COACHING CLASS

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ENROLLS FIFTY
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)

(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)

OLD RAILROAD TRACKS
ARE LOCATED ON CAMPUS

EDUCATORS WILL
BE HERE IN FALL

land, Ohio.

.

DEAN

OP ENGINEERING COLLEGE

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University of Kentucky, Irvine High school.
Stanley B. CundifT, University of
Kentucky, Boston, Ky., High school.
L. C. Harrison University of Ken
,
tucky, Jackson, Ky.
Leon Cook, Western Teachers ColO. L. McElroy,

SATURDAY,

lege, Sonora, Ky.

Irvine Jeffries University of Kentucky.
Alfred Portwood, University of
Kentucky.
G. D. Downing, University of Kentucky, Morchead State Normal and
Teachers College.
Paul McBrayer, University of Kentucky.
Orion W. McMurty, Georgetown
College,. Stanford, Ky.
Edrc"" Arnett. University of Ken
.
Ky.
tucky.
David McKinney, Eastern Kentuc
ky Teachers College, Cropper, Ky.
C. 0. Harrisea, University of Ken
tucky, Mt. Olivet, Ky.
G. H. England, University of Ken
tucky, Alexandria, Ky.
.Refet. S.vMiller, University of Ken- tacky, Little Rock, Ky.
Charles L. Starr, Berea College,
Dry Ridge, Ky.
J. iPark Strotfcer, Kentucky Wes- leyan, Blue Diamond, Ky.
W. W. White, Western. Kentucky
Teachers College, Providence, Ky.
E. R. Millar, Ohio University, Ken- tscky Wesleyan.
W. Theo. Wrieht, University of
Ketcky, LaGrange High school.
L. B. Cox, University of Kentucky,
Salyersville, Ky.. High school.
B. L. Tiller, University of Kentac
ky, Vanceburg, Ky.
E. C. Davis, Jr., University of Ken
tucky, Cave City, Ky.
HomT Wilson University of Ken
tucky, Mason, Ky.

(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
"Despite the charges that the un
d
and
dergraduate of today is
materialistic, 41 colleges; represent
lftg more than faU.UOU students, arc
officially participating in the inter
national movement to rebuild the
Among
burned memorial theater
these are: Amherst, Bowdoin, Brown,
Massachu
Cornell, Hamilton, Hobart,
setts Agricultural College, Mt. Holy
oke, Oberlin, Smith, Vassar, Wil
Hams, Clark, and the Universities of
Michigan,
Delaware, Chicago, "Virginia, Pennslyvania, Mississippi, In
diana and Maine."
Seventy-tw- o
schools
secondary
throughout the country are also co
Among
operating, it is announced.
these are Chestnut Hill Academy,
Chestnut Hill, Pa.; Choate School,
Wallingford, Conn.; Finch School,
New York City; Freehold Military
School, Freehold, N. J.; Hill School,
Pttstown, Pa.; Kent Schol, Kent,
jazz-ma-

OCTOBER

22

Morning Program
9:30 o'clock
"Requirements for
Elementary Teachers," Jejsse E.
Adams, professor of education,
of Kentucky.
10:05 o'clock
"Requirement for
Secondary
Teachers," William D.
Lewis, editor, John C. Winston Publishing company.
10:40 o'clock
"Requirements for
College Teachers," Samuel P. Capen,
president, University of Buffalo.
ii:zu o ciock "ine common udu- 'ations of High fachool and College,
Leonard V. Koos, professor of education, University of Minnesota.
Afternoon Program
2 o'clock Football game, University of Kentucky vs. .Washington and
tv

Ekr-fire-

AMERICAN STUDENTS HELP
REBUILD OLD MEMORIAL

Junior College in American Educa-- 1
tion," Leonard V. Koos, professor of
education, University of Minnesota
8:15 o'clock "Is There a Permanent Place in Our Educational Program for the "Liberal Arts College?"
Samuel P. Capen, president, University of Buffalo.

Lee.

STUDENTS TAKE ACTION
TO CURB BAD MORALS
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
ended.

