O'S. A. G. MENGER & CO. IS THE STUDENTS' SHOE STORE of itings, nts. — * * * N. ery, St. ONE. udents. eries ialty. Kansas N, in leats. I. t Office. cited. $ ^{*} $ UY ods, isky, rant. Student's. othiers. Place. tionery, styles. reet. eet. Goods ! University Shoes. Store. y's.4 Local and Personal Notes. Leonard, the tailor, makes pants for $5.00 For a dozen good photos, go to Hamilton. Twenty bath tickets for $2.00 at Andy Reed's, Knuckle is the student's fashionable tailor. W. M. Curry put in an appearance last Tuesday. Go to Andy Reed's for a smooth shave. Andy Reed is the popular barber among the students. H. C. Riggs is to be seen in the halls again, as of old. Great Scott! How shoes go at the Mass, Shoe Store. Go to Orme & Fingle's for every thing in the millinery line. W. W. Brown was reported lost but he turned up on Tuesday. The Winthrop Street Dining Hall is the place to get day board. Hamilton, the photographer, corner Massachusetts and Henry Sts. Look for the great fall opening of millinery at Mrs. Orme & Engle's. Cora E. Gill sets a No. 1 table in the Selig building on Winthrop street. Hamilton makes special efforts to please the students in cabinet photos. The millinery parlors of Mrs. Orme & Engle are headquarters for the students. 9 Look at our men's fine shoe and be convinced that prices will tell at the Mass, Shoe Store. The finest brand of cigars, cigarettes and smoking tobaeco at Smith's News Depot. If you smoke a pipe you will find everything from a five cent cob to the finest Meerschaums at Smith's New's Depot. You want to feel of and examine our shoes and then you will be satisfied that the Mass, Shoe Store is the only place. If you want a suit of clothes that will look nice, wear well and last a long time, go to Kunkle, the taylor. Do not delay but come at once and see our elegant line of ladies' and Misses' shoes and opera slippers at the Mass. Shoe Store. The class in Freshman English is so large that extra chairs have to be carried into the room to accommodate all the students. Prof. Hopkins, however, is equal to the occasion and will see that no one is slighted in the work. On Monday afternoon the Board of Directors of the Review company held a called meeting in Sigma Nu hall. After the disposition of some financial questions the following officers of the Review company were elected. J. F. Carlson secretary, W.A. Snow treasurer. The meeting adjourned subject to the call of the president. Kunkle, the taylor, has a large stock to select from. Get your suits made at Kunkle's. Pants for only $5, Leonard, the tailor. Tailor made pants $5 at Leonard's. Twenty bath tickets for $2.00 at Andy Reed's. H. B. Hall represents the Record on the hill now. When you want photos he sure and see Hamilton. The neatest dining hall in town at Cora E. Gill's. Get a pair of tailor made pants for $5.00 of Leonard. None but first class barbers are employed by Andy Reed. Ladies handsome Jersey jackets g.2.9S, THE FAIR. Go to Andy Reed if you want your hair cut in the latest style. J. E. Dyche is the only member of the constitutional history class. M. A. Barber returned from Burlington Monday. He is one of the Seniors this year. The library now contains 13,000 volumes, besides a large number of new books on hand not yetunpacked. Rowing is the best exercise for students. Dolly Graecer will give you special rates by the week or month. Why, Gentlemen, there is more money for you in buying your fine shoes at the Mass. Shoe Store than you can imagine. Handsome plaid dress flannels 49c. THE FAIR. Miss Watson spent the month of August in Colorado. Returning she made a trip to Chicago for the purpose of inspecting the libraries of that city. The reading room has been thoroughly renovated and more conveniently arranged. New alcoves have also been placed in the library for the new books. The class in American History started out with twenty-seven