27.50 You cannot buy a Quality Overcoat for any less at the end of the season sales, so why not get the use of the coat as well as your choice of selections by buying now, at $9.00 WEDDING SHOE Men's better grade shoes of black and tan calfskin. Just one of the many values now here at NEWMAN'S All wool coats of exceptional tailor ing, also at $22.50. SKOFSTADS Spanish Combs $2.50 and $5.00 THE An entire new selection of the newest Spanish Combs, to be correct they must be large and gay with richly colored rhinestone. These you will find fill every requirement of fashion. Special assortment of $3.00 values for A. G. ALRICH Engraving. Printing. Binding Rubber Stamps. Office Supplies, Stationery Printing by any process 736 Mass. St Special assortment of $6.50 values for $5.00 BELLS FLOWER SHOP Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS Your hair will retain the soft silky lustre that nature intended if your Shampoo is correctly done. The blend of shampoos in Palmolyce provide the most scientific shampoo possible, and the best shampoo possible will be delighted with the result, special 500 bottle for $39. Phone 139 For a limited time we offer toilet soap at this very attractive price, the cake 7c. 10c Palmolive Soap 7c 50c Palmolive Shampoo 39c 825 1-2 Mass Innes, Bullene & Hackman Beat the Aggies to-morrow! $ 45 Others $24.50 to $60 PALM OLIVE New style features, many shown for the first time, are offered in these new Dresses of wool materials. The Basque with circular skirt with Matelasse combinations and strait line effects are shown. Draped Coat Dresses, trimming of beads, embroidered and cabason ornaments. Colors are navy and brown in sizes from 14 to 42. An exceptional bargain at $21.50. Special Purchase Sale Newest Wool Dresses $21.50 A policeman is shoving a man down. Their style never wears out For Two Days Selling Friday and Saturday ITS'a fact about Society Brandstyle is a part of the Suit or Obercoat as long as the fabric lasts. That's the true test of quality clothing. Only the best of tailoring meets it -but that's the only kind we can recommend to you without qualification, so we recommend Society Brand. Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUT-FITTERS Football Special Train SANTA FE—ROCK ISLAND OFFICIAL ROUTE—THRU STEEL TRAIN Kansas vs Aggies Manhattan, Kansas, Saturday, October 28, Athletic Department Officials, the Team and the K. U. Band (50 pieces) will be on Santa Fe special—leaving Lawrence 9 a.m.Saturday-Returning leave Manhattan 6 p.m. Special Lunch and Dinner at McFarland, Kans.—Rock Island Dining Room and Lunch Counter. Tickets on sale at Santa Fe station and K. U. Athletic Office—Final return limit Oct. 29. Good on all Santa Fe and Rock Island trains. SPECIAL ROUND TRIP FARE $3.75 Ride on the Official Train and be with the Bunch For further information ask W. W. Burnett, Agent Santa Fe, Phone 32 SantaFe THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XX NUMBER 37. Wildcat Defense Holds Jayhawkers To Tie 7-7 Game Kansas Team Shows Superiority in Almost Every Department Of Play An Argic defense which became impregnable when fighting in the shadow of the goal posts, and a Jay-hawker offensive which broke down when a gain of a yard or two would've meant a touchdown and the game—these were the factors in the gridron clash between the two sister schools at Manhattan Saturday which ended in a 7 to 7 tie. The Jayhawkers out-fought, out-charged, and out-played the Bachman warriors, but failure to dent the Wildcat line with two or three yards to go for a touchdown, cost the Clark machine the victory. One Jayhawker touchdown was *caual* doul) on account of a foul, and two attempts for a place kick failed. The final score was 4-3, K. U. would have won the game. Kansas Defense Strong The Agnes were the first to score, although the Jayhawks started an offensive immediately after the kick-off which threatened the Aggie goal line. Tailing the ball on their own side, the Lawrence men startled on a drive where they batted the Aggie 5-yard line where the were held for downs. The Agriers then took the ball, but on the second play Stark fumbled and a blue-sweatered Kanan was found with the ball tucked neatly under him. It seemed as though the Jayhawkers still held the finx against the Agriers. Then after two plays, Wilson fell back to pass. He was tackled by two Manhattan linemen but eluded them, running farther back in an effort to make a good pass. With three Aggies men charging him, he passed into the arms of Haim, the Aggie captain, who with a clean field ahead and good posture behind, galloped away for a touchdown. Sobering kicked back. K. U. Comes Back Quickly The toddown angered the Jayhawkers, for in less than five minutes they kicked off to the Agios. On the second play, Stark again fumbled and again an alert student of the Clark style. of play was on it like a虎神. Straight football carried the ball to the Agios 3-yard line after which Krunger passed across the road line for a counter. Whose licked real. Try Two Place Kicks This finished the scoring and for the remaining three periods, the two teams battled back and forth across the field, most of the time with the Jayhawks. In one game again the Jayhawks carried the ball to within the Aggie 10-yard line, only to lose the ball by fumbles or on downs. With their backs to the wall, the Aggie line always stiffened and the Blue warriors were unable to count. Late in the final period with the ball on the Aggie 30-yard line, the Jayhawkers attempted their first place kick. Higgins dropped back to the 40-yard line for the try. The Aggie tackles broke through, however, and the kick was blocked. Black recovering for Kansas. The game was fast drawing to a close. With the ball on the Aggie 8-yard line, Wilson dropped back for another try. The ball was wide, there was a strong distance was gay; there was a strong gird from the southwest and the kick wide west by a scant yard. The game ended with the tail in Aigle possession on her own 20-yard line. It was the play of Carl McAdams, the rany Kansas half, that amazed the Aggie roots and verified to the Jayhawk fans that which they had long believed, that McAdams was that of the greatest halftacks in the Valley. His punting ability had long been conceded, but it was not until Saturday, that he displayed his skill. The Sandy-haired Kansas half, time after time, skirted the Aggie ends for ten, fifteen or twenty-four yards, being thrown for a loss only once out of about fifteen plays. Shifting, evading, changing his course and hurling, the Aggies were unable to stop him. Stark was the outstanding player on the Aggie team while Burton, whose presence in the game caused much clation among Aggie fans, failed to show to great advantage. Lomborg in the line and Burt in UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, MONDAY, OCT. 30, 1922. (Continued on Page Four) Fine Arts Students Give Sunday Evening Program Students of the School of Fine Arts gave a delightful program of vocal and instrumental numbers Sunday evening at the Epworth League meeting in the Methodist Church. June Judy, a senior in the School of Fine Arts, was in charge of the meeting. The program consisted of a violin solo by Reba White, vocal solos by Ruth Gould and Velma Christopher, a piano solo by Helen Hertel, a cello solo by Faye Stevenson, and an enconjoined orchestra by Greene in which Rachel Stevens took the piano part, Marie Biever, the violine, and Faye Stevenson the cello. Cosmopolitan Club Holds Open House For Three Hundred Filipino Orchestra Furnisher Entertainment For Visitors During Afternoon Have you ever imagined that a ordinary hand saw could make music? It can and it did in the hands of Pacificio Gapann, c25, at the Cosmo-politan Club Open House Sunday afternoon. Another instrument, made from a long bamboo stick, a wire, and a bag like an inflated football bladder, was of special interest to the guests. Almost three hundred faculty members, students, and townpeople called at the new club house at 1653 Indiana Street between 3 and 6 o'clock, inspected the rooms, and were served with tea by the club members. The Hawaiian and Filipino orchestra played during the afternoon. The members of the orchestra consisted of A. Assis, Cicopo Gupaña, Narciso Abelia Thomas K. Massuoka, and Pablo Ivovio. Twenty-two student are now living at the Cosmopolitan Club house which has been purchased by the University Housing Committee. Six nationalities—Chinese, Japanese, Hindu, Filipino, Greek, and American—are represented in the group at the club house. In one room, which has been called the Georgian Room, students from Greece and an American are living, E. J. Sweeney is president of the club and Prof. Karl T. Finn is the resident faculty member. Although the house has been furnished by the housing committee, the members have purchased a piano and are trying to start a library. M. U. Life Will Be Filmed Campus and Town Will Look Like Hollywood The project is being promoted by the Missouri Alumni Association and the members of the Student Council. It will be the first picture released dealing strictly with university life. G.W. Griffith, motion picture producer, has agreed to select the cast from pictures submitted to him next Wednesday. Some time next month he will have a tour of St. Louis will arrive in Columbia to photograph interior and exterior views of the university. The students of the University of Missouri School of Engineering will soon transform the M. U. campus and Columbia into a miniature Hollywood in preparation for the filming of a short picture of life at the University. The engineering students will build a studio for the filming of interior work. The out-of-door scenes will be staged on the surrounding hills and valleys. The picture is to be shown through out the state as an advertisement for the university. K. U. Graduate Instructs in University of Illinois Ernest Pickering, B. S. 19, holds a position as instructor in design at the University of Illinois. Mr. Pickering took his degree in engineering at K. U., and his degree in architecture later, at the University of Illinois. By the unanimous decision of the adges there, he was awarded the zym Fellowship, which provided 1,000 for a year's study in Europe. He was later awarded an extensive study. Mr. Pickering returned o the United States this month. John D. Elliott, A.B. 16, is with the Southern California Rubber Stamp Company in Los Angeles, Calif. Many Are Present At All-University Hallowe'en Party Eats, Stunts, Dancing And Fortune Telling Provided Entertainment For Crowd The second all-University party was attended by an extra large crowd that entered into the Halloween spirit and proved the success of parties open to all the students with enter-ance provided for those who do not dance. The lower floor of the gymnasium was given over to stunts and fortune telling, Dante's Inferno and Bluebeard with his two wives, as well as rattling skeletons, furnished the entertainment for the first part of the evening. Cider, apples and doughnuts were available, and some made the most of the opportunity until the sumpy was exhausted. The upper floor was decorated with black cats, staring from a white background, and shaded lights. Blanche's orchestra began playing about 10 o'clock and the crowd left the lower floor for the dancing. More Men Than Women Many man found that the supply of women was not sufficient and the east end of the room was a hatcher's room. Women and girls dances were instituted with those that were fortunate enough to be dancing. About a third more men were present than women. More Men Than Women Party Closed Early These parties are very informal and much difficulty seemed to be experienced by those present in getting acquainted. As the evening progressed this timidity lessened until the dance floor became so crowded that it was almost impossible to dance. The party closed at 11:30 o'clock, everyone clapping for more music, which was not available. Practically everyone stayed until the last note of music, which is conclusive proof that it was a real party. * Davidia Oliner, Geraldine Petitt, Waldo Bownie, Mawlan Griffin, and Charles黑衣 were in charge of the game. The team were worked out by them. The next all-University party will be held the night of November 10. Research Group Discusses Relation of Labor to Aims of Education Meets At a second meeting of the Industrial Research Group Thursday night, the outline for the year's work was discussed. Senator Arthur Capper's political record was unanimously endorsed at the Republican political rally at the court house down town last Saturday evening. The speaker's words were chiefly in defense of the present administration and a recital of its difficulties. The court room was not large enough to hold the crowd despite an attempt at audience attendance, the only speaker except the chairman who made the introductory remarks. Jens Jensen spoke to the Industrial Research group in the place of Ben Cherrington at the last meeting. This group meets every Thursday from 10am-4pm. The aim of this group for the year is to study the relation of the principles of labor to the principles of education. It is thought that by a Crowd Endorses Capper problems from the viewpoint of the college student and his studies will enable the student to work amongst the people of industries more sympathetically, understanding of their problems. Professors in each department will lead the discussion at each meeting night. Subjects to be presented and discussed at these meetings are: Genesis and the history; social evolution and the manual worker; social classes, yesterday and today; prospects for closer relations between the mental and manual workers; social engineering; ethics of labor organization; what the wage class is willing to accept of the teacher in industrial centers; labor legislation; and competition or co-operation. Sara Mae Cane, c'25, spent the last few days at her home in Tonganoxie. The deadline for Sour Owl copy has been advanced to Saturday of this week. Chet Shore, editor, announced today. Many appropriate and unique articles have ! on turned in, but the deadline is at more to make this a success. Sour Owl Copy Deadline Is Advanced to Saturday Anything in the way of humorous, satirical, editorial or any other kind of copy is wanted at once. Long stories, short snapp articles, and jokes are equally necessary for the success of the necessary. Germany. magazine will be in keeping with the "Homecoming" idea. The Sour Owl team played against the Nebraska game on November 11, and will be sold by the Owl Society. of the magazine. Cartoons are also in demand by the editors. Disabled Veterans Name November 4 Forget-Me-Not Day The Sour Owl goes to press a week from tomorrow. It will carry a four-color cover by one of the Hii artists, and the general tone 'f' the Money Will Be Collected For Benefit of Former Service Men As part of a national campaign for the benefit of disabled and desirate survivors of the World War, the local chapter of the Distabled American Veterans of the World War will put on a campaign here November 4—officially designated as "Forget-Me-Not Day." be sent to the national headquarters of the Disabled Veterans. From there it will be distributed through various hospitals and relief agencies. likely that flowers will be used if they can be secured in time for the day. Members of the local chapter and young women will do the soliciting Each person solicited will be asked to give what he thinks is just. It has not been definitely decided whether actual forget-me-not flowers or tags will be used here, but it is The day and the cause have been officially proclaimed by President Harding and Governor Allen, the latter having called upon the people of Kansas to help along the movement to assist those who are still suffering from injuries contracted four years ago. The answer thus collected will of the World War is an organization of former service men, and has for its purpose the