State Historical Society UNIVERSITY COURIER. SUBSCRIPTION, ยง1 PERYEAK. en. 392 PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. LOR ers. VOL. X. --- LOCAL AND PERSONAL. Mr. Higgins will study law this year. John Prescott is located now in Boston. Herb Hadley will study law at Harvard. Miss Galloo is the New assistant in French, Rufus Melvin will re-enter the University. Prof, and Mrs. Hodder will be at after the twentieth. Miss McKinnon, of the class of 189, is now at Cornell. Erl Brown and Jack Weaver are going to Ann Arbor this year. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SEPTEMBER 9, 1892 Miss Lucile Bragg, of Humboldt enters the University this fall. The Misses Mitchel, of Hutchinson, have entered the school of music. Senator Buchan's son, of Kansas City, will take a regular course at K. S. U. Profs. Canfield and Sayre were quarantined in New York harbor last week. Charles Humphrey is married and has again returned to the University. Miss Josie Ru-sel, who is well known in University circles, has entered school. Engle refused a $2,000 position to accept a less lucrative one in the Kansas University. Cochran and Dum, of base ball fame in the northwest, have entered the University. J. E. Baker was married this summer to Miss Rose Fowler of Rochester, New York. Professors Snow, Bailey and Blackmar spent a few weeks this summer, in Estes Park. Dr. Ed Esterly will complete his medical course at the University of Pennsylvania this year. Tom Doran says that tending a girl baby is worse than studying even until 2 o'clock in the morning. Ernest Hickey left Wednesday for Colorado. He will return in time to take up his studies with his class. Jay Withington spent the summer in Chicago working on the engineer corps of the world's fair ground. Fred Bonebrake will attend the Whortcn School of Finances at the University of Pennsylvania this year. Miss Nellie Morris made an extended trip east this summer. She attended the national convention of Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorosis as a representative of the local chapter here at the University. The girls' "rush trust" is broken. In fact it always has been. H E. Copper has a position as principal in the Plesanton high schools. George B. Thompson will not return to the University until late tbis fall. Miss Mary Manley was married on the first of September to Mr. Carroll Parmalee. Scheffer will not return this year to the University. He is principal of the Minnesota high school. Miss Gertrude Crotty is taking a special course in natural history with Prof. Mark, of Harvard. Chas, McFarland will return to Louisiana to resume his position as themist in a large sugar refinery. Senator Kelly and family have moved to Lawrence. His son andaughter will enter the University. Harold Barnes who won the honors of the recent spring oratorical contest, is writing for the Denver Tribune. The walls of the main building are nicely tinted and the rooms present a much more attractive appearance. Walter Davis graduated last year at the Columbian law school. His address is 215 A street, Washington, D.C. A. C. Scott, who is a regent of the University, is the republican candidate for state senator in the Seventeenth district. Amid the heat of summer and the bustle of business, how often have you longed for the cool and protecting shade of your "alma mater." Prof. Max Winkler, former assistant in German at K. U., took the Doctor's degree at Ann Arbor, last spring. He is now traveling in Europe. Hill, who graduated with the class of '90, will soon give up his fellowship at Harvard in exchange for a more prominent and lucrative position at that place. Will Brewster and his sister Grace will re enter the University after a year's absence. Miss Grace spent a year in Japan and Will attended William Jewell college. The Kansas State University is represented at the Illinois State University by Miss Kate Merril of the class of '89, who is assistant there in the English department. P. D. Aldridge, formerly connected with the school of music at the Kansas University, has a very prominent position as director of the choir in one of the principal churches of Rochester, N. Y. Geo. Rush could not work the Tom Sawyer racket very well. The athletic grounds fence was too long for him to induce any one to whitewash it for him. Ed O'Brien will teach at Augusta this year. Prof. Williston will teach anatomy this year. Regent Gleed, of Topekn, was in town this week. Prof. Newsom and his whiskers have returned from Colorado. TomBennett, from Arizona, will attend the law school. The faculty have discontinued the freshman optional in outlines of history. A new optional has been offered in technical chemistry for juniors and seniors. The Epworth League will give a reception to students Monday September 12. Fred Pickering was on the hill Thursday. His sister enters the University. Classes will be delayed on account of text books not having been ordered in time. All University students are expected to attend the reception at Music Hall tonight. There will be a reception to all University students at Music Hall Friday evening. Come. It is a noticeable fact that there are more girls entering the University this fall than ever. Jim Noble will be a student at the Chicago school of law and take in the world's fair incidentally. Piatt has returned and is receiving the congratulations of his fellow students,but denies that he is married. There are quite a