May 31st. spring is now here! Geo. Hollingbury can supply you the best Spring Suits for your money in America SITUATION. prospect which the beginning adenly darken-eatly to be deure at present patriotic, that their own agn-that of their man to the welts of the Uni seems to have all committee, men as to the time. A number and that the base should select. this is certainly and not only a , but an arbi-power, Unless any rate adn of the nine, to select his office amount see of five men seet and manage an experienced r, is certainly s directly par-controlled by a nates, and one roughly compete- manager Sterl-Hogg are preto select the every one, exin faction. of the 'Varsity and petty jealings, should not players, and no institute the nine; should belong to an. The Uniants a winning ardless of men or empleasantness"untimely. The exceedingly and will be amicably manager Sterling should have of the sorrangement of辛ely be in accedent and, we be for the besersity. WIM !! ong the rarest egs in Dress other mater- party, street, other puracknowledged Dry Goods, this section need to have choice things g in Dress bosiery, Para- NNES, Kansas. BAKER VS. WASHBURN. the First Game in the Triangular League Won by Baker How the Boys Played The Score. The first of the championship games of base ball in the triangular league was played Monday in Tokyo and resulted in a decisive victory for Baker by the score of 13 to 6. Both teams showed lack of practice, for which the wretched weather of this spring is accountable. The fielding was slow and rather loose, neither battery was very effective, and had the players been better trained in batting the number of hits must have been greater than it was. There is excellent material in both nines, and the practice of the coming days will doubtless remove the causes of the raggedness of the playing of last Monday. The more brilliant plays were made by Washburn—a fine home run hit by Guildb far center, a hard catch of a four-by McVicar; Baker did the steadier work. The following is the story of the game: Washburn went first to the bat, and the first man took his base on balls. A base hit by second and a wild throw brought in the run, Corrington then went out on three strikes. The next batter was struck by the pitcher, but before either of the men on bases could get in, a, little fly to third and another case of three strikes had retired the side. Baker's first man went out on three strikes. Then came a base hit by third. The next man hit slow to short and should have been out but fumbling and slow fielding gave him first. A hit to right brought in a run. Then came the second out, pitcher to first. Then came a bunch of hits which did not stop till Baker had seven runs, though the run getting was assisted twice by errors. The second inning brought Washburn another run. For Baker, after one man had taken his base on balls, the side went out in one-two-three order without scoring. In the third inning Washburn did some batting, and slow fielding made it safe. The first man hit to third and beat the ball to first. Then a high fly to left was allowed to touch the ground. Then came some solid hits, and four runs had come in before this side was out. Baker retired without reaching first in the fourth three men were retrained for Washburn on three strikes but not till Guild had made four bases on a clean hit over center. This tied the score, but in her half, Baker, without batting much, ran in three tallies and went ahead. At this point Washburn's scoring ceased and the game improved. Washburn got men to first in the seventh, on four balls, on the eighth, on four balls, and in the ninth on two hits to center. Baker scored two more on the fifth and then stopped hitting. The game was umpired with perfect satisfaction by Mr. Dana, Princeton, '92. The score by innings is as follows: Total Washburn .. 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1-5 Baker .. 0 1 3 1 2 0 0 0-7 Glycerine Mounts. At the last meeting of the Science Club attention was called to the use of glycerine as a mounting medium. This valuable preservation possesses properties which make it especially adapted for use by the microscopist, being non-volatile, colorless, slightly affected by changes of atmosphere, and of a high refractive index, it has no peer as a mounting for soft tissues. It is free from a serious defect possessed by balsom, that is a tendency to become yellow, and finally opaque, while the mounts are, if well made, quite permanent and unchangeable. Many are deterred from its more frequent use by the difficulty experienced in its manipulation. The following points require particular attention and care: do not use cells that have not been made at least two weeks; have the section perfectly dehydrated by twenty-four hours immersion in glycerine. Secure perfect elimination of the glycerine at the joint of the cover glass and cell wall. Finally the most important step is the operation of cementing the