Suit. BRO8.. MAKERS BURNISHERS, KAN. I will do well by calling us or Universe or parties, and no daes for one third th Steam Laundry Low Prices and Delivered 67. UNIVERSITY COURIER. LL in the City ors. Year. Have you written me yet? If you haven't, please do! I would like to thank you today. I am very grateful, personal and heartfelt to help you to be able to share the joy of meeting people with whom you have a special bond and who, when you will work in these industries, will find employment. You are so kind and wonderful that their own lives are ever live! I love the allusion or employment at an even greater amount. It is such a wonderful experience as above. In order to bring it on, or that it be brought to you, I know that presents from this company have been given to you. I have always loved people with whom you can share. I know that anyone who can know all of us, would be happy to give it to you. Maine --- dilate the stomach, blood, are punctual. Available in various forms. Constipation, liver troubles, bloody female genital tract, Female Genital Tract Liver Troubles, Painful Neck Pain Low bowel Bile Mallow Blood Sour Feeling Poisoned Watery or symptom perform proper prolapse, lancet, liver and bowel or each meal. A lancet or each meal. They contain to the most likely site of a postpartum mail postcard. CAL GATES MED. --- Stercial College BEST. BEST. MSS, BIS Bel-Air MSS, 131 W. 187 St. in Insurance Adviser Insurance Adviser in Business Lending in Banking M., PRESSER M., PRESSER wayson Hand. ARKET Student Clubs & SON. ERS. arlors. Cigare. Is Street. LY. Store. SUBSCRIPTION, $1 PERYEAK, PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. VOL. X. LOCAL DAINTIES. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. Snatched From the Grasp Windy March for the Courier's Special Use. Spring is coming. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, MARCH 25, 1892 Spring is coming. Oratorical contest. Vacation next week. "It seems to me"—Noble, Congratulations, Columbia. Ask the Beta's what ham-dog is The Betas have organized a quar pet. Ask Kinzie about the window episode. Examinations will soon be in order. Dan Crew is a candidate for councilman. Chancellor Snow will lecture in Boleti this evening. the freshman chemistry class had their pictures taken Wednesday. John Rush is a candidate for congress=or rather city councilman. Prof. Miller was given a banquet in the close of his lecture course at Wichita. The spring contest will take place the Friday evening of the last week in April. Cap. Peabody has the reputation of being the smoothest writer in the composition class. The trigonometry classes have been going through the ordeal of a quiz each day this week. The Courier company is going to issue a daily edition of the paper during commencement week. Mont Hallowell is editor-in-chief of the Kansas University COURHR, a chipper college paper that is always bright and entertaining. Wichita Eagle. The name of the new insect now infecting the wheat is isosamatritici- erorocephalalitus. How fortunate for the farmers that the insect is not as big as its name! The University law school has adopted a very clever combination of colors. The names of their regular instructors are Green and Brownell. As colors they have adopted ribbon of two shades. Green over a brown L. Jean Neilson, a Kappa, scored first place at the state contest held at Indianapolis. She had a magnificent oration. The Kappa's are to be congratulated. The law school attended the lecture in a body last Friday night accompanied by instructors and janitor. They were afraid, apparently, to go alone on account of the time they had on Thursday. R. D. Brown is reported to have wept bitterly in the presence of his grandmother's spirit the other night at the spiritual seance. It required several handkerchiefs to stem the tide of tears. College spirit has increased quite noticeably during the past week. Prof. Templein exposed another medium last Thursday in K.C. The K.C. Star gave a full account of the affair in Friday's issue. Every fellow who was in the "scrap" last week imagined himself the greatest hero of the conflict, and persists in narrating his exploits to any one who will listen. No paper which hangs on the rack in the University library with the exception of Lawrence dailies is thumbed and read more than the Kansas City Star. Independent, fair, able and clean editorials are appreciated by the University students. If the present senior class continue to be as progressive and energetic when they graduate as they have been within the last four years the world will witness a few reforms ere long. Their latest manifestation of originality is a novel one indeed Instead of the antiquated class day exercises, essays, orations etc., they are going to substitute a farce comedy. As was announced in last weeks issue of the COURIER, the examination of the applicants to write spring poetry was held. Shearer and Whitman tied for first place. Shearer is going to write a poem on "The Sanitary Influence of Hair Vigor or The Shaggy Intellectual" and Whitman is going to write on "Athletics' Cosmetics and Politics or How the Machine is Run." Principal F.H. Clark of the Minneapolis schools, gave a very instructive lecture last Friday p. m. His subject was "The Origin of the Aryans." He treated it in a historical manner and laid before the students gathered a large amount of matter on the subject that it has not been possible for them to get. Prof. Clark is a very pleasant talker and the meeting of the seminary was one of the most profitable of the year. Money to loan on personal property at Passon's Bazar,723 Mass. st. The friendly bout which the Laws and collegiates indulged in last Thursday would havepassed unmarred if it had not been for the "Papa" of Laws, that long whiskered man from Borneo,who it is said bears the appellation of professor. He showed his littleness and inability to control his temper by striking three different students in the face. Only the gentlemanly bearing of the respective students saved him from being awakened to his senses. Buy your Baseball of Smith. PERSONALS. Miss Bessie hand returned from home last Monday. Misses Russell and Rushmer were visiting friends on Mt. Oread Tuesday. Fred Morris spent a few days in Fredonia during the week. Prof. J. H. Canfield stopped over in Lawrence, Monday on his way home. Blaker and Babbitt are guilty of a henious crime. Look on their upper lip. Oh! my! John Noble, an electrical engineer, student of last year's class, spent a few days at home during the