assistance of those ex-service men who face difficulties. if former service men, and has to its purpose the assistance of those ex-service men who face difficulties in their profession cannot allow proof of injury in the service of the United States during the World War can become a mem- The organization has functioned especially in securing claims for disabled men who are entitled to them, and maintains an office in Washingto-ton, where the interests represented in the councils of the United States Veterans' Bureau. Under the direction of Supt. O. T. Rocklund of Fowler Schools, students are making patterns and castings for the rebuilding of a 14-inch band-saw. The rebuilt machine is to be used on the second floor of the shops. The completed machine will have an I8 roller with a guide. It could make it possible to use cleaner blades. Students Will Rebuild Saw During the summer, under Superintendent Rockwell's direction, 820 square feet of shelving for patterns was added on the second floor. New Machine Will Lower Cost For Blades This summer, storage facilities for 7,000 feet of lumber were built at the shops. This makes it possible to store the lumber supply on edge and to season it by air, free from warping and the effects of sunlight. All records for registration at Harvard have been broken by the matriculation of 6,225 men this year. This enrollment tops the previous mark of last year by 200. In view of the fact that this year's freshman class is not as large as the previous one, the first year in its history the enrollment in the Law School surpassed the 1,000 mark. Mrs. Allie Cowgill, formerly Helen Thurston, A.B. '21, is visiting in Lawrence. Death Claims One Of K. U's Oldest Professors Sunday James Edward Todd Was Member of Geology Faculty For Years James Edward Todd, assistant professor in the department of geology of the University, died at his home on Avenue Street, early yesterday afternoon. Professor Todd was one of the oldest professors in the University. He was born February 11, 1846, in Clarksville, Ohio, and has been connected with the University since 1907, although the last four years he has been able to give only part of his work on his own account of ill health. He received his A. B, from Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio, in 1867, and his A. M. in 1870. During the Civil War he served in Company K, 1869. Oberlin Infantry. Before coming to the University, Professor Todd was professor of nat- ural science at Tabor College from 1871 to 1892 and professor of geology and mineralogy, as well as acting as professor of the University of South Dakota in 1897. He was one of the thousand starred men of science, and the author of many articles in the Geological Survey, Geological Magazine (London), K. U. Scientific Bulletin, and other iden magazines, as well as the author of numerous papers and pamphlets upon geographical subjects. He was charged of a murder by the police in South Dakota, Missouri and Iowa to study glacial deposits. At present P.R. C. Moore, of the department of geology, has a manuscript upon "Glacial Deposits in Northeast Kansas" which Professor Todd finished recently, Professor Moore is getting it in shape for publication. Professor Todd was a member of the Geological Society of America, Sigma Nx, a correspondent member of the Kansas Academy of Science and a fellow of the American Association of the Advancement of Science. Funeral services were held this afternoon in the campus room of T.D. Punk "The Admirable Crichton" Selected For Presentation. Play Try-outs On Tuesday Try-outs for "The Admirable Crichton," the first big Dramatic Club play of the year, will begin Tuesday afternoon at 3:30 in Little Theater, in Green Hall. Prof. H. A. Shinn, hese of the department of public speech every week in the university who is interested to attend this try-out. Previously, the plays of J. M. Barrie have not been available for amateur productions. It is only within the last few months that they have been offered to the non-professional field. In "The Admirable Crickent", Barie is at his best, and it is notable, according to those in charge, that the production is presented this production at this time. Governments Are Formed For Redeemed Province Paris (By mail to United Press). —The French government will propose to parliament that Alasce and Lorraine be incorporated again into the departmental administration of France dating from March 1, 1923. The two provinces taken from France during the reign of 1870 and restituted to her by the treaty of Vernais, will form the three departments of the Moselles (Lorraine), Bas-Rhin and Haut Rhin (Alasce). The date rule will be suspended tomorrow night for the play "Adam and Eva." This applies for this event only. Since the armistice the administration of the two provinces has been in the hands of a high commission whose seat is at Strasburg. Together with the change, the railroads of Alsace and Lorraine, which have been under the management of the commission, will pass back to French government administration. The return of Alsace and Lorraine to departmental regime will bring the total number of French departments back to 80. The Kansas-Nebraska football game here November 11 is eliciting much interest from football followers all over the state, according to Alfred G. Hill, secretary of the K. U. Alumni Association. The Ottawa-Sterling football game which had been scheduled for November 11 has been set up one day, in order that Sterling and Ottawa roots may be able to attend the game here on Homecoming Day. Dwight Ream, director of athletics of Washburn College, has also written Mr. Hill that plans are under way for advancing the date of the Washburn-Emporia football game one day, and there are many schools may attend the game here. Plans Formulated To Complete Drive For Memorial Fund Majority of Amount to Reach Million Dollar Goal Will Come From Alumni Plans for the proposed Union building were discussed at a meeting of the board of directors and finance committee of the Memorial Corporation, held in the Alumun Office Sunday afternoon. It was decided that the campaign for the completion of the million dollar memorial fund would be continued, and completed this winter. "more than $850,000 has been sub- scribed," said Alfred G. Hill, secu- rary of the Memorial Corporation this morning, "and we are striving to reach the total of a million dollars as soon as possible. It is our plan to raise the greater majority of this from the K. U. alumni." Those attending the meeting here Sunday were; Chancellor E. H. Liedl; Thornton Cooke, of Kansas; and Bainbridge Miller, of the K. U. alumnus of Kansas City; Mrs. John Weaver, of Kansas City; M. L. Birelental, Kansas City; Chester Woodward, Topeka; and T. J. Sweeney, Irving Hill, Chas. H. Tucker, H. B. Ober, Mayor George L. Kreeck, W. J. Baumpartner, Dr. F. C. Allen, Sherman Elliott, and Alfred G. Hill, all of Lawrence. Prominent Citizen Dead Hon. J. D. Bowersock Died at His Home Friday Hon. J. D. Bowersock, pioneer Kansas financial and industrial wizard, died at his home in Lawrence, Friday afternoon. The passing of Mr. Bowersock marks the end of a career, filled with work and an ever-ready willingness to advance the welfare of Kansas industry and citizenship. or *Kansas industry* tilt citizenship. Overcoming obstacles of great magnitude Mr. Bowersock was able to build up some of the greatest engineering feats ever attempted in Kansas. The most noted of his works is the great concrete dam across the Kaw, built under his own personal supervision and capital. This great dam will always stand as a monument to the memory of Lawrene's greatest citizen. As a citizen, Mr. Bowerscoop served the people of his state whenever called to perform his duty. He served as mayor of Lawrence, as representative to the state legislature, and as representative of the Second district in Congress. He served in Congress from 1898 to 1906 when he voluntarily withdrew to private life of his own accord. He was also a member of the first Chamber of Commerce ever established in Lawrence. One of the principal hobbies of Mr. Bowersock was a keen interest in football. Whenever business matters allowed him to attend, he was always present at all of the football games played by the University. At times at the Haskell games, his snow-white hair making him conspicuous among those in the crowd. He was one of the largest donors to the Stadium-Union fund. Always showing a keen interest in the affairs of the University, he always be remembered as a stautch friend of the school and its athletics. Phi Alpha Delta, law fraternity announces the pledging of Jack Taylor, Eldorado; Amon Jones, Liberal and Robert Lawen, Pittsburg. Virgil Gordinier, ex'20, is a midshipman at the Naval Academy at Annapolis. Committee Plans Elaborate Program For Armistice Day Many Organizations Will Take Part in Stadium Dedication Services Here Tentative plans for the dedicatory program of the K. U. memorial to be held here on the morning of Armistice Day were discussed at a meeting of representatives of the state department of the American Legion and the EI F. Bessy Post, Saturday evening at the University Cabin rooms in Topkek. W. P. MacLean, state commander of the American Legion of Kansas, and Frank Samuel, state adjant, representing the state department, General Wilson S. Metcalf, former state commander, and chairman of the program committee from The Eli L. Mays Jr. Memorial Secretary of the Memorial Corporation, made up the committee to arrange the program. Parade Forms At South Park According to the plans now drawn up, the parade will start from South Park, and will arrive at $t_{i}$ the Stadium before 11 o'clock. Among the units which will make up the parade will be four bands; the University Band, the Nebraska Band, F. A. U. Band, and the Haskell Band. Other units will be the Ell F. Dorsey Post, American Legion, representatives of the Topolea Legion Post, Disabled Veterans of the World War, National Guard Units, the University R. O. T. C., the Haskell Battalion of National Guards, G. A. R. from Law Enforcement, and visiting G. A. R., state executives of the American Legion,auxiliary, and all other ex-service personnel. Automobiles will be furnished in the parade for distinguished guests,Disabled Veterans of the World War, and the G. A. R. Taps Will Be Sounded The entire program for the morning is in charge of the EI F. Dorssey Post, American Legion, with Major Sam Clark, commander. Major MacLean, state commander, will preside at the meeting. The salute to the dead will be fired by riflemen furnished by the Eil F. Dorssey Post. Tape will be blown by one of the best buglers in the country, Francisco Dumingo, a lieutenant in the National Guard, of Topkapi. Among the speakers are Lemuel Bolles, national adjunct of the American Legion; Governor Allen, and Chancellor E. H. Lindley. "The program will be over at 12 o'clock," said Mr. Hill. Men Have New Gym Rules System For Making Up Cuts Is Changed cation has issued a new set of rules governing gymnastics cups, Dr. James Naismith announced today. Hereafter unspecified cuts that are made up within one week with require only one period's work; but if they are not made up within one week, two 40-minute periods of work will be required. The new ruling also states that all cuts must be made up before anyone can transfer to another class or short. The new rules as issued are as follows: 1. Excused cuts are made up at the rate of forty minutes per cut; unexecued cuts at the rate of two 40-minute periods of work. 2. All cuts must be made up on a day other than that on which class meets: Freshmen on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday; Sophomores on Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday. 3. A maximum of 40 minutes work will be credited at each time. 4. Secure make-up cards at offices before work. 5. Report to instructor for assignment of work and also for his o. k at completion of work. 6. All cuts must be made up before transferring to another class or sport. 7. Unsecured cuts made up within the school are required but i- single period of work. 8. All cuts must be satisfactorily made up before a grade can be received for semester's work. 9. All men substituting varsity sports, for, for their gym work should report at the same office. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Campus Editor New York Sport Editor Plain Tale Editor Domain Editor Exchange Editor Clare Ferguson Jabrih Johson Bryan Johnson Leo Lewis Glick Schulta Perry John Dana DeMarcus DeVaughn Francis BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager Lloyd Ruppemana 'Ant' isn't Mar. John Montgomery, Jr. JOARD MEMBERS Ben Hibbe Doris Flossley Ruth Carter Laura Cowdery Chester Shaw Caulton Powers Myrii Hart Caroline Harkrader Subscription price, $29.00 in advance for the first time month of the academic year; $29.00 for one semester; 50 cents a month; 15 cents a week. Published in the afternoon, five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the news of the Department of Journalism. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1919, at the post office at Lawenburg, Kanna, under the act of March 3, 1879. Phones, K. U. 25 and 66 Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas The Daily Kannon aims to picture the undergraduate life of the University of Chicago, and to inform the new line by standing for the fiddle player; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be able to handle more serious problems to their hands; in all aspects of their ability at the University. MONDAY, OCT. 30, 1922. P Now that the ultra-modernd handbill has started robbing people of their glands we will have to discard swallowing as a safe method of protecting our last lonely dine against theft. GETTING BY "Can I get by?" GETTING BY They all ask it. It is the prevailing question of the day. The politician asks it of his cohorts, the shop girls hotly debate it among themselves, the college student has it on the tip of his tongue at all times. And with it comes a feewed effort to reap the benefit of its accomplishment. Getting by—taken with a large pinch of salt—is a good slogan to adopt—but without afrescoal salt is a rather perilous policy. Wanting to get by is a laudable aim—if you can deliver the goods afterwards. For just so long and no longer can you fool the public. I inevitably the veneer will rub thin in places, no matter how carefully you retouch it. If you have got by solely on the veneer you are done for when the brass begins to show through. There is a gentle art in getting by, without a doubt. It is subtle—but you can always learn it. It is infinitely more difficult to learn the art of "staying by," but it is correspondingly beneficial in its accured justness. Just as silver is more expensive at first but retains its value forever, so the art of staying by is more work to learn but has results which last through life. To stay by is a man's work. To get by can be accomplished with clever phrases and polished savility. To get by is child's play, but to stay by has been learned in 'the school of experience' by the great men down the ages, they warriors, churchmen, statesmen. It is the art which the youth of the land must learn, and that soon. The reins of the nation are in the hands of its youth. And the character and value of the nation's youth depends upon its ability to choose between getting by alone, and staying by after they have got by—staying by and delivering the goods. The unspeakable Turk evidently believes that actions speak harder than words. HONOR TO OUR HEROES Kansas pioneer heroes may have their graves marked, according to plans now under discussion by the Kansas Historical Association. This plan is to be commended, for many such are obscure—obscure through neglect. Within a few miles of the campus (the old Union Cemetery, a sorry looking spot to honor pioneer Kansas who fought in the terrible horde struggles. Rows of graves dated 1859 bear the