number of good musicians among the new students. The Glee and Banjo club will not lack for material. Russ Whitman has been playing fine tennis at Kansas City. He has already won the Schmeltzer "free to all comers" medal and it is his personal property. The seniors have begun their frolics early. If they begin with a reception the first week how will they close the year. The first number of the Review, under the new management, is out on time and is of unusual interest. Editor Fullerton is a man of literary ability and well fitted for his place. The churches of the city extend a cordial invitation to all students to attend their services. University classes taught by the professors will be found in nearly every Sunday school. Will White has exchanged his position on the Kansas City Journal for a position on the Star. Many of the Journal readers will miss his pleasing personality from the "Kansas Kernels." Mr. Fulton, from Washburn, will enter the sophomore class. Sherman has returned. He says he will not play foot ball this fall. The fraternity girls have been well represented on the hill this week. The Y. M. C. A. has been doing a good work in locating the new students. Prof. Dyche has been working hard all summer. The number of animals for the world's fair exhibit is nearly completed. The west Lawrence tennis courts have been fixed up in splendid shape and will probably be used by the University players. The state Normal people are wanting another wing. They ought to have it. How can they be expected to fly with only one. We are unfortunate in having so far but one foot ball game on our home field this fall. It is to be hoped that others can be arranged. Corbett can have the position of center rush on our foot ball team if he applies early enough. We would refer Sullivan to Baker for a position. The new enrollment checks look so much like railroad passes that some of the boys thought they were going to be requested to return home. University politics promises to be unusually interesting this fall. The students have not forgotten that J. Ira Brown is still street commissioner. All the non-resident members of the senior class are invited to a reception given by the resident members at the home of Miss Rush at 8 o'clock on Tuesday evening, September 13th. By order of the committee. The vacation has been taken advantage of for the cultivation of moustaches. Quite a number the boys wear a conscious blush as you meet them and sometimes it takes you quite a while to discover the cause, the change in their appearance being so slight. The rooms of the city Y. M. C. A. are open from 8:30 a.m. till 9:30 p. m. Students will find their county papers on file along with other daily and weekly papers and magazines. The parlors are free and all will be made welcome. No plesantter place in town to spend a half hour. Lottie Mortimer with the "Tangled Up" company next Saturday night, is said to be the best dancer of the famous serpentine dance. Dollie Fuller, the originator of this dance, is now in Ber.in and bequeathed her place in the "Tangled Up" company to Lottie Mortimer, who comes here. No. 39 Our New Professors. The largely increased enrollment of the past few years has demanded a corresponding increase in the corps of instructors, and this year six new names have been added to the University faculty. Prof. Dome, by his advent last spring, is not unknown to the majority of students and his accession to the faculty will undoubtedly result in a large increase in the students of stringed instruments. Mr. Hayworth, who will have charge of the classes in geology and minerology is an old graduate of the State University, and recently from Harvard. Miss Galloo will assist Prof. Canfield with his French classes. She is a resident of Ann Arbor and has just returned from Paris where she has been studying for the past two years. Mr. Shepherd, the assistant in physics.is a graduate of Cornell He will have charge of the newly equipped physical laboratory. The English department will be releaved in a measure this winter, of a great part of its work by the able assistance of Mr. Jones, of Amhurst, Mass. A new professorin piano forte has been provided in Prof. Carl E. Preyer. Prof. Preyer has been for the past summer in Vienna studying under the able instruction of Leschiltzky, who was the instructor of the famous Paderewski. "Tangled Up." "Tangled up," the next attraction at the opera house, is the funniest comedy by the funniest comedians on the road. The new curtain raiser, "Why" Bum McIntosh, and Boom-ta-ra and some political verses by Gilbert Gregory, will prepare the crowd for the fun to follow. The members of this company are more than comedians and actors, they are jolly good fellows, every one, and make personal friends wherever they go. Seats on sale Friday morning. Now that the University is fairly opened it might be well for the Lawrence street commissioner or some other highly patriotic officials to see that the weeds are cut along Massachusetts street. That approach to the University is not only the easiest and nearest walk for many of the students, but connects the campus and athletic field, and certainly should be cared for. This is the last issue of the "COURIER" under the present management. The staff wishes to express its thanks for the many courtesies it has received. The place to get your Perfume is at the Leis Drug Co. Weaver has the finest stock of New Fresh Dress Goods in this City.