THE
LADY W1NDEHMERES

taking leading parts
FAN duction arc Eleanor

NEXT STROLLER PLAY TO
BE PRESENTED

APRIL 28

Directors, Cast to Have Production Ready for Public in
Two .Weeks.
SEAT SALE TO START 1STH
Will Be Played Two Nights in
Lexington ; Thursday to Be
Student Night.
Rehearsing, building, planning and
working combined with unusual enthusiasm on the part of the cast, stage
crew and members of the executive
staff of the Strollers, makes evident
the fact that the 1923 production
"Lady Windermere's Fan" will be the
a
produced by the dramatic
club of the University.
The drreqtor of the organization,
John E. Burks with assistant directors selected from among prominent
Strollers, is laboring every night with
rehearsals and no amourtt of time, energy or effort is being spared to make
the play the greatest thing which the
Strollers have attempted previously.
The stage crew headed by Gilbert K.
Smith, is spending every spaTe moment in the workshop of the organi
zation, building, constructing and mak
ing over scenery.
The executive staff is kept busy answering replies from the many towns
in Kentucky which are anxious for an
engagement.
The play itself "Laidy Windermere's
Fan" by Oscar Wilde is one of the
most striking, vivid pictures of fashionable English life or the period of
1890. The plot which is interestingly
woven about ,the lovely fan which has
been presented to Lady Windermere
by her husband on her .twentieth
birthday, and the disastrous results
which follow a threat made by Lady
Windermere a few hours previous to
her birthday ball, is dealt with in
charming style by the great WiMe.
Members of the Strollers who are
super-dram-

in the 1923 pro-

Mon.ve,
Frances
Smith, Mary Lyons, Earl Hcavrin,
Dan Morse, William Finn, and new
material which has been selected for
parts includes Pauline Park, Lucille
Stillwcll, Virginia Shivcly, Mary Sto-fcJohn Walsh, James Darnell, and
James Chapman.
The dates set for the play arc Thursday and Friday evenings the 27 and
28 of April with a matinee performance on Saturday afternoon, the 29.
Scats will go on sate at the Lexington
Drug Company on Wednesday, April
18 and fraternity blocks may be reserved with John Albright, business
manager, after Wednesday the 11th.
All fraternities which wish to reserve
blocks of seats are advised by members of the staff to mak earrangements
at once as it will be difficult to reserve sections after the seats are put
on sale downtown.
Remember the dates, April the 27
and 28. The night of the 27, is UNIr,

VERSITY NIGHT.

KENTUCKY

KERNEL

Paft Firt

U. OF K. PLAYERS GIVE
'BEYOND

THE

Sordon

HORIZON'

Work is Done on Play,
Which is One of Most

Much

Pre-tiou-

s

Produced.
"Beyond the Horizon," by Eugene
O'Ncil, the Pulitzer prize play of 1920,
will be given Tuesday afternoon and
night by faculty and students of the
University.
The cast of the play includes: Ruth
Mayo, Ann Hickman; Nan Atkin, her
mother, Mary Louise Covington; Rob
ert Mayo, Ruth's husband, Prof. A.
H. Hiucks; Andy Mayo, his brother,
Prof. E. E. Flcischman; Jim Mayo,
her father, Louis Shackleford; Kate
Mayo, his mother, Elizabeth Hopkins;
Capt. Dick Scott, her brother, Prof
J. T. C. Noe; Mary, the Mayo's dauglv
ter, Maltha Green; Ben, a farm hand,
Henry Taylor; Dr. Favvcctt, Austin

an

ARROWS H I RT

CWade

of a better oxford, in a fine, tailor-lik-e
way.
The collar is the work of the expert Arrow Collar
makers. The cuffs have buttons
p y yy
or are the French link model

Bell.

This production which is a true play
"KENTUCKY SIX" TO
of the soil, is one of the most pre
RETURN FROM FLORIDA tentious ever put on in the Little

CLUETT.