inscriptions for men who died in Quantrill's raid. Numerous graves of children under three years of age are all silent reminders of Oct. 30,1922. No. 37. TYPHOID INOCULATIONS AND SMALLPOX VACCINATIONS; Vol. II. Official Daily University Bulletin Copy received by Florence E. Bliss, Editor, Chancellor's Office until 11:00 a.m. TOOILD INCULICATIONS AND SMALLLOX VACCINATIONS: Will you please allow a few corrections of the article, purporting to be incorrect? No one knows he is immune from Smallpox until he has been successfully vaccinated or has had the smallbox. Every person vaccinated successfully when a child should be re-vaccinated after resuming maturity. A successful vaccination after maturity will minimize the risk of serious illness. Smallpox was very severe last year. One third of the cases proves fatal. This year, where cases have appeared, the death rate is even larger than last year. Every student who has not been successfully vaccinated since childhood should be vaccinated. Inoculations for Typhoid Fever protect for three years. Every student that has not been inoculated within three years, should be inoculated. that has not been incubated within three years, should be incubated Vaccinations and Inoculations are free to Students. Dispensary treatments and Hospital care, except cases of Smallpox and Typhoid Fever, are free to students. (OUTSIDE CALLS FOR STUDENT HOSPITAL PHYSICIANS; S. P. E. E, will meet at Manhattan, says a Nana headline. And when they do, whispers an engineer, they'll add a D to those few letters. All outside calls for Student Hospital physicians must come through the hospital, city telephone 1610. Charges are $1 for a dry call and $2 for a night call. E. SMITH, University Physician. FINE ARTS MUSIC FACULTY RECITAL. Professor W. Waller Whitlock, teach, and Miss Fanny May Ross, plant, give the second faculty position in Fine Arts at 8202 TONNELS TONNELS is invited. H. L. BUTLER, Dean. BOOK EXCHANGE: The Book Exchange in Fraser Hall will be open Tuesdays from 9 to 12 and from 1 to 4. Money will be delivered for books sold. The comic magazine of the University of Oregon is called Lemon Punch. A successful subscription campaign has recently been completed at the University, and the magazine will be issued eight times this year. COMBINED MEETING WOMEN'S HYGIENE CLASSES: An alphabetically inclined Indiana couple have thirteen children, all of whom have names beginning with the letter "A." It's a long way to the "X Y Z." All sections of the women's hygiene classes will meet in Fraser Chapel at 4:30 Wednesday afternoon. All women interested are invited. "The film 'How Life Begins' which is sent from the State Board of Health will be shown." MARTHA M. BACON, Assoc. Prof. Phys. Ed. ORCHESTRA REHEARSAL THURSDAY: Orchestra rehearsal will be held at 7:30 Thursday night as usual. Discord former announcement. To keep the animals for medical use is all right, but there surely should be a demand for plain human treatment in such a case as has been cited. EDWARD F. KURTZ, Director. the hardships which everyone was forced to endure during that turbulent period. GRADUATE RESEARCH_COMMITTEE: There will be a meeting of the Graduate Research Committee at 4:30 Thursday afternoon in Room 102 East Administration Building. But recently a dog, so weak that he was unable to defend himself, was placed in the wire-enclosed pen. Other dogs proceeded to mutilate the sick dog, without interference of any kind from the keepers. The stones are, for the most part, is perfect condition, but hardly one is standing in an upright position. Nearly every grave has been allowed to sink a foot or more into the ground; weeds unhampered grow to their full height. The old iron fence which protected the monuments in former years is giving way before the cattle which pasture among the graves. How Quantrell would laugh if he saw how loyal Kansans have honored those who fought against him to save the state! Truly, it is a noble thing which the Kansas Historical Association is contemplating doing. Skii, the battling Songelope, is making the rounds of Paris calling for rounds of drinks, which is bad training for rounds in the ring. ANIMAL RIGHTS TO FAIR TREATMENT On the campus of this University there exists a flagent disregard of all principles of humaneness. South of the gymnasium, stray animals are kept for the use of medical students on the hill. From time to time the animals are placed in there, and regularly fed. E. B. STOUFFER, Chairman. Jayhawk Jargon They have quite a few stock jokes at the cow-school. One of them is "beat K. U." They will be at K. U. next fall. Queer how a couple of senatorial candidates can meet and clap one another in loving embrace, and then the same night prepare eternal resting places for one another out of the blackest of campaign mud. Not so queer, either; perhaps; they do it all the time in the Senate. A negro, under stress of circum- stances, took his wife's name in preference to his own. A lot of people are in the same fix! On Other Hills A Henry Ford won an internationa race. She was a fishing yacht, Daugherty gives his o. k to Harding. Naturally, that's what he is expected to do. The Welsh people are going to live on religious faith and prayer this winter, due to fuel, food, and job shortage. What in the world can Kansas substitute for these things? MASTER OF SCIENCE FOREVERY DEGREE of Lead A servicable,simplified writing tool that holds the style of lead most suitable for your partic- tiple work. Seven different grades available. Send the Daily Kansan home. Miss Helen Mahin, assistant professor of Journalism, was the speaker at the Theta Sigma Phi Journalism sorority meeting yesterday. At the meeting it was decided to postpone for time the University until after the high school journalists have their meeting here this fall. Made economically by mass production methods and sold at prices under $20.00. Wood pencils a luxury. Harold R. McGill, c24, underwent a minor operation at the University Hospital Saturday. The STUBYB~shown here-of Rolled Silver with ring for watch chain costs $1.00. Ingersoll Pencil Photographer See this and other Ingersoll models at your stationery or cooperative store. Ingersoll Redipoint Co., Inc. Wm. H. Ingersoll, Press, 461 Fourth Avenue, New York City Frank Thomas, c'26, has withdrawn from school, and left last night for Oklahoma City, where he has accepted a position with the International Insurance Service Company. For a Good Complexion Boncilla Massage STADIUM BARBER SHOP "The Shop of Service" 1033 Mass. St. First Door South of Von's Lynn Barclay, e28, has withdrawn from school, and is working in Kansas City. Kans. Dorothy Moody, A. B.22, is teaching in the Shawnee Mission Rural High School this winter. PROTCH The College TAILOR WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods Visit the United Army Stores Co 706 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Distributors of Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 Army Goods Army Goods Thomas Shoe Electric Shop "GIFTS THAT LAST" Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00 DIRECTORS C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. D. C. Asher, Cashier D. C. Asher, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Asher, L. V. Müller, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishop Adam and Eva Y. W. C. A. Benefit TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 8:15 p. m. "Adam" bring your "Eva". You don't want to miss this! A laugh A minute! $1.00 75c 50c Seats on sale Bowersock box office HILDA ENGLUND SHEPHERDS COMING November 3rd-4th ROBINSON GYM Friday Matinee "THE MARRIAGE OF KITTY" by Lennox Friday 8 P.M. "ROSMERSHOLM" by Ibsen Saturday 8 P.M. "EASTER" by Strindberg THE WORLD'S FEMALE ACTRESS. MERCEDES DESMORE Great Plays Given by All-Star Casts Hilda Englund, one of the greatest Ibsen actresses of to-day, has created five of Ibsen's heroines in the original casts at the Royal Theatre, Stockholm, Sweden. Ibsen himself selected Miss Englund to create the role of "Mother Ase" in "Peer Gynt", of "Regina" in "Ghosts," and of "Gerd" in "Brand." Mercedes Desmore, an English actress who for the past eight years has been playing in America. Until recently she has been playing opposite Lou Tellegen and John and Lionel Barrymore. Robert Donaldson, direct from The Theatre Guild of New York City where he has played leading parts with such stars as Otis Skinner and Walter Hampden, will play the part of "Rosmer" in Rosmersholm. Ibsen and Strindberg, Like Shakespeare, Should Be Seen By All SEASON TICKETS $1.50 and $2.00 Send orders to Henry A. Shinn, Department of Public Speaking THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Theodore Roberts Doesn't Care What Part He Plays In Movies; Got In Pictures Accidentally Many K. U. students who were in Kansas City, Mo., over the week-end ended the Orpheum Theater where Theodore Roberts, the Paramount character actor, appeared, by special permission of Jesse L. Lasky, in a William C. DeMille playlet, "The Mar High Up." The sketch was especially prepared for Mr. Roberts so that he might demonstrate to the vaudeville-going public his skill on the legitimate stage, and also prove that he is a real "flesh and blood" actor. A five weeks' leaks of absence from the Laukey studios made possible Mr. Roberts' personal appearance in Kansas City. In January he will be special permission appear in Chicago and New York. Later he plans to appear in some sort of short play in New York, and he willUpper Up" is a thoroughly German sketch, it is doubtful whether it will be produced in London. Mr. Roberts was born on a California farm and acquired an early knowledge of dramas in San Francisco where he attended elementary school. When 16 years old he was teaching elocation to aspiring young actors, and three years later was playing in New York vaudeville. "My entrance into the movies," said Mr. Roberta, when interviewed by a Kansan reporter, "was purely accidental. I had played with a wande-ville troupe in New York during an eager schedule of series of engagements in Australia. Passing through Los Angeles, enroute, I met a motion picture director who made me an offer which presented so many possibilities that I was forced to accept. Since then, I have been working on the number of years, but he would pass for about fifty—I have been directly or indirectly transmitting motion t R. O. T. C. Picks Twin Color Guards For Parade Appearance Robert S. and William L. Patterson, twins, have been appointed color guards in the local R. O. T. C. unit, and will serve in that capacity at parade drill next Wednesday after noon. The unit is very fortunate in having these men, according to Sergeant D'Ambran, since, if any military organization is to make a good appearance on the battlefield, other guards be as nearly alike as possible. In the popular army, he says, the commanding officers will often search an entire regiment to find two men, of even approximately the same stature and facial expression. The same system of recognizing honor students in the unit will be followed this year as was in effect last year. Any student in either the basic or advanced course, who attains a certain subject during one semester will be given the privilege of wearing, during the following semester, a blue ribbon similar to the army campaign ribbon. About a dozen men are wearing the ribbon this semester in recognition of work done during last semester. Non-Com Officers Will Be Chosen Wednesday on Basis of Drill Performance Police Interfere When "Jelly Beans" Get Rough The appointment of non-commissioned officers will be made next week. The performance of the eligible men at drill next Wednesday will determine, to a considerable degree, the future status of the men will be six sergeants and six corporals appointed for each of the three companies in the unit. Drumright, Okla., Oct. 20, (United Press)—local police have put a stop to the war waged here recently between squads of "jelly beans" and "anti-jelly beans," it is believed. In the second engagement between the opposing factions, police claim they snatched victory from a troop of "beams" who had just administered a beating to two enemy leaders. Trouble is reported to have started when "anits" objected to silk multi-colored Mata for saashes worn by the "beans" on a local dance floor. The "first gun of the war" was "fired" when a hunky "anit" unwound a sash from the shapely form of a "beam" leader. An attempt to burn the confiscated saush resulted in calling of "reserves" of both factions. movie audiences in about one hundred plays, of all sorts and descriptions." Mr. Roberts' first trial before the camera was in the filming of "The Call of the North," which featured Robert Edison. "That play," said Mr. Roberts in regard to the Edison picture, "is an old timer which may possibly be remembered by some of your faculty members." Irene Peabody and Mary Smith went to Kannas City to hear the concert given by Roan Raisa on Friday evening. When asked what type of character he liked best to portray in pictures, Mr. Roberts said: "I am careless with my ability and take chances at anything villains, farmer, father, blind blacksmith, gambler, and prosperous manufacturer. I can't say off-hand what sort of part I like to play best," he continued; "I have done equally well in them all." In "The Old Homestead," the story of which is made up of a series of connected "Yankeesisms," Mr. Roberts admitted he played the strangest and most violent team in history. Besides leads Mr. Roberts has played a great number and variety of subordinate parts. "In one picture," he says, "the blow on the foam off a glass of beer." According to his own confession, Mr. Roberts is a faithful fisherman, and, when business at the studio is not too pressuring, likes to cruise about in Golden Gate Harbor. "I catch only one or two fish a week," he said, "but they are nearly always man-sized and that number is sufficient." Mr. Roberts is a close friend of Frank McGlynn, who played the title role in Drinkwater's "Abraham Lincoln," which appeared in Lawrence a short time ago. For some years the film has been neighbors in Californias. Mr. Roberts left Kansas City yee tday, and Wednesday will again be at work before the camera in the Lasky studio at Hollywood. New Oil Burning System to be Installed Here The new Greenfield Automatic Oil Burning System will be installed in the mechanical laboratory, if plans now under way are carried out, Dear P. F. Walker has received a letter from the Empire Oil Company, stating that the system may be installed here. This new device for keeping a boiler at the proper pressure and insuring a maximum amount of fuel economy from the oil was developed by Benjamin F. Greenfield, a former student in the School of Engineering. It is being adapted and used by the largest independent company operating in the middle section of the country. The new burner will be installed here in connection with the service boiler in the laboratory and is also to be used for experimental purposes. Forum Hears Sternberg "Paper Money Is Nations' Only Resource" Why nations continue to issue almost worthless paper money was one f the questions answered by Prof. W. Sternberg of the department f economics at the student forum n the Unitarian Church Sunday. Professor Sternberg expressed the opinion that this depreciated currency will never rise to its former value and that the paper money can never be justly redeemed. Either it will have to be entirely repudiated or a new standard of value will have to be created. Paper money is their only resource to meet national expenses, according to Professor Sternberg. These nations have reached the extremity where they cannot further reduce expense or increase income. They must compel the purchase of bond issues. Paper money is their only alternative. The Forum programs for next month will be: November 5, "Modern Faith Healers," by Prof. W. S. Hunter, department of psychology; November 12, "China," by