members and several more have entered since. This fact is conclusive evidence of the increasing popularity of the course and shows that students are anxious to know their country's history. Mrs. Ella W. Brown of Holton, Kan., has entered the law school, Mrs. Brown has been teaching in Campbell Normal University for several years, and is a woman of more than ordinary ability. She will undoubtedly stand high in the school and make the men work for their honors. Ladies black Jersey's 98c at THE FAIR. The many friends of Miss Nannie Anderson in the University, will be pleased to hear that she has received the nomination by the Republican County Convention of Johnson county for the office of County Superintendent. Miss Anderson will win,as she is as popular in Olathe as she was in Lawrence some years ago. All wool Henrietta, all colors 39c, THE FAIR. Sorrow has come to the hearts of many former students and friends of the University with the announcement of the death of one of our graduates. Herbert J. Humphrey,'81, died suddenly of typhoid fever on August 8th, at his home in Hutchinson, Kan. Although he was only twenty-seven years of age, he had already reached an enviable position in the practice of law. He began the study of law immediately after his graduation and in 1885 was elected Prosecuting Attorney of Geary county, which position he held for two terms. In 1889 he was married to Elaenor W. Houk, of Hutchison, to which place he transferred his practice. Here he was cut off, still in the beginning of a career that could not have been less than brilliant if he had lived. He will be remembered by classmates, teachers and associates in professional life for his intellectual strength, industry, independence, manliness and honor in all relations of life. By those more intimate with him he will be mourned as a kind friend and loving brother. Ob Twenty bath tickets for $2.00 at Andy Reed's. Chautauqua. "Chautaquna is the most American thing in America," says Professor Hjalmar H. Boyesen. The Chauantaqua system divides itself into two parts. One is the vast C. L. S. C. the Chauantaqua Literary and Scientific Circle—embracing the world in its classes for home study. The other is the summer school on the lake of that name, where thousands of students go annually, many of them ambitious young teachers who desire to improve themselves during their brief vacation. At the school, or schools rather—for there has gradually grown here an agglomeration of educational nuclei—every branch of learning, art or science has a six weeks' term devoted to it. The lessons are so long, the study so severe, that no more than one or two branches can be taken during a summer, but these few are learned with more thoroughness than one might expect from the conditions. "Chautauqua," wrote Rudyard Kipping when he visited America three years ago. "is a sort of lawn tennis academy of the arts and sciences." Every kind of person is found among the students. There are some college presidents and professors, who in their hearts know they are deficient in a given branch of learning. They come here, and with the simple humility of the child sit perhaps among their own students and make up the lack they know of. This is the true spirit of science. Young ministers that are to be find here a preliminary course in theology so thorough that in six weeks' time they are able to do a year's ordinary work at theological school. College students who are ambitions and earnest do the same. But determined study is required, and no fooling can creep in. Many of these learners, who make finally the best teachers and scholars, are very poor in all but brains and splen did will power. What do they therefore do? They seek places to work in the kitchens or wait on table in some of the many boarding houses, thus earning their living as they go. At Chautaquua the waita quote Latin and the chamberlaids discourse of Browning's poetry. These students that thus pay their way by labor are respected neither more nor less than the rest. Here is the ideal community, the true republic—one spot in America that is as it should be. There is a singular absence alike of display of wealth, of snobbery or toadyism. Would that America had a thousand more such blaces! Base-Ball Standing AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Won. Least. cent. Brooklyn . 