Reception Planned in Welcome; Will Theatre. The cast worked on it for
about six weeks.
Play for Prom
Scenery and costumes have been
designed by students of the Art DeA reception is being planned for
partment under the direction of Prof.
the return of the "Kentucky Six" or Carol Sax.
chestra at 5:30 o'clock Friday after
The matinee Wednesday afternoon
noon at the Union Station. The Lex- under the auspices of the Woman's
ington orchestra, having completed a Club of Central Kentucky.
K
seven months engagement at St. PeTHETA SIGMA PHI NAMES
Fla., is on its way home to
tersburg,
DELEGATE TO CONVENTION
play for the Junior Prom at the Phoenix hotel ball room Friday night.
Louise Connell to represent Fraternity
Following the initial reception the
at National Meet
will be taken to the Phoenix
boys
At a meeting Salturday afternoon of
in
hotel where a banquet will be held
Theta Srgma Phi, woman's national
their honor. The orchestra, which was honorary journalistic fraternity, Miss
composed of six members when it left
Louise Connell, of Paris, Kentucky, a
Lexington, now is composed of nine junior in
the College of Arts and
Huffman,
They are Joe
memlbers.
Sciences, was elected delegate to the
Hawkins,
manager; Richard
Jesse national convention of
Theta Sigma
Hawkins, Pat Ryan, Ray Williams. Phi
to be held in Norman Oklahoma,
Ed Sidebottom, all of Lexington; Earl April 26, 27 and 28, ais a representaGresh, of Philadelphia; William Her- tive of Chi chapter of the University.
ring, of Aisheville, N. C, and Marks
Miss Connell was initiated into the
Stanley, of St. Petersburg.
local chapter last sprang, and since
that time has taken an active part in
the affirs of the fraternity.
She is
one of the most representative girls
Make Early Reservation! for Cud Patties and Dinners AT THE NEW
on the campus, having taken part in
mm
DANCING EVERY EVENING
many of the leading activities ait the
JAZZ ORCHESTRA
1
University. Misis Connell is a member
ONE MILE VERSAILLES ROAD
of Kappa Delta Fraternity, president
PHONE 3227
Tea Room and Garden :: :: stop FIVE
Council,
of Women's
and represents her fraternity in the
y
Circle.
Preceding the meeting at which Miss
Connell was elected delegate, ten new
girls were initiated into Theta Sigma
Phi, as follows: Emilee Young, Bet
ty Barbour, Margaret Lavin, Bertha
THE THREE
Kraft, Dixon Davidson, Mary M.
(ESSENTIALS
Helen King. Mary Gorey,
Georgia Lee Murphy; and Elizabeth
Ellis.

MAK ALII

MAKERS

1

COLLEGE BOYS' TAILOR

Dry Cleaning. Pressing
Altering
PHONE 929

216 S.

LIMESTONE

The Lafayette Drug Store
Lafayette

Hotel Building
OPERATED BY STUDENTS
We handle a complete line of domestic and imported Perfumes and Toilet Articles.
OUR SODA FOUNTAIN SERVICE IS THE BEST IN

TOWN.
Phone 3309 "We Deliver."

Stationery

Candies

M

University Lunch Room
i"HOME OF STUDENTS"

"The Better Ice Cream"
Purity
Richness

YOU WILL FIND THEM ALL IN

Hughes Ice Cream
WELL BALANCED FOOD PRODUCT
Made By

HUGHES ft COMPANY

Ifa a

"Eat Ice Craam Everyday

Health Food."

High and Woodland Ave.

141

Good Things to Eat at All Hours

UR. and MRS. W. M. POULIS, Props.

HUGH PEAL HONORED
AT OXFORD COLLEGE

Smothness

PHONE

V CO. lac.

P. B. ROBARDS

Su-K-

A

PEABODY

Becker

William Hugh Peal, class of '22, of
the University, who is in Exeter Col
lege, Oxford, England as the Rhodes
scholar from Kentucky, has recently
been elected Treasurer of the British
American Club. Peal finds college life
at Oxford very different from the University of Kentucky but very interesting.
At this time he is traveling on the
continent. He expects to visit Paris,
Toulon, Monte Carlo, Avignon, and
Essen.

"Cleaners That Satisfy"
PHONE

MM

Hawkins & Haley
Successors to C. D. Cunningham

K
in your
"Don't be so
reports as you have been in the past,"
said the manager of the "Wild West"
railway to his overseers. "Just re- -'
port the condition of the track as ye
find it, and don't put in a lot of needless words (hat ain't to the point.
Write a business letter, not a love
letter."
A few days later the railway line
was badly flooded and the overseer
wrote his report to the manager in one

Corner LIME and HIGH

621-- Y

long-wind-

RefjUlWKir
FRATERNITY
JEWELRY
HE
123

INT Z

E. Main

line.

St

"Sir Where the railway
river is Yours faithfully,

Oppo. the Phoenix
Lexington,

and
Sunday, April
the habit.

I

. ..j

Made Ike FmUam Pen fOSSULK "

I

351

W. Short Street

15.

Get

Phone 70

Meal Hours
BREAKFAST
LUNCH

Sunday-scho-

Brushes

University Cafeteria

"

NOTICE

Glass

AND ARTIST MATERIAL

was the

Ky.
Go to church

Paints

7:15 to 8:00
12:00 to 1:15
5:30 to 6:00

DINNER
A DINING ROOM IS ALSO OPEN FOR WEEKLY BOARD.

$4.75 FOR 20 MEALS
Baiemcnt Administration Bldg.
Both Operated en the Cott Bails.
Sandwichee, Pit and Milk Served Between Meek.

t

*