Prof. D. L. Patterson, department of history; November 19, "Invention," by Prof. R. Fanser, department of drawing and painting; November 26, "National Selflessness," by Prof. F. W. Blackwar, department of sociology. Freshman medical students at the University of Oklahoma are having a hard time to find some means of identification. First they tried wearing moustaches, but abandoned this upon imperative recommendations from their brethren of the legal process. Next they decided to wear masks, but immediately the wrath of the engineers. Now they are seeking some distinctive mark that won't trespass on other schools. Y. M. C. A. to Secure Prominent Men Every Week Until Thanksgiving First One Of Noon Luncheon Is To Be Held Tuesday, Oct.31 The first of the fall series of the K, U, Y. M, C. A. noonday luncheons will be given Wednesday, November 1, at 12:00 o'clock in Myers Hall. Dr. Schweiger of the department of education will speak, and those in charge say that the luncheon will be well worth 25 cents. After this week, these luncheons will be given on Thursday, and will continue until Thanksgiving. Tickets can be bought at any time at the M. Y. C. A. office in Myers Hall, or from students on the hill, or from the office in Myers Hall, beignet, tickets mounted on the lapel. The announcement of this week's luncheon for Wednesday noon is a change from the first announcement, which placed the first of the series These noonday lunchouts at which noted men over the state speak to men students of the University are not new. They were held regularly last year and so much interest was evidenced and the attendance was so good that the Y. M. C. A. decided to continue them. Their revival this year means an important addition to the University program for the promotion of good fellowship in the student body. Fewer Smokers This Year Freshman Records Show That Majority Are Non-Smokers Taking as authority a questionnaire of college freshmen enrolled in hygiene, the non-smoker out numbers the smoker in a ratio of two to one. To determine if the results of physical education, gives the results as 218 abstainers against 102 users of the "weed." This percentage is rather remarkable, when it is remembered that two years ago an annual survey gave 31% smokers to 49% non-smakers. The department has announced its statistics on the freshman physical examination, for this year, as to height and weight. The average height is 68.3 inches; average weight 140 (slightly underweight); maximum weight 232; minimum weight 50.8 inches; minimum weight 103. Dr. Naismith has put the freshmen into ten classes according to the percentage of total development. In the list below is the percentage of total development and the number classified in each division. Percentage of total Numbers development Numbers 1 to 9 7 10 to 19 41 20 to 29 60 30 to 39 67 40 to 49 61 50 to 59 57 60 to 68 49 70 to 79 46 80 to 89 37 90 to 100 23 It is interesting to note that the greatest number have a percentage of between 38 and 39 percent. From each class in each class begins to decrease Indian Girls Given Surprise Party Saturday evening at 6 o'clock a surprise Halloween dinner was given for the twelve Indian girls that are staying at the Esther House. The Social Service committee of the Y. W. C. A., under the direction of Margar- dale Dale, cooked the dinner and the buffet. Patti Putnam took the kids down town. These Indian girls come from various places over the United States to attend Lawrence High School. Elizabeth Dumkel, chairman of the Ways and Moans committee of the Y. W. C. A., entertained the cast of "Adam and Eva" and Mrs. Myrtle Halloween dinner party Saturday evening at her home, 631 Ohio Street. The largest selling Quality excellent in the world VENUS PENCILS FOR the student or prof, the superb VENUS outrivals all for perfect pencil work. They black degree 3 copying. American Lead Pencil Co. 212 Fifth Ave. New York pencil Write for booking on Venus Express or Venus Expeditions www.venusexpress.com K. U. Tramps Reach Aggieville By Signs "Yeh, think they may need me," and wavered Hal. You goin' to Manhattan?" asked Dan of Harold as they started down the Hill Friday afternoon. "How're you goin?" "I don't know. How're you goin?" "Why, I can't go unless I walk." "I'm just about that way my way," I tell you what, let's do walk!" Two hours later late at the forty-two o'clock lunch, two loyal K. U. freshen trumped along wearing two large signs: "K. U. to Argroville," and "Rides Accepted." Dan Daring and Harold Lauer reached Manhattan at 3 o'clock Saturday morning. They report that they did little walking, and that cars along the road were all in sympathy with their novel scheme of getting to the game as economically as possible. Nu Sigma Nu, professional medical femalefraternity announces the pledging of the following men: John Philipin, Muskogee, Oka; Clarence Schaffer, Kansas City, Mo.; Paul Hunt, Paola, Kan; Harold O'Donnell, Ellsworth, Kan; Gerald Smith, Pittsburgh, Kan; Robert Bell, St. Joseph, Mo.; Kenneth Conklin, Anken, Kan; Williss Elinger, Kansas "We're going to all the games now," said Dan, as he told the long hike Sunday morning. "It's a dead cindh there'll be nothing to keep us home." New Secretary for Dean Kent Ruth Lichen, A. B'14, of Leavenworth, who has been working in Kansas City, has accepted a position in Dean Kent's office. Miss Lichen is Grand Secretary of the Sigma Kappa sorority and she will stay at the Sigma Kappa house while she is here. City, Mo.; William Engle, Lawrence, Kansas; James Danglade, Webb City, Mo. After Every Meal WRIGLEY'S P.K. CHEWING SWEET The Flavor Mannish Tailored Coats For Ladies You girls know all about the exceptional quality of The Flavor Lasts Wise C Tailoring for Men Tailoring for Men You get the same fine woollen, the same distinctive style and expert tailoring in these mannish coats for ladies. Costs you less than you'd pay for any of the leading makes of ladies' ready-to-wear garments. © 1928 Ed. V. Price & Co. S. G. CLARKE 1033 Mass. St. Do You Want Quick, Careful Service on Your Clothes? Phone 442, Kirby Cleaners 1109 Mass. St. The Event Beautiful of the Theatrical Season OLGA HERSELF IN PETROVA The White Peacock BY OLGA PETROVA BY OLGA PETROVA Exactly as it was played all last winter at the Comedy Theatre in New York City. You can find them from one of the love centres: argument of verse from one of the love passages: "Your eyes . . . Are like stars Under the white veil of a cloud. And you are not afraid. Is like the rising moon. Your mouth . . . Your body . . . . . is rather than blood!" What This Remarkable Play Means to Every Man: No man can refuse response to its throbbing appeal of beauty. And What It Means to Every Woman: No woman can fail to grasp its vital significance for every number of bows say Everywhere pronounced by the critics as "THE MOST FASCINATING LOVE STORY IN A DECADE, RIVETING THE INTEREST FROM START TO FINISH." Unauthorized, Original New York Cast and Production and Unaltered, Original New York Cast and Production and Paperless, PETROYA, in Person. BOWERSOCK Prices: Orchestra, $2.50 and $2.00, Balcony $1.50, $1.00 and 75c. One Night Only, Tuesday, November 7th MAIL ORDERS NOW! BELLS FLOWER SHOP Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS Phone 139 825 1-2 Mass. Fancy Pressing and Alterations LOEWENSTINE Phone 1968 Blue 813 Maine Add - a - Pearl $1,800 Picture Title Contest (1937) Give Us a Title for This Picture No restrictions—Contest open to all Get full information and entrance blanks for add-a-pearl picture title contest at Pander's QUALITY JEWELRY Camel Hair Sweaters $7.50 to $10.00 A. H. A. SWANK! That's English for topnotch style and aristocracy in dress. The New KUPPENHEIMER and CHURCHILL OVERCOATS have lots of swank. The English effect is seen in the loose, all-enveloping bodies, big, long ulsters and all-around belts. $20 to $45 Houk-Green Clo. Co. Knox Hats Stetson Hats THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Physical Education Department Warns Against Class Cuts Gymnasium Credit Is Necessar, For Gradation, Says G. B. Patrick G. B, Patrick, instructor in men's gymnastics, throws out a broadcast warning today, to all men desirous of eventually receiving a degree from the University. The warning is in the text and we will watch out for indiscriminate cuts. The department went into executive session last week over a letter received from a last year's student, Mr. Patrick said. The letter was written by a four-year student who finished last year with 122 hours of credit in the college, and was enrolled in an online course, yet failed to receive any credit in exercise, due to his negligence in appearing for class periods. The writer expressed himself as being in favor of the rule requiring four semesters of gymnastics credit from every student, but gave as an excuse the fact that he played golf and tennis during his college career and had little time for other kinds of exercise. "Unfortunately," said Mr. Patrick, "a rule is a rule only when it applies to all. This student had credit to aprep, and probably needs a degree to help him in a business way, but he could not have worked because that it would be unfair to grant him credit for work he never took and trouble to think about. Fechis his golf and tennis would have gotten him exercise credit if he had taken income from his employer, but it is too late now. What is a rule for one must go for all." Aggies Win Cross Country Wilson Takes Wrong Route at Finish and Loses The cross-country team ran a great race against the Aggies Saturday and should have won, but lost, 27 to 30. "Acc" Wilson started off at high speed and a furious pace for Henry, the Agrio captain, to follow Half. He was able to lead a safe lead ever his nearest rivals. He heve his his way. Instead of turning as a sign clearly indicated, he kept on. Discovering his mistake, he raced back, only to see three Agies far in the lead. Wilson tried to close the gap, but the handicap was too great. The best he could do was to finish fourth. Three Aggies, Henry, Willey, and Von Reese, finished in order, then came the entire Kansas head, headed by Wilson, and the other three K. S. A. c. men. At that, the time was fast, 2450, shattering the course record held by Watson. The length of the course is about 4.7 miles in length. Wildcat Defense Holds Jayhawkers To a Ti (Continued from Page One) the backfield were two Jayhawkers whose play drew respect from the Bachman men. The line-up: Agges ... Position ... K. U. Sebring ... R.E. ... Griffin Stain ... R.T. ... Holderman Bschindler ... R.G. ... Higgins Gunnell ... Lonborg Hahn (C) ... L.G. ... Davidson Nichols ... L.T. ... Mosby Weber ... L.E. ... Black Swartz ... Q.B. ... Wilson Brandley ... F. ... Spurgeon Stock ... L.H. ... Krueger Sears ... R.H. ..McAdams First downs earned — Agigres 4, K. U. 18. Offensive plays including forward passes — Agigres 35, K. U. 78. Total net gain of offensive - Agigres 110 yards, K. U. 287 yards. Average gain per play — Aggres 3.1 yards, K. U. 3.7. Forward passes successful — Agigres 7, K. U. 4. Forward passes incomplete — Agigres 4, K. U. 7. Gain passes, includes runs after passes — Agigres 103, K. U. 74. Knuts (number) — Agigres 7, K. U. 5. Average of punts - Agigres 47 yards, K. U. 49 yards. Average runback of punts — Agigres 1.4 yards, K. U. 5. Penalties - Agigres 4 for 11 yards, K. U. 4 for 40 yards. Field goals tried — Agigres none, K. U. 2. Fumbles - Agigres 3, K. U. 2. Times ball lost on fumbles — Agigres 3, K. U. 2. Touchdowns - Hahn, Agigres; J. Wilson, Burt, Agigres; P. Brendley for Brendley, Lasswell for Scandin, Steiner for Stahl; K. U., Cave for Holderman, Burt for Spurgeon, Shannon for Krueger, McLain for Griffin, Boone for McLain. C. E. MeBride, Missouri Valley college, referee; B. L. Cleary, University of Oklahoma, umpire; A. A. Schabinger Ottawa university, head lineman. More Library Help Here Than in Previous Year Twelve more regular workers are on the library payroll this year than land. This includes all departmental libraries as well as Spooner. Inexperienced workers are paid 25 cents an hour. The maximum amount set by the chancellor, paid to experiential workers, is 30 cents an hour. The books of the School of Education have been moved from the basement of Spooner to the main floor. This necessitates more assistants in the main room. In the Geology library it has become necessary to employ an extra worker, and the student help in the various other departmental libraries has been increased according to their needs. Gridiron Gossip Glick Schultz The Jayhawkers lacked the punch. They failed in the final drive when a small gain would have meant so much. The Agie forward wall stiffened, it is true, but a team that gain consistently in mid-field should be able to exert that extra ounce under the goal posts. The hummadlers were at the station at Manhattan to meet the two specials. Between three and four hundred arrived in Agggileville early Saturday morning via the coal car route. Counting them all, there must have been 1,200 K. U. students at the game. The Kansas cheering sections were scattered, however, and the Aggies had the advantage. Mae's band came on the field at 1:30, just an hour before the game. Five minutes later the Aggle band of seventy-six pieces appeared. The Aggle band was the larger in numbers. Mae's music sounded the better to us. The Ku Kus and the Wampus Cats, the pop organizations of the rival schools, were next on the field and soon displayed their wares. Between halves they both appeared again, the Wampus cats foretelling an army victory in two gridon warriors, while the Ku Kus 101 of a Jayhawk triumph through a sham bull fight, the Agnie cow taking the count in the end. Like the game, the stunts were about a tie. The Wampas Cats displayed the following slogan: "We'll plunge your center, skirt your ends, and tear the feathers off your hen." They left out the forward pass, which was the only effective Aggie weapon There are some who say that the Jayhawkers have lost their jinx over the Aggies. The game next year will establish that point. Both teams got breaks, but the majority went to the Bachman crew Saturday. When Hahn, the Aggie captain, intercepted Wilson's pass, he had a clear field ahead and a wall of interference behind. Lonborg was the closest Kansen man and white shih. Grant Farmer, the loss was too great. Here's a bint to the Wumpus Cats. We use simplified spelling and hence t is "Fraser" and not "Frazier." McAdams had one bad punt Saturday. There was a strong wind blowing from the southwest and the Jayhawks were facing the wind. The wind caught the ball. It dropped about five yards in front of Mac. Lonborg broke through several times and threw the Aggies for a loss. When the Jayhawk touchdown late in the second period was called back, the Kansas fans were disappointed and expressed it. But MeBride saw a foul and called it. That is the referee's business. This decision was hard to take, however. Wilson's pass was low and Krueger barely caught it, scooping the ball from just off the ground. After a catch like that, he deserved a touchdown. But rules are rules. In our estimation the vaunted Aggie team failed to show. On paper, before the game, the Manhattan team had the dope all its way. The Aggie line and the Giants was a strong line. The Aggie offensive failed. Now for a few statistics. Kansas gained 287 yards on the offensive, the Aggies 110—this includes grains from passes. The Aggies flipped seven passes for 103 yards and Kan- The Aggie backfield was all Stark. He tried the line and he tried the ends to no advantage. He is a great player, but even wonder halves must have a hole. has completed four for 72 yards. This leaves the Aggies gaining 7 yards through serimignment while the Jay's made 144 yards by serimignment. The Clark machine earned eighteen first downs, the Bachman men four first downs. The ball was within the Angle 40-yard approximately 45 minutes of the game. In other words the Angle 10-yard