week. A. W. Vainman, brother of Chaney Vainman, paid K. U. a short visit the first of the week. He is secretary of a college near McPherson, Kan. Ed Keys, who attended the University last year, but who is now teaching in the Cooper Memorial College at Sterling, Kan., spent Sunday with his Sigma Nu brothers. Moot Senate. The senate went into a committee of the whole to discuss the silver question. This same question was discussed before and one would naturally suppose from the voluminous speeches made that the subject had been exhausted, but not so. The senator from Nebraska led off with a speech in the affirmative. He brought forward many good points but these seemed to vanish into oblivious desuetude when the senators from Illinois, Michigan and South Dakota had done speaking, by a large majority vote the committee acted unfavorably to the bill and then arose. After the chairman had handed in the report of the committee the question was again thrown open to discussion and soon the tide of oratory began to flow Senator Holmes from Arkansas made a ringing speech against the bill and sat down amid the cheers of the free silver antagonists. He fully demonstrated in his own way that the west on the whole would be the loser should the bill be passed. Senator Challiss from Texas followed next with facts and figures to prove that free coinage would be detrimental to the country. Brown of Michigan was of the same opinion. Although the democrates are in the majority they don't seem to be inclined to voice the sentiment of their brethern throughout the country on free silver for when the question came to a vote during the evening it was lost: 20 voting nay; 8 voting aye. Buy your Sunday paper of Smith. Prize Contest. The Courier would like to see more enthusiasm manifested in the coming April contest. For the interest of those who seem to be laboring under some doubt we will make this statement: That all are eligible to this contest except the winner of the January contest. But no oration delivered at the winter contest can be used. Also the winner in the spring contest is eligible to the winter contest as well as his oration. Here is an excellent opportunity for aspirants to fame upon on the rostrum to gain experience and be recompensed for their trouble. The first prize is $15, the second $10. If you have not written an oration begin at once. You will have ample time to finish it during the spring vacation and then if you desire to enter the contest next January, a summer's work upon your oration will develop, perhaps a masterpiece. There are a few in school who have already written orations, possible for the High School which they have attended or perhaps some college. Why not brighten them a little, smooth the rugged style of puerile mannerisms and make use of the oration in the April contest? At least try. If you should fail to gain admittance your work will not have been in vain, and even though you should be one of six contestants and have failed, your experience gained will be invaluable. Perhaps it will take a little pluck for a freshman to enter, but if you are afraid to assert yourself now, when will you assert yourself? If you don't try to assert yourself rest assured that no one else will. Prepare your oration and enter the contest. The Lecture Bureau. The University Lecture bureau met last week for organization and election of officers. The members have all been chosen and are as follows: Profs. Templin, Sterling, Messrs Riggs, O'Leary, Harrington, Kutz, Bartlett, Parrott; Miss Scott and Mrs. Bell of the student body. The bureau organized by electing Prof. Templin president, R. D. O'Leary secretary, and Prof. Sterling treasurer. An informal vote showed the bureau to be in favor of a course of six entertainments for next year, four lectures and two concerts. The course will cost $1,000 or more. The price of course tickets will be placed at $2 and the committee expects to dispose of 600 of them at that figure. The secretary was instructed to open negotiations at once with the various managers and lecture bureaus of the country and secure a list of attractions for next year. No. 27. Buy your Base Ball of Smith. Canfield's Address. The enthusiasm which was manifested by the students toward Chancellor Canfield last Friday evening proves very conclusively that he still holds a warm place in the hearts of the students. Not only the students greeted him, but many of his friends in the city. The hall was crowded. After his address the Chancellor held a short reception for his old students, who would have been too glad to banquet him but a previous engagement forbade. The students went to the train in a body to see the Professor off. This is the substance of the address. He wanted individualism to be taken as opposed to the masses or herd. One man is standing out from a community. Then the history of the Hebrews was taken up and it was shown that no element of individualism existed with them. It was the same way with the Greeks and Romans. But with the northern tribes, the Teutons, there was something different. They broke down the old order of things and the individual began to be seen. This idea grew. In the dark ages, it was still felt. It later caused the separation of Europe into protestant and Catholic states. Was the cause of the thirty years war and the great French revolution. It inspired the revolution in our country and brought about changes in our government until it is now a democratic republic. Individualism was what moved John Brown, and from considering him a fanatic he is now held to be a martyr. But in all this growth and in all future growth the one idea to be maintained by every individual and that will develop individualism is, the truth. This should be demanded though it is not liked, and by following this up individualism will be evolved that will be of the highest benefit. "Reflex Action of the Exposure." For density of ignorance, for a typical example of illiteracy and a jumble of words the article by W. S; Roberts in last Saturday's World is an acme of art. He was evidently in a rage when he wrote it or he could not have falsified as he did. Such trash and invectives should not be allowed in print. Templin fully demonstrated to the enlightened public that "seance" was a farce as far as Miss Foye was concerned, at least, and evidently the arrow struck home in this mans case. But grin and bear it friend Roberts for you will surely have a few more of your theories exploded if you and your like rub up against our professor. Notice those 10c Canes at Smith's News Depot.