cover glass to the cell wall. This must be done thoroughly and when completed, finishes the internal work on the mount. But in this condition it is not finished. A slide is only done when it is nicely finished and labled. An observance of the above directions will result in a mount that will always be a pleasure and pride to its owner. The Lecture Bureau. The officers of the lecture bureau held a meeting Wednesday afternoon to discuss matters in general and to all vacancies. McClung was elected to fill the vacancy made by Mr. Bartlet, and Roberts was elected to the position formerly filled by Mr. Parrot. It is the intention of the bureau to make next year's course more interesting than ever. New material will be run in, that is, instead of hiring lecturers who deliver the same cut and dried speech year after year, they will be given less prominence on the course and some of our leading authors and poets will be substituted. Six entertainments will be given two of which will be concerts. It is also the intention of the bureau to have a few lectures given, free of charge, by some of the professors of the leading colleges. Iron for the blood, Calisaya bark for the liver, aromatics for the stomach. All in Raymond's Elixer Calisaya Bark and Iron. Why not take a boat ride? Dolly Graeber will furnish you a boat. Go to Shane's old reliable picture gallery for photos. Buy some of Smith's fishing tackle. FURNITURE THE J. H. NORTH AND FURNITURE DEPARTMENT. CARPET CO., Full of all the new styles Chamber Suites, Parlor Suites and Dining Room Suites. DRAPERY DEPARTMENT. Handsomest Styles ever Shown. All New and Elegant. CARPET DEPARTMENT. Ingrains, Brussels and Moquetts Velvets and Axministers. Also a full line of —AND— WALL PAPER THE J. H. NORTH, Gasoline Stoves. Furniture and Carpet Co. 1216 to 1224 Main St., Kansas City, J. M. JONES Kansas City, Mo. Has been knocking prices right and left in the grocery line. These are a few of his bargains: Fine raisins 7c per pound. Figs 10c per pound. Evaporated Apples 5c per pound. Laundry Soap, 7 bars for 25 cents. Peaches 5c per pound. Be sure and see him this week and save money. Everything else in proportion. Go to Grand Opening Saturday, April 30. Come and See 'um. Straw Hats AT ABE LEVY'S Our great sale now in progress. L. O. McIntire & Co. TRY US Reference Books, Text Books, Supplies. STATIONERY IN ALL STYLES AND FORMS, CHEAPER THAN ANYBODY. Lawrence Book Company, 745 MASSACHUSETTS STREET. SEND FOR OUR CATALOGUE ON Bicvcles, Kodaks, Fishing Tackle, Base Balls, Lawn Tennis, Or Anything in the Sporting Goods Line. J: F. SCHMELZER & SONS, 541 and 543 Main Street, Kansas City. J. M. ZOOK, DEALER IN STAPLE and FANCY Special Rates to Clubs TELEPHONE 25. 845 MASSACHUSETTS STREET. BEAL & GODDING. LIVERY, HACK, BOARDING AND SALE STABLE. We make a specialty of BOARDING Horses. Telephone 139. Opposite Lawrence House. DO YOU WANT GOLD ? Cripple Creek is not a health resort. It is a wealth resort. Quite a difference. Location, near Pike's Peak, in Colorado, lies across the valley of grass roots and in the rock formation. Reliable experts claim this is today the richest camp in colorado. Assays average $100 per ton, and have run as high as $5,000. One hundred people a day are now rushing to Fremont, chief town of the district. The chance of a life time, is worth looking after. You can get there quickly and comfortably by taking the Santa Fe route. Only line with no change of cars from Chicago, Kansas City and other principal cities to Florissant, nearest railroad station with daily stages, to Fremont. Inquire of George C. Baily, ticket Santa Fa Route, about rates and services. TYLER DESKES - 200 New Styles. TYLER HYER KOALY TYPE WRITE CATALOGS ABBEY BAY and SUNNY, Special Edition and Special Discounts. Catalogs for 1959 now ready, 130 pages. Illustrator: Book Free from Logo 100. Equivalent for style, quality, and Price. Illustrated in Colour. TITLE DLEE CO. ST. LOUIS, MG, U.S.A. TITLE DLEE CO. ST. LOUIS, MG, U.S.A. Advertising. If you wish to advertise anything anywhere on WOLL LY, & (O) No. 10 Stupron St., New York. EVERY ONE in need of information on the business of "Book for Advertisers," prices one dollar. Mailed, postage paid, on request from the American Newsroom, directory to the be it papers and class journals; gives the best deal of information about rates and deal pertaining to the businesses of advertising. Ads by ADVERTISING BU'EAU; I SPUCE 51, N.Y. WEIDEMANN HAS OPENED H18 Street, for Fine Shoes For the season, and makes a specialty of OYSTERPARLOR Supplying Parties WITH Oysters,Fruits Banquets a Specialty GONFECTIONARIES CLEANING WORKS. KAW VALLEY STEAM DYING If you want your CLOTHING COLORED OR cleaned in first-class style take them to the Kaw Valley Steam Dying and Cleaning Works. Also Second-Hand Clothing bought and sold. All work warranted. SIEBKE & BOOTHE, Hume's, 829 First House Northwest of Massachusetts Street Lawrence, Kansas Massachusetts and Oxfords.