bigger all but 15 minutes of the battle. Now turn for a minute to the Oklahoma-Nebraska game at Norman. The Cornhuskers won, 39 to 7. Nebraska earned only sixteen first downs, two less than Kansas earned against the Aggies. Oklahoma made four first downs, the same number as the Aggies. The Cornhuskers gained 238 yards through scrimmage while scrimmage netted the Jayhawks 214 yards. Oklahoma gained 84 yards in scrimmage, the Aggies 7 yards. The Kansas backfield is to be entirely reorganized this week according to an announcement made this morning by Coach "Pooty" Clark. Potty indicated that the first backkeeper, Ken Griseno, quarter, McAdams and Shannon, halfbacks; and Burd, full. However, the practice this week will Pi Beta Pi antiformes the initiation of Sue Bidwell, Evelyn Lowman, Charlotte Alken, Laurie Robinson, and Elizabeth Wheatley this afternoon at 5:30 at the house. Several Sigma Chi freshmen enter alined with a steak roast at Wind nill Hill Friday night. probably see several different combinations at work. WIEDEMANN'S Quality Merchandise on a close margin of profit is responsible only for Our Popular Price Drink a: MALTED so thick you can hardly draw it through a straw MILK Our Popular Prices Ye Tauerne SkofStadS ELLING SYSTEM LAWRENCE, KANS. A Special Hallowe'en 1. Dinner— Tuesday, Oct. 31 YE TAVERNE 6-7:30 p.m. In college for your themes, papers, letters and lecture notes. Out of college for all your personal writing. This machine will be your friend for life, making your work easier, making your time go further. In College and Out of College you need a Remington Portable The Lawrence Typewriter Exch. 737 Mass. Lawrence, Kas. Remington Typewriter Co., Inc. 107 W. 7th St. Topeka, Kas. Remington Typewriter Co., Inc. 1021-23 Grand Ave. K.C., Me Also the most compact—fits in case only 4 inches high. Price, complete with case, $60. Remember—it is the most complete of all portable typewriters — Standard Keyboard, with four rows of keys and no with four rows of shifting for figures. *Panasonic Ribbons for Remoting Portable Typewriters* *each cach* - $5 a dozen price, 00. WANT ADS LOST- Phi Delta Theta in small, white gold, diamond points. “W. L. H.” on back. Finder notify W. L. Huguenh. Phones 248. —O-2 WANTED—Single room by student, close to hill. Leave address at Kansan office. O-31 FOR RENT - Furnished rooms for girls, vacated by sorority. Four doors north of Jayhawk Cafe. 1328 Ohio. Phone 2203. —N-1 SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire to earn enough to more than pay their We make clothes. We do alterations on both women's and men's clothes, reeling ladies' and men's overcoats, cleaning and pressing. Suiting you, anywav. That's My Business SCHULZ THE TAILOR 917 Mass. St. Go to Manhattan? Arrow Let us clean the Aggie soil off your clothes. NEW YORK CLEANERS Phone 75 way through college. Pleasant work, after school hours. Write J. F. Stanley 3446 Wayne Ave., Kansas City, Mo. -S79 PROFESSIONAL CARD "R.J. W.O'BRYAN, (Dentist) Special attention to prevention and treat- ment." 804 Perkins Building. Tel. 507. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclu- sive Optometrists). Eyes exam- nated; glasses made. Office 1025 Mass. Oread Shining Parlor CHARLIE'S Best Shines in Town Miss Sarah Lyon will talk on "K. U. Overseas" at the regular Y, W. C. A. meeting Tuesday afternoon in Myers Hall at 4:30 cclock. --Wear a large Size? Varsity Sale will continue but a few days only, so get yours early. Size 10 1-2, 11, 11 1-2 widths B-C-D only! $6.45 Monday and Tuesday Ober's NEED TO FOOT OUTSIZERS HELENE CHADWICK AND RICHARD DIX —So temptingly appetizing All large sizes from broken lines of shoes and oxford have been grouped for quick disposal. The season's best patterns are represented and affords an opportunity to buy below actual cost to manufacture. IN and piping hot delicious student lunches there is only one place and that too is —and real prompt service THE OREAD CAFE Just a Step from the Campus E. C. Bricken, Prop. are the hot savory meals to be found at the Oread. A Clyde Cook Comedy "THE SAILOR" "YELLOW MEN AND GOLD" A thrilling drama of tropical adventure by Governor Morris. The thrills you haven't known since childhood's first glimpse into the realm of adventure and romance. Monday Only SHIRLEY MASON Bowersock IN "THE NEW TEACHER" The adventures of a society girl who wanted to do something worth while. She went to the East Side for adventure—she had plenty. Love will find a way even in the slums. A Lee Kids Comedy "A PAIR OF ACES" Both Theatres Wednesday Inspiration Pictures Inc., Chas. H. Duell, President, presents: Richard Barthelmess is TheBondBoy A FIRST NATIONAL ATTRACHION As big as "Tofable David." THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XX. NUMBER 38 Mid-Season Finds Nebraska Huskers Leading The Valley Drake Bulldogs Also Stand Chance of Finishing With 1,000 Percent Missouri Valley Standing Nebraska ... 2 0 Drake ... 2 0 Aggies ... 1 0 Missouri ... 2 1 Ames ... 2 1 Kansas ... 0 1 Okahoma ... 1 1 Oklahoma ... 0 2 Washington ... 0 3 UNIVERSITY O. KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, OCT. 31, 1922. Games This Week Kansas-Oklahoma at Lawrence. Kans. Aggies-Missouri at Columbia Ames-Drake, at Des Moines. Washington-Grinnell at Grinnell. Neb. Syracuse at Syracuse, N. Y. Games This Week With three weeks of the 1922 football season behind and only four more weeks looming ahead, the Nebraska Cornshukers are again doped to win a Missouri Valley football championship. While Drinke will probably finish the season without a mark in her lost column, the Bullsplay play only two weeks before the final five and no one would question the relative strength of these two elevens. Cornbuskers Invade East The Kansas Agriges also have a percentage of 1,000, but the Bachman men are due to fail by the wayside either this week when they meet the North Dakota Governor on November 18 when they meet the Cornhuskers in Lincoln. Nebraska goes east this week *t* New York state where they tangle with Synchase Saturday afternoon The Cornhuckleurs have been touted as one of the greatest trans in the United States and the game Saturday will give a good line on the relative strength of the Dawson machine eastern eleven. Synchase and Nebraska played a scoreless tie at Saturday. The Oklahoma-Kansas game here this week will give a good line on theajwacker chances to hold Nebraska. While both Oklahoma and Kansas played the Kansas Argies 4 to 7 to it, it is generally conceded that the Sooners and theajwakers both outplayed the Marathon men. The Clark machine has its season and thegame Saturday will tell whether or not the shake-up in the Kansas backfield has solved the difficulty. Drake Meets Ames Saturday The Kansas Agrie-Missouri game at Columbia is hard to dope. While Missouri had a hard time defeating St. Louis University last Saturday and has not shown much this year, it is the opinion of local sport followers that the Aggies will have to show more than they did against the Jayhawkers to win from Missouri. The Tigers have an advantage of playing at home and will probably take the game. Drake will probably send the Ames Cycles back to Ames with another mark in their loss column. Drake has a powerful line this year and the backfill shows flashes of offensive power. The Washington-Grimmel argument at Grimsel Saturday is just about a toss-up. Neither team has a Valley game. The Fliers have a slight advantage, however. Health Officer Speaks to Classes in Child Care Dr. Helen Moore, who is chief of the Division of Child Hygiene of the State Board of Health, spoke in all of Doctor Sherbon's classes on Friday upon the subject of "Child Health Work of the State." Doctor Moore came' to tell the students the work of child welfare in the state and also to present the purpose of the Shepherd-Tower act, which provides that the federal government shall give to the division of Child Hygiene of the State Board of Health $7,100 per person, providing it is matched in the next legislation by an equal appropriation. This division administers the Shepherd-Tower act in Kansas. Alpha Chi Omega announces the dedication of Ruth Brisbane, Iowa City, Iowa. Henrietta Hadley, c25, spent Saturday and Sunday in Kansas City, Mo. Miss Ketchum Speaks To Women's Federation Miss Rosemary Ketchan, of the School of Fine Arts, gave a lecture on "The Relation of Art to Home Decoration," before the Eighth district federation of women's clubs convention held in Augusta last week. Miss Ketchan, who gave her talk on Wednesday afternoon, brought out in the discussion that the point of view of the American women is changing and they are learning that European and period furniture has 1. 000 She urged that American mance furniture and materials, the outgrowth of American ideals, be used in order that a national art may be developed. Miss Ketcham used samples of American-made draperies to show that native materials may be used as advantage in home decoration. Shinn Announces Date For Try-outs For Debate Teams Question Concerns Recognition of Soviet Government by United States On November 14, at 3:30 p. m., in the Little Theatre, Green Hall, tryouts for the Colorado, Oklahoma, and Missouri debaate teams will be held under the supervision of Prof. Henry Lowe of the department of public snorkeling. According to Professor Shimm, few men who were on the teams last year are now available and all men who are present have been urged to attend the tw-outs. - "I have always felt," said Professor Shion, "that there are many men attending K. U. who would make好 debateers, if they would only treet out." All men who are interested in making the debate teams are asked to report to Professor Shim in the Green Hall before November 14. The question for debate this year is, "Resolved, that the United States should immediately recognize the Soviet government of Russia." The K. U. teams will alternate from the affirmative to the negative side. Geologists Hold Meeting Dr. R. C. Moore Presents Paper at Annual Convention "Structures of the Colorado Plateau Region and Their Origins" was the subject of a paper presented by Dr. R. C. Moore before the annual fall meeting of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists held in Denver, Cloo, October 26 to 28. Prof. R. S. Knappen, L. M. Wilshire, c'22, and Dr. Moore were the K. U. representatives. The meeting of women interested in the "K. U. Quack Club" to have been held tonight, has been postponed on account of the Y. W. C. A. play to next Tuesday night at 7:30 o'clock in the gymnasium. After next week the meetings will be on alternate Tuesdays only. There were 265 people at the meeting, and sixty-five papers were presented. In addition to a banquet, the members enjoyed a 100-mile auto trip through the Denver park system, which extends into the mountains to an elevation of more than 12,000 feet. An all-day trip was given over to the Salt Creek and Tea Pot Dome oil fields of Wyoming. Former Cheerleader Enterts Lawrence Morris, a graduate and former cheerleader at K.U., entertained with a dinner party at his home in Jackson City followed by the K.U.-Aggie game. Those from K.U. who attended were: Dorothy Dillow, Francis Blair, Leah Floyd, Katherine Stewart, Jia Jackman, Dean Boggs, George Hollingsby, Whitsed Laming, August Lauferbach, Robert Messenheimer, William Crow, William Glasscock, John Montgomery, Dolph Simons, Jeffrey Williams, Robert Brigham, and Dalton Beerry. Following the dinner, John Montgomery entertained with a dance at the country club. Most of the discussion of the meeting was on the subject, "Geology of the Oil Fields of the Rock Mountains." The next meeting of the association will be held in Shreveport, La., March 22-24. This is the largest society of its kind in the world. Its rapid growth is due to the great development of the petroleum industry during the last ten years. Former Cheerleader Entertains Jayhawker Editor Places Time Limit For Photographs Individual And Group Stat istics Must Also Be In Office By January 5 "We are now ready to accept photographs for the 1923 JAYHAWK;" said Ted Hudson, his editor, this morning. "January 5 has been set as the deadline for all group and individual awards, and we must adhere to this date." Besides the photographs, according to Mr. Hudson, all individual records and group statistics must be in the hands of the editors not later than January 5, and after that date no pictures or records will be accepted. Accuracy is to be the kernige of this "ristorante of College Annah," say John Hammond, an author in mind that they are enduring to close the book earlier. In former years; Mr. Hudson explained, there has always been a big rush at the last minute, resulting in many errors. Accuracy to Be Keynote "This year we are increasing the size of the annual one hundred pages, and adding over three hundred illustrations more than ever before, so [we] necessary that we call for material earlier than usual. We expect to verify every initial name, address, and every statement in the annual." Make Appointments in November This deadline applies to juniors and seniors, all fraternities and sororites, and every organization which wants to be represented in the annual. Make Appointments in November "There are a number of good libros, and they are well equipped," and all are well equipped to take individual and group pictures such as are required for the Jayhawkker. I would suggest that appointments be made on Friday or Saturday, December is always a rush month, and January will be too late." In order that they may be reproduced, all photographs must be glasses. Junior and Senior individual pictures must be size 480 inches, and group pictures will have a uniform height and determined by the photographer. More Individual Pictures more individual pictures. "This year, for the first time," said Mr. Heckman, a colleague of the student government officers are to be individual pictures, and will be artistically mounted on a gray background for the annual. Photographers will assist students in getting the pictures right. All that is necessary is to tell them the pictures are for the Jayhawker." Blanks will be mailed this week from the office to every Junior and Senior, and every organization, according to the business manager, on which requests may be made for space re-venue. Prior to this year glasses were left with the photographer to be picked up b the editor, and then it is the student who one bring his gloss in person to the Jawhacker office, where a blank will be supplied for the individual's record. The local R. O, T. C, basketball team has scheduled two games to be played in the near future. One of these is with the fast Topek Y. M. C. A. team. The other is with the Kansas City Boys' Hotel team, which has played a total of 61 games and won 56. The local team is practicing consistently in order to be in trim for the games. Over in Snow Hall is mounted the hide of a skunk which has done a very unusual thing for a skunk—proved that K. U., women are not merely pretty and useless, but are capable of showing great bravery. Skunk Proves Valor Of University Women The two young women are members of a class in mammals, and as a part of their duties must trap animals, prepare the hide, and mount them. Not long ago one of the professors in another department informed them that a ground hog had been lukking about his home for several days, and gave them permission to trap it. One dark night the young women set their traps and awaited the results, which were quite unexpected. For the next morning they had caught the offender. He was not a ground hog, but a beautiful black skunk. How to get the animal out of the house? It might be the cement the women invaded. Snow Hall and capture all the either and chloroform in the building. When they returned to the victim they administered the ether and chloroform by turns until the animal could be gotten from the trap. He is now on exhibit as an emblem of their courage and bravery. Pay Up Week For