79 41 £88 Boston . 74 47 £11 Chicago . 75 48 £19 Philadelphia . 75 47 £18 Cincinnati . 63 50 £08 New York . 66 64 £60 Cleveland . 86 82 £03 Pittsburgh . 21 102 £108 Won. Lost. cent. Louisville 71 89 $45 St. Louis 44 89 $66 Rochester 48 52 $77 Columbus 61 80 $49 Oakland 61 84 $39 Athletics 68 59 $73 Syracuse 45 62 $40 Baltimore 61 79 $81 NATIONAL LEAGUE Per Won lost per PLAYERS' LEAGUE. Won. Lost. cent. Boston 73 48 429 New York 68 50 284 Brooklyn 71 51 281 Philadelphia 64 55 237 Cleveland 65 68 267 Pittsburgh 62 61 267 Cleveland 46 70 290 Buffalo 74 65 272 WESTERN ASSOCIATION. Won. Loss. Cent. Kansas City 70 78 654 Minneapolis 72 40 644 Milwaukee 72 41 637 Denver 54 54 200 St. Louis 65 50 420 Omaha 45 62 420 Lincoln 41 95 372 St. Paul 65 74 821 O. P. LEONARD, THE : TAILOR Has the best line of samples ever brought to Lawrence, Kas. TELEPHONE :: STAIRWAY BARBER : SHOP. ALBERT GREGG. Finest Shop! Best Location in the City. Bath Rooms Adjoining Shop. Eldridge : House : Block. HAVE A NUMBER OF FINE A. also carry a complete stock of SHEET MUSIC and STUDIES. —AGENTS FOR— Washburn, Haworth. Brown. (Guitars and Mandolins.) CALL AND SEE THEM. J. H. Bell & Bro., 823 Mass. Street. Saturday Night, September 20th. HAMLIN'S HAMLIN'S Musical : Comedy : Co., CAST: COL Lexington a managerial essex. William Gilbert Schoeffer, a retiree Fakir...Jon Johnny Eli Quick, a child of nature...Geo B. Gilson Jon Cassaway, a man of leisure...Geo. Mitchell Garry Tommy Tomts...Arthur Raymond Gilroy Tommy Tomts...Arthur Raymond Gilroy Charity Kings, who cherish ambitions...Miss Helen Reimer PaTy Baker, the Fakir's daughter...Miss Mamille Grey Charlotte Blankl, one...Miss Annie Sutherland of the 4.9...Fay Pollind Member of...Miss Emma Pollock Nyla Nobba the whirligig...Miss Sherwood Wood Chole Cobbs...Company...Miss Evelyn Pollock Act1-Boker's Cottage, springtime; the plot thickness; Act2-Green Room in Folly Theatre, New York; the plot thickens; Act3-Boker's residence; the plot obscures the stage. The audience is requested to carry away no portion of the plot. Alice Harzloom and Wm. Gibert are well and favourably known in the east. Alice Harzloom is at Cresta. BONNELLY BROS. Livery, Feed and Hack Stables, Cor Winthrop and New Hampshire Streets, TELEPHONE 100. J. H. Shimmons -WILL- Furnish You a House from Cellar to Garret With everything except Curtains and Carpets. A. P. FELLOWS, D. D. S. Dental Parlors 921 Mass. Street. BY MEANS OF GAS. Teeth Extracted Without Pain FRENGER'S Dinner lunch from 11:20 a.m. to 2 p.m. Warren St., Between Mass. & Vermont. Short Order Restaurant. Steaks and Chops; Fish and Game in Season served on short notice. Dinner 10am from 12:30pm DR. WHEELER. DENTIST, The First to Depart from High Prices in Favor of the Masses. 829 Mass. St., Lawrence, Kas. Amalgam Filling... 50 Fineest Gilt Fillings half the usual price. Kisner Fillings... 64 Office overHume's Shoe Store, 829 MASS. STREET. Open from 7 A, M to 6 P, M. Confectionery, Fruits and Cigars. Oysters Prepared in All Styles. MEALS 25 CENTS. H. V. NORTON( Carries a Large Stock of 905 Mass. Street. Ice Cream & Confectionery. WM. WIEDEMANN, Oysters : in : Season ! W. BROMELSICK, Banquets and Parties a Specialty The Students' Hatter, Displays all the Newest Fall Styles in Soft and Stiff Hats, CRUSHERS. Boys, don't fall to call on him when in need of nothing in Fmishing Goods or Hats. Fresh Oysters by the Can or Bulk at Chris Epley's.