Cigarette smoking, beer drinking,.
during classes
were also condemned as being ruin
ous to the moral fiber of the student.
The following rules were posted by
the faculty of a small college in Kan
sas, for the regulation of student
morals:
"No dresses shall be worn to col
lege that are not longer than six
inches below the knee."
'No slang or other immodest lan
guage shall be used."
''Belts for men are prohibited, their
use being supplanted by suspenders."
Use or possession of rouge or lip
stick by any student on. the campus
is strictly forbidden."
Now pick out any town in the
United States which is populated by
hundreds of youths, and mentally apply these rules.
No comments necessary.
and

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(y7AY'
DEAN

F. PAUL ANDERSON

hand-holdin- g

no "yet in.colleee?"
The first move'
lies in weighing and measuring1 infe
order to find out Just where each in-

dividual stands with reference to
weight and height.
Next comes
examday in the calendar of the new com- - a complete physical-growt- h
pany for it was on that day that the ination by a physician who is
road was formally opened for a mile thoroughly trained
and a half. The Observer of the the possibilities and standards of "
Physical'
following day records that about growth and development
forty persons rode, on the inaugural and social defects must be determined
and corrected.
In serious cases oir
viCbA
trin nf "Thr Cnr" tariiinli
e,.. i.
jr
at ine asiounuing rate oi ten muesi
t uctraarj .wa
'he student, out of school and
an hour. By January, 1833, the first jkjke
1
Sive him an opportunity to train into
railroad newspaper advertisement ,
solicited patronage for its daily train Iorm wn,ch wu permit him to lead a
over the six miles of aompleted track. iuii ine meeting normal require
ments.
The newpaper of March 2, 1833 re- organized Summer camps are being
in which our program is
corded that "The Car" was making
used as the foundation and remark
three trips daily "and usually filled able results are
appearing. The. prowith passengers." In the same paper gram
been
was the announcement that "we are many that hasin the presen'edin so
articles
Woman's Home
happy to learn that the steam
Companion
can be used in manyi
by our ingenious
but its
townsman, Mr. Bruen, is hereafter to forms Health essentials must be hekl.
diagnosis is the first
to.
make regular trips on this road." step. When one is
free to gain it be- - '
On January 31, 1934 the road reached
comes merely a mater of increasing
beFrankfort and communication
health intelligence. Nothing, is
tween the two cities was definitely one's promising for
more
the attainmentiefAj
established
more abounding and satisfying life
Following its auspicious founding than the present tendency to mobilize
and successful early life, the road the intelligence of families
andfm
suffered a lingering death. Slowly muni'ies for higher standardsTfof,
it became antiquated, an object of
ileal
ridicule it was supplanted and rebuilt. It was mortgaged and sold,
O
finally being merged into. the. Louisville and Nashville system.
College
(
Such in the briefest form is the
o
o
history of the first railroad west of
University of Minnesota probably
the Allegheny mountains.
i will soon become the mecca for pres- Pctive undertakers. A short course,
DOCTOR DISCUSSES FOUR
lL,AbS& U UJNAlINfcfcb! extension courses given by the West- em Col,ege- - ,
'
.
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3)
'
.
For 16 years a $20 gold piece haa
year. Another could not get through been waiti
for someone to claim it.
a gymnasium period without feeling It win be given to the
who
as he put it, "all done out" Careful will write a new alma mater song foV
diagnosis and a good program soon University of Florida. Only 10
him where his gymnasium pi;canta have tempted new songs,
made him feel line.
of which have been rejected.
The men who kept late hours were
found to gain one hundred per cent
.
ial
th:
less than the average for all members
?f ? S ateS mf '?al f.urv
? th.? Cincinnati
of tte classes. Those who did not use ?mted
.,
tobacco gamed fifty per cent better , .
.-.
than those who did use it. The men
native born Americans play some
who were in our physical fitness class
gained twelve times as much as did musical instrument or are able to
those who were not in the classes. A
group of fifty underweight men in
Walter J. Moberg,
'he classes gained four times as freshman at Boston University of
much as fifty unselected underweight
Liberal Arts, has been awarded a
men not in the classes.
scholarship with requirements so
What Can the Home Do?
high that it has not been awarded
The important question in this ar- for years. The honor man has not
ticle is "What can be done about received a grade lower than an "A"
physical fitness for the boys and girls since he was in the sixth grade.
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)

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Brevities'