Kansas Memorial Starts Saturday Semi-Annual Payments Duo Now—Pledges Received Room 108 Fraser University Pay-Up Week for the K. U. Memorial has been set for the week of November 4 to 11, inclusive, to Sherman G. Elliott, KISSERPHY "Coming as it does at a time when students most appreciate the advantages of the stadium, we feel the week is an appropriate one," said Mr. Eliot. "Many student pledges were made in February to pay little semi-annually, and most of them come due November 1 and May 1." Under this plan of payment, according to the treasurer, the amount due at this time is small for each individual. On $100 pledges, $12.50 is due and on $600 pledges $6.25 is due, and proportionally with pledges of other amounts. "Progress in construction of the stadium and the union have a very close relationship with the Corporation's financial condition," Mr. Ehlert pointed out. "At present a total of $278,000 has been spent on the stadium, and this amount has not been entirely paid. Until it is, and when it is treated in court, there will be doubtful that more building will take place." Prof. H. L. Butler, dean of the School of Fine Arts, and Mrs. Butler returned Sunday morning from a concert tour. The Butlers gave six concerts, the last one, given at Shawne, being the 250th concert they have given. They were assisted by Mrs. James Eliot of Kansas City, formerly a member of the faculty of the School of Fine Arts. Notices are now being mailed to all whose payments are due, and pledges may be paid at the treasurer's office in Room 108 Fraser Hall. Miss Florence Hall, a student at Baker University, will come from Baldwin this evening to visit her sister in Chicago. She will also endorse the niece "Adam and Eva." Trophies Will Be Awarded To Best Decorated House Attempt Made to Interes Residence District in Dressing Up For Homecoming Homecoming Trophies, to be given the two best decorated organized houses. Homecoming, were authorized at a meeting of the Committee, yearday afternoon. One trophy will be given to a men's organized house or fraternity, and the other to a women's organized house or security, according to plans of the committee. Rules of the committee will be given out in a few days. Decorations A New Feature "Hereforde the business district has always been well decorated for the occasion of Homecoming, but K. U. has been far behind other institutions in the decoration of her student district," said Hebert Hungerford, chairman of the Homecoming Committee. "We hope in offering these Trophies to increase the interest of the many organized houses in 'dressing up' for this big annual event." Plans for the many features of the two-day program were discussed at the meeting, and sub-committees reported. "From all indications," commented Mr. Hungerford, "we are going to have the best program in years." Old Timmers' Night: on Friday Old Timmers' night, which is scheduled for Friday, November 10, in Robinson Gymnasium, gives promise of being a big event, according to the committee in charge. The men will be entertained with a snappy program on the upper floor. The main menu includes soup to accompany where the W. A. A. will give an entertainment. These programs are for all University students as well as alumni. According to Alfred G. Hill, secretary of the Alumni Association, the railways are taking an interest in the K. U. Homecoming, and are advertising for the occasion. One railroad has asked for a list of all former students of the University who might use their road in reaching Lawrence, and will send circulars to each of them. Silver and gold ores discovered near Ackland, is the subject of a report recently received by the department. The mine, located in it is stated the assay shows a value of $68 a ton. The mine is located on the 8000 acre ranch belonging to Jim Hudson. This project is near the well which is reported bottomless. Discover Valuable Ores Near Ashland is Repor "Kansas rock formations are not productive of silver or gold ores," was a statement by R. L. Grider, assistant professor in the department of mining engineering. Lead and zinc are found frequently in deposits in the Rocky Mountains; ore have been received by the department of mining of the University. The ore can be worked through strip mining according to a statement from George Bixby. The mine was discovered about three months ago, and a close company of ten men was formulated to promote the interests. Geraldine Ward and Lucile Oreor spent the week-end in Kansas City. Photo by Merrill SCENE FROM TONIGHT'S PLAY "ADAM AND EVA." Local Rifle Team Accepts Challenge of Nebraska A challenge from the University of Nebraska Rifle Team was received by the local R. O. T. C. unit this morning, for a competition match to be held February 3, 1923. According to the challenge, issued by Sidney Erickson, PMS & T of the Nebraska unit, the competition shall be between ten men from each unit, shooting ten shots from each of the four standard positions, standing, sitting, kneeling, and none. The match will be indoor, at a distance of fifty feet, and with the standard government issue twenty-two caliber rides and ammunition. Captain Casey stated that the challenges would be accepted and that the match would begin as soon as the range in Marvin Hall could be put in condition. Large Demand For Graduate Engineers, Says Dean Walker Conference at Manhattan Discusses Advisibility of Five Year Course in Engineering "The demand for graduate engineers is much larger than can be satisfied," saill P. F. Walker, dean of the School of Engineering, this morning. "Although civils and technicians are more in demand in this part of the country, the scarcity is very evident in other branches of engineering as well." he continued. "We have been made all fall and we are experiencing difficulty in finding the men for the places." N, T. Veatch, e'09, of the firm of Black & Veach, consulting engineers, Kansas City, Mo., was in Dean Walker's office this morning hunting for a young engineer whom he might place. The advisability of extending the courses of engineering over a five-year period was discussed at the meeting of the Kansas-Nebraska section of the Society for Promotion of Engineering Education. The meeting was held at Manhattan last Friday and Saturday, and was attended by fifty-eight members from the engineering schools of the two states. "Industries of the present day are realizing that it is necessary to have a competent engineer permanently connected with each organization," said Prof. A. H. Slus, of the School of Engineering, "There are," he continued, "inunable ways in which the services of an engineer are indispensable, and real efficiency cannot be had without one." Due to lack of data on the subject, no general opinion could be formed in answer to the problem. The methods of training engineering instruction were discussed and some notable in present methods were well exposed. The latest Kansas mann to be placed is Ira Barber, B. S. 22., who has joined the engineering staff of the University Portland Cement Company at Chanute. Joint Recital At Fraser Miss Ross and Professor Whitlock Please Andience Prof. Waltler Whitlock of the vocal faculty in the School of Fine Arts, and Miss Fanny May Ross of the piano faculty appeared last night in a joint rectal in the Fraser Hall auditorium. An audience listened to the program. Miss Ross played with great charm and delicacy of touch. Her interpretation of the Capricorn on the Airs of Ballet from "Alceste," was especially captivating for her final number, a Fantasia, by Chopin, was exquisitely done. Professor Whitlock has a pleasing tenor voice of great range and power. His selections were well chosen and were well liked by the audience. His encores, a negro spiritual and "That Dear Little Woman of Mine," were beautiful. The second opening, the Open," by Frank La Forge, Professor Whitlock was at his best Joe Bloomer, c'23, spent Sunday at his home in Chalfin. Governor Allen has appointed LeRoy Robertson to represent K. U, at the coal conference to be held in Topeka November 4. Miss Anna Sweney of the pian faculty accompanied Professor Whitlock at the piano. The new Steinberg was purchased just purchased this fall, was used. William A. White To Give Address At Dad's Dinner William Allen White will be the principal speaker at Dad's Dinner, the main event of Dad's Day, November 4. Mr. White may spend Thursday and Friday on the campus. An additional feature of the day was named when yesterday the Lawrence attend to attend Dad's Dinner and act as "fathers" for the men and the Oklahoma football team. Mr. White has cancelled all other engagements for the week-end in order to attend the Dad's Day celebration at the University. Mr. White has said that he will be KU, U and always proves to be a popular student at event events here. Lawrence Chamber of Commerce Will Bring Sooner Team to Affair Day to Become Tradition "We are very fortunate," said Clemener E. H. Lindley this morning, "to secure Mr. White. He comes because of his love for K. U., and because he believes Drus' Dady will be the greatest of the campus." Reservations for Dad's Dinner are coming in rapidly, according to Dean J. R. Dyer, chairman of the committee for the day. Dean Dyer pointed out this morning that the members of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce attended at the banquet Saturday evening. Their action will make it possible for the entire Oklahoma football team to be present; they will also act as "fathers" to any of the varsity men whose fathers are not present at the event. Thus it is assured that both teams will be there in full force. Benny Owens Will Sneak An exceptional program is being arranged for the dinner. In addition to Mr. White's address, Benny Owens, coach of the Oklahoma squad and former K. U. man will talk to the dads and their sons and daughters. An orchestra and a male quartet will furnish music for the event. All reservations for the dinner must be at Dean Dyer's office by 5 o'clock Wednesday afternoon. Many organizations are planning to reserve blocks of tickets for the occasion, and do to the increased attendance assured by the action taken by the Chamber of Commerce in connection being held here Saturday by the Rotarians of Kansas, Dean Dyer pointed out that those who reserve seats early will be most sure of getting reservations for the banquet. Favors for Dad and Mother Special favors for Dad and Mother will be provided by the Men's Student Council and the W. S. G. A. The committee wants it understood that Mother is just as welcome as Dad, and that if any student wishes to go to her father, he must be his father or mother, that guest is perfectly welcome at the dinner. The dinner costs $1.00 per plate. Dean Dyer has pointed out that the dinner will be over in time for affairs later in the evening. Paving To Be Completed Cement Side Walk to Replace Board Walk Pouring of the concrete in the road bed in front of the Administration Building began Saturday. In ten days, if the weather remains good, the paving will be finished, as much as is to be done this year, according to John M. Shea, superintendent of Buildings and Grounds. After this is finished the concrete has to cure for thirty days before it can be used. The paving will extend a little below the west wing of the Administration Building. Later, the road bed will be lowered so that the building and the paving connected between the car line and the Commons. A cement sidewalk will be constructed to take the place of the present boardwalk. Miss Ruth E. Lichen, A. B. 715, arrived yesterday to take a position in Dean Kent's office. She has been working for the McIntosh-Saymore University in Kansas City. Miss Kappa is grand secretary of Stigma Kappa. - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kapaa EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Census Editor New Sport Editor Clare Peregrus Ralph Johnson Ray Peckham Llewellyn White Glick Schiavo Glick Schiavo Perry Jones Dennis Doolittle DeVaasman Francis HUSINESS STAFF Business Manager...Lloyd Rappenthal Am't. Bus, Mgr...John Montgomery, Jr. Ben Hilbs Doris Fleeson Buth Carter Laura Cowdrey Chester Shaw Carlton Powers Myrl Hart Carolina Harkrus Subscript price, $3.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.60 for one semester; 50 cents a month; 15 cents a week. Entered an second-degree mail master Steppe in the spring of 1879. He served Kansas, under the act of March 8, 1879. Published in the afternoon, five times a month, was the nationalism of the University of Kansas, from which he graduated. Addresse all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phones: K. I. 25 and 66 Phones, K. U. 25 and 66 The Daily Kansaan aims to picture the undergraduate in preparation for more thoroughly of news by standing for the ideals of a university; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courageous; to be kind; to be hospitable; to be all-around in all serve to the best of its ability. TUESDAY,OCT.31,1922 Lincoln would have made a great backlash for one of his maxims was: "If you can't remove an obstacle plough around it." THE STATE BONUS On November 7 the people of Kansas will be asked to express preference at the polls on a measure officially known as the Kansas Adjusted Compensation Act—popularly known as the "soldiers' bonus." It may be well to explain what adjusted compensation means. The popular conception of the act is that its object is to make able-bodied men a gift for their services in the war. This is not so at all. Adjusted compensation means just what the name implies. Men who did not go to war made good money at home during its progress—everyone knows that—while those who entered the service made approximately thirty dollars a month. This thirty dollars did not go far when a service man had made his war risk insurance payments, bought Liberty Bonds, as he was practically forced to do, and made allotments to his dependants. Sometimes he had as high as three or four dollars a month to spend on follish pleasure, tobacco and necessities. On the other hand, many a young man who stayed at home made from twelve to fifteen dollars a day when before he had done well to make three. The adjusted compensation act means to equalize this injustice. Many tax-payers are fighting the measure because they feel they are burdened to death with taxes now. The state tax commission has issued figures which state that taxes will be increased with the passage of the act only 39 cents on each one thousand dollars of assessed valuation. Thus if a tax payer is assessed twenty dollars tax for one thousand dollars worth of property now, he will have to pay 39 cents additional if the adjusted compensation act carries. The measure calls for 25 million dollars, the payments to be extended over a twenty-five year period. Last year the people of Kansas spent 50 million dollars on candy, tobacco and amusements. Just half as much expenditure for such would pay adjusted compensation to Kansas soldiers in one year instead of twenty-five. The attorney-general of Kansas has decided that the measure, if carried, must have a majority of all votes cast. This simply means that a voter who votes for everything else in the election but neglects to vote yes or no on the adjusted compensation act really against it. The ex-service man of Kansas want an expression of opinion from the voters. If you feel the measure should carry when you go to the polls, vote for it; if you are opposed to it, vote no. But vote one way or the other and express an opinion. Kansas veterans do not want to see the measure go by default for lack of votes. Official Daily University Bulletin Vol. II. Oct. 31. 1922. ORCHESTRA REITERATES BOWLING HALL NOBURGER! Orchestra will be held at 7:30 Thursday night in France. Chance de dormir former announcement. ORCHESTRA REHEARSAL POSTPONED TO THURSDAY; No. 38. EDWARD F. KURTZ, Director. LAW SCHOOL FACULTY; The regular weekly luncheon of the Faculty of the School of Law will be held at 12:30 Wednesday at Ye Taverne. COMBINED MEETING OF WOMEN'S HYGIENE CLASSES: H. W. ARANT, Dean. . All sections of the Women's hygiene classes will meet in Fraser Chapel at 4:30 Wednesday. The film "How Life Begins," which is sent from the State Board of Health, will be shown. All women interested are invited to attend. MARTHA M. BACON, Assoc. Prof. of Phys. Ed. INTELLECTUAL BUMS NOW THAT IT'S OVER A big taxiist spaced across the Kaw River, Bridge early Friday evening and stopped at the north end of the bridge. Two 'men dressed in kuhki breches and flannel shirts climbed out and started for the Union Pacific depot. The young men in the taxi were bums. The were going to beat their way on a freight train to another town. They were out to rough it; they were after a taste of life in the raw. These "intellectual bums" were tough guys. They didn't care whether or not it was right to steal rides on freight trains. When a guy gets out in the world he can't be bothered, you know. You have to be a "hard gut" to get by with it. OCTOBER IN KANSAS Autumn—Dark blue skies, gorgeously-colored sunsets, riotically-tinted leaves, and crisp, invigorating air. Weinie roosts, steak fries, nature's long hikes into the country, nature's paradise. These fellows were "hard guys" if you should chance to ask them. No brake or anyone else could tell them where to head in. They were twenty minutes eggs and were going where they were going, see? They were boobing it, see be? But they took a taxi to the station! The ex-Kaiser is worrying a good deal these days; his faece does not believe she can live in the secluded home at Doorn more than four or five months each year. Now the powers can chuckle, at last the exemperor's heart has been touched. Brown fields of stubble, eloquent of the golden harvest of the summer, fade into the dim distance and are loot in the haze on the horizon. Great oaks and whispering elms are stripped of their garments and lift stark branches to the inverted, azure bowl above them. They wait silently for the coming of the snow king, the bowling winds and swirling, white lakes. Two inquiries that occur to the thoughtful student following the truitt and shouting are, what do the officers do now and whom do they represent? The senior president has duties in connection with commencement, the junior and sophomore presidents call meetings in connection with prom and hop defects but what do the others accomplish for the good of a college education? Large flocks of birds—darting thrushes, noisy blackbirds, friendly robins, tiny wrens—beat the air into a chaos for a moment and are gone. Small creatures of the earth busy themselves storing up supplies for the winter, scurrying here and there in warm, fuzzy coats. One conclusion is that fall elections are merely another offering upon the altar of the great god itself, including selfs, friends and fraternity not In the evening the sun, a disk of red, reeds toward the horizon, pauses a little, and drops from sight. A light breeze rustles brittle leaves on the trees and sweeps them, one by one, to earth. Darkness steals over the sky and all but obliterates a thin band of grayshick light which persists in the west. Shadowy, grotesque forms are silhouetted against a round, clear moon. Out of the stillness comes the erric cry of the “snow bird.” "Some of us call it Autumn but othery call it God." omitting blows to self's fancied enemies, which are an offering doubly precious to a certain type of mind. But now that it is all over, why not analyze how really valuable it all is, delete extraneous matter, and try a little introspection on the subject in an attempt to make the system and its results a worthy representation of consciousious University student government instead of a manipulation of puppets? Georges Carpentier now assumes the role of a diplomat—well he can never be called a slacker anyway. Jayhawk Jargon The son of an eastern millionaire is going to try for some records on the Kansas City speedway. He has three alternatives—he will break a record, break his dad, or break his neck. European debt nationals are still chanting the same old tune about canceling war debts owed us—and giving us nothing in return. The equation isn't balanced; the digits won't cancel. Two of our intimate friends went cancing on the Kaw the other evening and in the course of events had a few upsets, but they set up, setting, even to put it mildly. Twice in the past nineteen years the Agnies have succeeded in tying the score on us. Don't you think they think that we should thank of their record? Neither do we. West Virginia professors, we hear, have rebuked the students for using the word "hell" in the school yells. Now that is hell! Rex Beach, the novelist, comes out with the declaration, "Damn the prohibition reformers!" !! But you can't dam a "dry" stream. And speaking o freformation at the present rate it will be a national misdmeanor to chew Wrigley's by 1975. Some new Greek books have been received at Spooner! A, the Greek letter man will be right in their element! Freshmen at the University of South Dakota are required to chase squirrels about the campus. Look at them! Sometimes the "worm turneth." Campus Opinion One of the freshmen, when informed that the dance would be played by a "five piece" orchestra, inquired "Who broke it up?" Regular rehearsal of Men's Glee Club Wednesday evening at 7:30 o'clock in Central Administration Hall. The present—R. J. Dyer, Mambrah. Now that "the best men on the ticket" have been elected, just what are they going to do? Are they going to fulfill all the promises made before the great day? That is a big question, but there is another of just as much importance, that is, are they going to have the chance? ANNOUNCEMENTS There will be an important business meeting of PlLambda Theta at 7:15 Wednesday evening in Fraser Hall. Attendance will be to present "Nellie Higgins, Sec." To the Kansan Editor: Why do we not have class meetings? If not from a business standpoint it could serve as a purpose for better acquaintance of classmates. Many students attend their classes for four years and are never really acquainted with any of their class, teaching, learning or school spirit, and it is school spirit which brings success to the University. The regular monthly meeting of the Cosmopolitan Club will be held Sunday afternoon, November 5, at the Cosmopolitan house, 1653 Inc., at 2:30. All members are requested to attend as there are important business matters to be settled—E. J. Sweeney, President. Sorab, honorary architectural fraternity, will hold its regular meeting tonight. Arthur Harris, e23, will talk on "Landscape Gardening." There is, of course, the old argument that no one will attend the meetings. If the class officers are all they claim to be, they could arrange some really interesting meeting programs, and those are taken care of so that the first meetings will be successful. These persons will be eager to go again, and they will tell their friends; and we all know it "tips to advertise." So as long as we have the class officers who are having some real genuine class meetings, and get acquainted with our fellow students? Snow Zoology Club will meet at 7:15 Wednesday evening in Room 304 Snow Hall, Prof. W. J. Baumgartner will speak. The Botany Club will have a social meeting from 7:30 to 8:30 Wednesday evening at the home of Prof. W, C. Stevens, 1121 Louisiana. Because of the recent clashes between members of the freshman and Sophomore classes in the dormitories at the University of Pennsylvania, Boncilla Massage For a Good Complexion STADIUM BARBER SHOP "The Shop of Service" 1033 Mass. St. action has been taken by a representative committee and has been approved by acting provost, Penninan, to abolish unorganized fighters between this will not cause a discontinuity of the organized fighters, however. First Door South of Von's The "new" student directories will probably be out in time to stick into ur memory books. PROTCH The College TAILOR WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods United Army Stores Co 706 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Army Goods E E.Z. N TRADE MARK SPORT GARTER This garter is ideal for men's and women's bows—and just right for knickers—because the wobbling is soft and wise. Buy by name, and get a free sample from The T. Peter. J. Bridgeport, Conn. Featured by Leading Merchants Gustafson "GIFTS THAT LAST" THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING Wed. and Thurs Photographers to K.U. Students Varsity—Bowersock Wed. Only Squires Studio WATKINS NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL $100,000.00 Shows—2:30—4:00—7:30—9:00 p. m. Make Your Appointment NOW and Use Them For Christmas Gifts Adults 33 cents TALKAL $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. Children 10 cents Are Making The Jayhawker Photographs A Lyman Howe Travels A FIRST NATIONAL ATTRACTION Squires STUDIO What a Picture! Shows: 2:30, 4:00, 7:30, and 9:00 p. m. HELENE CHADWICK AND RICHARD DIX in "YELLOW MEN AND GOLD" A Red-Blooded Tale of Plunder and Love Also Clyde Cook Comedy "The SAILOR" SURPLUS $10,000. D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. The Indiana VARSITY THEATRE Today Only The finest Barthelmess has given. DIRECTORS Richard Barthelmess in "The Bond Boy" From first to last--as powerful as "Tolable" David C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Asher, L. V. Miffer, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishon Adults 28c An escape and bloodhound chase as exciting as the screen can give. The story of a boy who passed through slavery for his mother—and to the gulls of the gulls to save a woman. George W. Ogden. his famous story, bigger still in motion pictures. Children 10c Copyright 1922 Hart Schaffner & Morx Top coats—a necessity You need them five months of the year Better get one now—you'll need it 2 months in the fall -3 months in the spring Hart Schaffner & Marx top coats in the newest styles exceptional values at $35 others $20 up PECKHAMS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN McFarland Talks To Nursing Class On Child Welfare Has Just Returned From A Tour of Investigation In Kansas Towns Miss Alice K. McFarland, of the Kansas Industrial Court, who has charge of all regulations of women and children in industry over the state of Kansas, spoke to the classes in Child Care and Home Nursing as well as health care regarding conditions in the best fields of western Kansas. Miss McFarland has just returned from an investigation of these fields in the vicinity of Holcob and towns near Garden City, reporting that the working population there consists mainly of Russians, Germans, and Mexicans. She also discovered that the large number of very young children are being kept from school to adulthood. She also found that they are too young to receive employment certificates, yet are working in the fields for their parents. Need to Amend Laws The need now is to amend the present laws so that every child under eighteen years will be in school within which conforms with his health, strength and capacity, or else on a job and attending part time school, according to Miss McFarland's statement. There are three general classes on child labor, the factory and manufacturing plants, commercial industries, and the agricultural industries. The first is covered by child labor legislation, because of the dangers and hazards of the machinery and utensils employed. The factories are set up as factory conditions and at the present time there are few children employed in factories in Kansas, while before there were many. Second Class Is More Difficult Second Class is More Difficult The second class is more difficult to control as the hours are more irregular and many require that teachers interfere with the health and education of the city children. Miss McFarlancid many effective examples and incidents in this group. The last class, the agricultural, has not been touched by legislation either which might be accredited in part to the wide-spread conviction that outdoor work is good for the child without regulation of the hours of industry. It was in this group investigation that Miss McFarland related the injuries inflicted in the beet industry. Does Not Include Younger Children The Child Labor Law does no cover the case of the children as young as five and six years old who work in the fields because the parents contract with sugar companies to do a certain amount of work, so that the children work for them instead of for the company itself. The Compulsory Attendance law can provide whereby the school board has the right to sanction a leave of absence of children fourteen years of age for eight weeks. The best season lasts until October 15 or later. Ed Martz, e2'5, spent the week end with friends in Kansas City. W. S. G. A. Hallowe'en Tea To Be Held Wednesday The W. S. G. A. Halloween Tea will be hold in Henley House Wednesday afternoon from 4 o' 5 ackon. Decorations and refreshments will be in keeping with the Halloween season. Every girl in the University became a member of the W. S. G. A. when she paid the 50 cent dues at enrollment time. These can are held to enable the women of the University to become acquainted with each other. Marian Walker is in charge of the tea. She will be assisted by Kari Dorothea Higgins, Catherine Rewling, Holton Mac Mae, Laura Preston. Former Economics Student Describes Work In The East In a letter to Prof. A, J. Beynon, Marie Russell, A. B. 22, tells of her work in the Simmons College in Boston. Miss Russell is the second girl from the department of economics of the University to receive the Simmons scholarship. Marie Russell, A. B. '22, Is Now Studying in Simmons College, Boston Miss Russell writes that from 2 till 5 o'clock on both Monday and Friday afternoons, there is a rather formal class in statistics; and the remainder of the week, from 9 to 15, is given over to investigations. Miss Russell has selected the Credit Union, which offers Credit Union, which is connected with the Women's Educational and Industrial Union, as her preliminary study. Miss Russell is living at the Elizabeth Peabody Settlement House, which is one of the largest and best settlements in Boston. Mrs. White, the director, is the head of the Boston School of Social Work. About twenty-five social workers and students in the school asked to be asked for two evenings a week to the House, either directing clubs, or working in the office. In this way they have a wonderful opportunity to become acquainted with some of their many Polish, and Jewish neighbors. The people in this vicinity seem to be prosperous although quite ignorant; directly back from them comes a crowd of most crowded section of the city. This shows the ideal location of the House. Miss Russell finds the work very interesting as well as enjoyable. She was graduated from the University last June. She was a member of Gamma Epsilon Pi, and Phi Beta Kappa. Her home is in Topeka. First Issue of Oread To Be Holiday Number A Holiday Number of the Oread Magazine will appear on the campus sometime late in November, according to Austen Cross, the editor it will feature Christian poetry and music. The cover will carry out this idea. The first appearance of the Oread Magazine has been delayed on account of changes in the business staff. Mutba Parker is the newly appointed business manager, and Sam Weatherly will be the advertising manager. FRENCH BOYS AND GIRLS IN THE DANCE The exquisitely soft materials that characterize this winter's coats, with the added richness of our trimmings, make the ominent cold weather an enticing season. Squirrel, wolf, fox, moleskin, and the very popular beaver appear in most unusual combinations with gerona, marleen, and marvella clothes. Long loose effects, with style distinctly in evidence, make Weaver's coat a luxurious necessity. —and you find that charming person is yourself. Yours in style, Jeanne Marie --- P Teacher Has Unusual Relic Oklahoma Woman Owns Box From Boston Tea Party P=22 Oklahoma City, Oct. 30 (U. P.)