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And there is yet another dean who imental work on the first Alden ab- Frankel and for many years the con"
sulting engineer firm of Anderson LOST
is carrying on at the- - university dur- sorption brake. "
"Ideal" fountain pen, black
ing the summer session. He is Dean
In 1891 he was appointed professdr and Frankel carried on responsible
with gold band.
F. Paul Anderson, of the College of of the School or Electrical and Me-- i and extensive work in the Blue Grass. ley Cundiff, 320 Rose Return to Stanst. Phone 4524.
Engineering. Daily he can be seen chanical Engineering at the UniverIn 1904 he was a member of the
about his work in and around the sity of Kentucky. For the -- last 35 International Jury of Awards at the
Engineering buildings which occupy years Dean Anderson has devoted his Louisiana Exposition in St. Louis. In
a portion of the campus noted at the untiring efforts in developing" the five 1921 Dean Anderson was appointed
most beautiful of the many acres of distinct branches of engineering
director of the research laboratory of
bluegrass sod belonging to the uni- mechanical, electrical, civil, mining the American Society of Heating and
versity.
The Ventilating Engineers in cooperation
and metallurgical engineering.
F. Paul Anderson was born Febru- graduates of the college have for with the United States Bureau of
ary 10, 1867 at South Bend, Ind. years taken equal rank with the best Mines at Pittsburgh. He has served
Fur Sale
His father, J. W. Anderson, a Scotch- men from American tetHrfical insti- as first vice president and president
man, was an engineer and inventor of tutions.
elected president
of the society-bein- g
Charge
note and was superintriedent of the
Dean Anderson is an outstanding at a meeting of the society held in
Purchases
Studebaker Brothers Manufacturing leader in engineering educational so- St. Louis January 26, 27, 28. He is
Company for 25 years.
cieties and the great technical socie ja member of the American Society of
Are Payable
Dean
Anderson was graduated ties of America. For eight years he Mechanical Engineers, the Royal
December 1
Bend High school in 1885 was chariman of the section on me- Academy for the Advancement of
from South
Conn.; Knox School, Cooperstown, N. and served as machinist and steam chanical arts in the Association of Science, the Society for the PromoEducation,
Y.; Mackenzie School, Monroe, N. Y.; fitter apprentice at the Studebaker American AgriculturalCoHeges and tion of Engineering
plant.
In 1890 he was graduated Experiment Station, and for 25 years American Society of Heating and
School, Concord, Mass
Middlesex
Phillips Exeter, Exeter, N. Jtr, from Purdue University where the was engineer of tests for. the South- Ventilating Engineers and of the NaPrinceton Junior School, Princeton, next year he was a fellow in steam ern railroad where he made a 'num- tional Research Council. He is also
"N. J.; Taft School, Watertown, Conn.; engineering, building a large part of ber of inventions now in use on the acting in an advisory capacity for
Westover School, Middlebury, Conn.; the apparatus in the steam laboratory modern locomotive.
the Research Laboratory at Pitts
He was associated with Leon K. burgh.
Thayer Academy, South Braintree, at Purdue and doing all of the exper- Mass.; Chicago Latin School, Chicago; Morristown School, Mbrristown,
N. J.; McGehee School, New Orleans', nessee, North Carolina, Arizona, Lou- the University of Illinois department quency stations.
Messrs. Bullock and Penn com
La.; Ashley Hall, Charlestown, S. C; isiana, Oregon California, Missouri of agricultural engineering discussed.
and Westridge School, Pasadena, and Utah, have announced participa- "Better Equipment as a Factor in pleted theif'"rtlieg!jg work on May 28,
tion.'
Reducing the Cost of Production."
and were graduated from the .univer
Calif.
"If the campaign for rebuilding the
with the degrees,
One of the outstanding contribuDemonstrations of machinery cal- sity on' fip-30,
w
Shakespeare memorial theater
tors to the fund, it is stated, was the
culated to save the labor and improve Bachelor of Science in Mechanical
its present momentum among the output of the farm were held con- and Electrical Engineering (B. S. ii
Hotchkiss School, of Lakeville, Conn.,
where 330 students, the entire school our American youth in school and tinually during the two days of the M. E.) On June 27 Mr. Bullock ac
body, participated in the fund, donat- college," said Professor Baker in meeting. Many makes of the latest cepted a position with the Southern
commenting upon these results, "the types of farm implements were on Bell Telephone and Telegraph com
ing $750.
In addition, the public school sys work of restoring the only living the ground for demonstration, includ- pany of Atlanta, Ga.
tems of 12 states, Connecticut, Geor memorial to Shakespeare in all the ing all kinds of modern hay making
Penn is a graduate of the Lexinggia, Massachusetts, Alabama, Ten- -' world may well be described as 'the machinery, lime crushing and spread ton Senior High school, Radio Service
gift of American youth to the im- - ing machines,
school) Washing- tractors,
mowers. school (army-nav- y
mmm
mortal bard of Avon'."
rakes, plows and harvesters. Of parJ.ton, D. C, and the University of
He has served in
ticular interest was the combined Kentucky.
ANNUAL "AG" MEETING
harvester and thresher demonstrated the capacity of wireless operator on
ISj HELD AT UNIVERSITY Thursday by H. L. Young, a repre- the following" Ships, controlled by the
sentative of the Horse Association of Radio Corporation of America of
' (CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR) America.
New York:
Steamships, Lake Pear, Norfolk,
Although emphasis was placed at
demonstrations were given.
the meeting on farm machinery, vis- Chattanooga, Gaston, Cassimir and
,
"The Trial of a Soil Robber" with its were made to numerous plots oc- Berkshire. Since Mr. Penn became a
telegraph operator in
members of" the experiment station cupying 80 acres of the experiment commercial
'staff, county agents aridfarmers as station farm where various experi- 1920 he has traveled on these ships
actors, was given at a meeting at the ments in crop growing and soil fertil- some eighty thousand miles at sea
stock judging pavilion at 7:30 o'clock ity are being conducted by specialists and visited Mexico, Honduras, Vir
gin Islands, Brazil, Uruguay, ArgenWednesday evening.
157 S. Limestone
.of the station.
tine and England, besides running
Thursday, Prof. W. E. Lehman, of
MINIATURE BROADCASTING from Maine to Texas and stopping at
all principal coast towns.
SET MADE AT UNIVERSITY
I. G. Watkins, of 333 Clifton avenue, has been connected with the Uni(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) versity of Kentucky in the College
Pelts are better, the selection is
of Engineering since 1910.
At the
most complete and styles preCleaning-Pressin- g
fundamental wavelenth it was neces- present time he is instructor in steam
sary to build a suitable transmitter, and electrical laboratories and is a
sented absolutely will not be
and of course, a receiver must be practical engineer with very keen
changed.
Purcell's will extend
provided.
Bullock and Penn de- ideas. During the past few months
WE WILL DO YOU A FIRST CLASS JOB
signed, and built two transmitter Mr. Watkins has been devoting his
the payments for you; a down
panel sets, one of 15 watts output and spare time to learning the telegraph
payment will hold any coat; regu5906
one of 100 watts output.
Both of code.
This has ben successfully
these sets used the well known "Hart- done and he now hoi-.lan amateur
lar prices go into effect Sept. 1.
ley" oscillator circuit and the plate operator's license.
Purcell's will take care of all resupply to the tubes was direct curCo.
rent from a motor-generatof high
At Last
pairs free for one year. Charge
voltage.
We are informed that the Charlesaccounts will be billed Dec. 1.
Data taken on the Grebe CR-1- 8
ton is now reputed to have been origmeters) inated by a college student who abshort wave receiver (10-20- 0
Storage free until Dec. 1. Guarindicated that the builders of this re-- 1 sent mindedly stuck a lighted cigar
anteed savings of 20 per cent to
ceiver are far in advance of some in his hip pocket.
other manufacturers of short wave
40 per cent on all purchases of
efficiency is very good,
j receivers. Its
0
its reception is excellent, and 0
Furs.