—A tea box, one of the very few rescued from the waters of Boston harbor, as relics, when the cargo of British tea was cast into the water at the beginning of the War of the Revolution, is in possession of Mrs. Mary E. Rowe, local music teacher. The box, one of the eight containers bound together to form the chests thrown overboard, is only six inches square. Y. W. C. A. Presents Play Tonight at Bowersocl The small chest handed down to Mrs. Rowe from generation to generation, is probably the most pristine of the children of a resident of Oklahoma City, it was said. Mrs. Rowe is the last of her family linen. When she dies the chest will be moved to the Massachusetts Historic Society at Boston, according to her wishes. "Adam and Eva" Y. W. C. A. Play, will be presented this evening by an Ill-star University cast, at 8:18 o'clock at the Bowie Court Theatre. Among the cast will be "Ted" Wear, who will play the role of Adam; Madeline Donnyer, who will be Eva; and Albert Kerr as James King, a young American business man. The leads will be well supported by students who have played parts in several former University plays. Dean Kent Entertains Dean and Mrs. R. A. Kent entertained informally last evening at their home on West Twelfth Street, with a buffet supper for Chancellor and Mrs. Lindley, and the members of the department of education and their wives. Some of the scenery and material has been imported from New York, and some has been sent from Kansas City and Topoka. Many gorgeous olympic swimsmen, according to Mrs. Myrtle Bair, is coaching the production: Afterwards, a series of Hallowe'en stunts were engaged in. About twenty-eight guests were present. Send the Daily Kansan home. MODERN rooms for boys at 804 Louisiana St. Phone 1043 Black. —N-1 LOST-Gold Eversharp pencil cenc- graved "H. G. Austin" between Kappa Sig house and West Ad. Finder call 1701. —N-2 FOR RENT—Rooms for boys, close to University, 1320 Kentucky St. -0.28 FOR RENT----1001 Maine, Room for boys. Phone 1599 Black. -028 Mrs. Eoff, the Alpha Delta Pi house mother, attended the Aggie-Jayhawker game. Wednesday Special at The Food Shop, 1126 Teen. Home made doughnuts. -adv-1. WANT ADS LOST - Phi Delta Theta pin; small, white gold, diamond points. "W. L. H." on back. Finder notify W. L. Huggins. Phone 248. —O-2 WANTED—Single room by student, close to hill. Leave address at Kansan office 0-31 FOR RENT - Furnished rooms for girls, vacated by sorority. Four doors north of Jayhawk Cafe. 1328 Ohio. Phone 2203. —N-1 A. G. ALRICH Engraving. Printing. Binding Rubber Stamps, Office Supplies Stationery Printing by any process 736 Mass. St S. G. Clarke 1033 Mass. St. Oread Shining Parlor CHARLIE'S Best Shines in Town We make clothes. We do alterations on both women's and men's clothes, re-lining ladies' and men's overcoats, cleaning and pressing. Suiting you, anyway. A suit or overcoat made to fit anbody your size, can never give you the fit, the comfort, the wear, or the value to be had in clothes made to fit you by Prices $25 and up. 825 1-2 Mass That's My Business SCHULZ THE TAILOR 917 Mass. St. Be Distinctive Phone 139 BELLS FLOWER SHOP Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS —So temptingly appetizing Pander's QUALITY JEWELRY are the hot savory meals to be found at the Orread. —and real prompt service and piping hot delicious student lunches there is only one place and that too is THE OREAD CAFE Just a Step from the Campus E. C. Bricken, Prop. SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for students (male or female) who desire to earn enough to more than pay their way through college. Please work, study, or school hours. Write I. R. Warner, 94 Wayne Ave. Kansas City, Mo. 640-737. -S73 PROFESSIONAL CARD *J. W. O'BRYON, Dentist* (Special attention to prevention and treatment). 304 Parking Building. Tel. 507. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive Optomatrists). Eyes examined; glasses made. Office 1205 Mass. Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 Thomas Shoe Electric Shop Bowersock, One Night Only Tuesday, Nov. 7th Mail orders filled strictly in the order they are received Prices, $2.50 to 75c The Selwyne presents OLGA PETROVA The Noted Beauty, Celebrated Star and Distinguished Author and Playwright The White Peacock The Indiana by OLGA PETROVA Exactly as it was played all last winter at the Comedy Theatre, New York City. KO When your friends drop in unexpectedly an electric chating dish makes immediately possible a delicious Welsh rarebit or wholesome homemade candy. We have them in all styles and sizes Kansas Electric Power Co. 719 MASS. ST. We're Here--to give you the best in Laundry and Dry Cleaning service. Our workers are skilled and all our equipment is the best.The result is: We Guarantee Satisfaction. May we serve you? Phone 383 LAWRENCE STEAM LAUNDRY Water as soft as melted snow THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Gridiron Gossip Glick Schultz Potys had the new backfield in action last night: Kruger, quarter, Shannon and McAdams, halffacks, and Burt, full. These men showed well last night and the week's gruelling will tell the tale. The Jayhawkers showed considerable ability in the aerial game last night. With Krueger and McAdams flipping the passes and Shannon, Burt, McLean, and Black snagging them with unfungible regularity, the Kansas eleven showed the old time power. What will they do in a game? That's the question that will be answered Saturday, y. It may not be the combination; in fact there is another man who would substitute well in that quartette. "The greatest football team I have seen this year," said Coach Spring in referring to the Cornhusker eleven after scouting the Sooner-Nebraska game at Norman Saturday. And he has seen every team in the Valley "The Cornhuskers are better than the Army team that I saw," the freshman coach continued. "They're made of stars who work like a machine." It was a versatile machine than Coach Chouch saw. The Sooner had been coached to break up the Cornhouser off-tackle amuses. When these plays failed they resorted to the air and beat the Owen men at the home game. "The Cornhouser uses everything," wrote Sproun's words. The Oklahoma game was played under unfavorable weather conditions for the Nebraskans. It was hot and dusty. Kansas fell before that combination last year, but not the Cornuskers. Few Summer Fees As Low As Kansas' Dean Kent Reports Schools Represented in Nationa Association Show Great Increase in Attendance "In only a few universities are the summer fees as low as at Kansas," said Dean R. A. Kent, who has just returned from a meeting of the Association of Summer Session Directors at Iowa City, Iowa. "No institution that was represented will increase its summer salaries next year," he said. "Neither is there any anticipation of a decrease." The association is a national organization, having for its members the directors of summer sessions from more than thirty schools in the country. Only those, however, are admitted to membership which give a liberal amount of standard graduate work. Most of the summer sessions increased in their attendance last year, over the preceding year, Dean Kent said, and it was the consensus of opinion that there would be still further increases next year. The Chamber of Commerce of Iowa City and the faculty of the University there were generous in their hospitality, according to Dean Kent. The president for the coming year is Director A. H. Rice of Boston University in Georgia University at New York City is the next place of the meeting. Highland College May Be Accredited School Professors Engel and Mitchell will visit Highland College, Highland Kansas, Nov. 3-4, as representatives of the Committee on Affiliation of Colleges, to confer with President Howe and affirming the accei-rding of the college. Highland was formerly a four-year college under the supervision of the Presbyterian Church, but two years ago the Presbyterians voted to give up the college. Since that time, President Howe has carried on the work with the aid of three instructors in the Extension Division of the University. The University Extension Service planned the courses and provided the examinations and the students of Highland received university credit for the work done. This year, how are you preparing to enter into a Junior College, and is seeking to have the two years' course it offers accredited. The Kappa Sigma fraternity was entertained by the chapter in Manhattan, with a Homecoming Party at Declaration Hall, Saturday night after the game. The K. U. Orchestra furnished the music for dancing. Send the Daily Kansan home. Boll Weevil Menace May Soon Disappear In Cotton Growin Oklahoma Professor Makes Extensive Study of Hibernation of Pest The boll weevil as a menace to the fortunes of cotton growers in this country will soon be a thing of the past, from an economical standpoint, if measures adopted in Oklahoma are used and are used by other states. Prof. C. E. Sanborn, of Oklahoma Agricultural College, recently returned from a trip to Oklahoma, where he built six hibernating cages in various places in the state, for the purpose of surviving the fall weevil this winter. The object of the study is to determine what percentage of the boll weevils live through the winter in various parts of the state, enabling advice to be given to the farmers as to whether or not to plant cotton. The insects are subjected to natural stresses and may number in each cage, so the number surviving in the country around can be approximated. Last year, the first when this plan was used, the winter was mild and many of the pests lived, so the farmers were advised that cotton rains would be risky. Some were skinned. Professor Sandern is a graduate student at K. U. this winter. Dormitories Take Form committee Making Selections of Furniture Now Steady progress toward the completion of the girls' dormitory of the University is being made. The committee is now making the selection of furniture for the girls' rooms, and the furnishing will be made within the next month. The furnishings for the large reception and living rooms will not be selected until the rooms are entirely finished, as a more suitable choice of fabrics and colors can then be made. The aim is not luxurious in furnishings, but in proper lighting and ventilation, which will promote good health and right standards of living among the girls. It is expected that between 135 and 140 girls can be accommodated. The present plan is to divide the rooms proportionately between the seniors, juniors and sophomores, allowing a larger proportion to the freshmen. All of the rooms will be the same price for the difference in the single and double rooms. In addition to a statement several weeks ago, none of the rooms are to have a private bath, although there is a invatory between every two rooms. Initiation services were held yesterday by Phi Mu Alpha for Martin Brauer, A. B., 21 'B', McPherson, Hugh. A. R., 20 'C', McPherson, Hugh. A. Foldie, C., 25, Bonner Springs. Dormitory For Central College To Cost $75,000 Conway, Ark, Oct. 31, (United Press)—Thoroughly modern in every respect, the $75,000 dormitory now under construction at Central College probably will be the most conveniently arranged college structure in the United States. It is of fire proof construction and planned with a view of utility and convenience to students who will make it their homes. Students assigned to the dormitory will occupy double rooms with connecting bath and private dressing rooms. Special features of the architects' plans are the reception room and lobby on the first floor, the mezzanine and utility room on the second floor, and the private parlor on the third French Fellowships Open Are Worth More Than $560 Each Year Fifteen fellowships for 1923-24 in the University of Paris and provincial universities of France have been established to "perpetuate mutual understanding and fraternity of spirit among French and American students here," he said. Fellowships pay $500 frames, which at present amounts to more than $860. The fellowships are to be held for one year with the possibility of renewal. Study in any branch of university work is open to the student and a recommendation is made that it shall be done in a provincial university in order that the student may come to greater understanding of French life. To be eligible for a fellowship the candidate must be a citizen of the United States, between the ages of twenty and thirty, must be a graduate of a college of recognized standing, and must have a practical ability Dresses of Poiret Twill, Tricotine and Spongene in the new coat draped effects, braided and embroidered and fancy ornaments. Coats and Dresses 1920s Fashion Gabardines of $35.00 to $45.00 Quality Innes, Bulline & Hackman $27.50 Tailored Dresses of the Better Class for and $22.50 SKOFSTADS due to Coats in blouse and wrap models in soft novelty, velvety materials of Gerona, Marvelia and Panvelaine. Fur trimming of Beaver, Wolf, Caracul Other Coats of similar materials, self trimmings, Navy, Malay, Black and Hawaiian $65.00 to $125 $35 to $75 to use French books. The only alternative to these requirements is that if the candidate is twenty-four years old and has spent five years in some work requiring technical skill, he may apply for a fellowship. All applications for 1023-24 must be in by January 1. Interested students will be able to secure further information from the graduate office. French Professor Will Speak Here Wednesday Prof. L. Andre, who is on a year's absence from the College of Librourie, in France, will speak at the Cercle Francais meeting, Wednesday afternoon, at 4:30 o'clock. His talk, "Edmund Rostand" will give personal experience to students, as Rostand and Professor Andre were at one time college chums. Prof, Andre, licencié in letters and history, was professor of history and literature many years, and has been president of the College of Libourne for the last ten years. He is also an instructor of the "Société des Gens de Lettres" and of the "Société des Auteurs Dramatiques." Helen Peck and Katherine Jackman, both former students at the University, were guests at the Kappa house Sunday. Wiedemann's Ice Cream The Cream Sisters The Cream Supreme Special molds and designs for any Occasion Phone 182 Cold Wave Coming Over Coat Time every new model all fabrics here for your choosing $25 to $50 Glad to show you! CARLS GOOD CLOTHES Society Brand College men will always like this style - They take to the right Norfolk style—it's so free and easy, just the thing for the Campus. Loose fitting, but obviously smart too—we know what you want; we have it in Society Brand. There are no better fabrics, there's no finer tailoring. $45 Others $24.50 up Ober's MILK CHOICE DVIPTER SIMON C. BURTON HILDA ENGLUND COMING November 3rd-4th ROBINSON GYM Friday Matinee "THE MARRIAGE OF KITTY" by Lennox Friday 8 P. M. "ROSMERSHOLM" by Ibsen Saturday 8 P. M. "EASTER" by Strindberg WESTERN MARY STREET. MERCEDES DESMORE Great Plays Given by All-Star Casts Mercedes Desmore, an English actress who for the past eight years has been playing in America. Until recently she has been playing opposite Lou Tellegen and John and Lionel Barrymore. Hilda Englund, one of the greatest Ibsen actresses of to-day, has created five of Ibsen's heroines in the original casts at the Royal Theatre, Stockholm, Sweden. Ibsen himself selected Miss Englund to create the role of "Mother Ase" in "Peer Gynt", of "Regina" in "Ghosts," and of "Gerd" in "Brand." Robert Donaldson, direct from The Theatre Guild of New York City where he has played leading parts with such stars as Otis Skinner and Walter Hampden, will play the part of "Rosmer" in Rosmersholm. Ibsen and Strindberg, Like Shakespeare, Should Be Seen By All SEASON TICKETS $1.50 and $2.00-SINGLE ADMISSION $.1 Send orders to Henry A. Shinn, Department of Public Speaking For Reservations Call K. U. 130