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PURCELUS AUGUST SALE OF

FUR

A Dowh

Payment
Will

HM

Any

Fur Caat

OATS

GUARANTEED
Savings of

'

GUARANTEED
Savings of

20 to 4

20 to 40

'Watch Your Watch'

R. W. Smock

Buy

WATCH AND
CLOCK

REPAIRING

NOW!

HAVE YOUR

Repairing

in

DONE BY US

Phone

UNIVERSITY

Dry Cleaning and Pressing

EXCURSION

CINCINNATI
NEXT SUNDAY

FROM
TRIP
LEXINGTON
FARE
Half-far- e
for children between ages of five (5) and twelve (12)' years.
GOING: Special Train Leaves Lexington 7:30 a.m.
RETURNING: Special Train Leaves Cincinnati 5:20 p.m. (Central
Time) 6:20 p.m. (Eastern Time)
ROUND

SMBBN

$2.00

Kumr SKIM

tuning

possibilities

are

wonderful,

The coils are placed remote from the
operator's hands and body capacity is

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Answers
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Twenty-si1
practically eliminated.
Only two 201-tubes are required 2 In 192G there were 9,000,000 cuin this receiver to get all the volume
bic feet.
needed, and distance is. unlimited due 3 The Administration building
to short wave work.
It is just as
1882.
easy for Bullock and Penn to receive
England, Belgium, Chile, Costa Rico, 4 3,000.
Mexico, Australia or New Zealand as 5 White Hall and Neville Hall.
it 'is for a Lexingtonian to get WLVV C September 15.
7 September 24. .
(on a six tube receiver. This
8 Maryville
College
to the fact that short waves travel
from Tennessee.
an infinite distance with greater s$p- 9 McVey Hall.
nai strengtn witn less output as co
pared to high waves and low f
1052140 square feet.
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Built on Value Growing on Value Since 1888
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