AS OTHERS DO, THAT WE CAN SELL YOU GOODS AS LOW AS THE MANUFACTURER THEMATICALLY THE BAYLESS MERCANTILE COMPANY. THE WEEKLY UNIVERSITY COURIER. RS, do well to Shirts and to order for an buy the regular price. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. Laundrp for ces. Telephone SUBSCRIPTION ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR. VOL. VII. oes. Personal. Prof. Bailey was in Topeka, Monday. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. A. Sweezy was in Topeka last Saturday. "Ubi est Hickey? Estne in Baldwina?" Prof. Marsh spent last Saturday in Topeka. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, MAY 17, 1889. Butterworth left for Chetopa last Monday. Regent Gleed was in Lawrence yesterday. Miss Jennie Sutliffe is visiting in Topeka. Harry E. Riggs was at the University Tuesday. Charley Voorhis visited in Ottawa last Monday. Chas. F. Scott, of Iola, was in the city last week. city last week. Will Reynolds left Sunday for a visit in Wichita. visit in Wienna. Grubb made a very impartial umpire at Baldwin. pire at Baldwin. Miss Inez Taggart was on the sick list last Saturday. Topeka, We Will Morgan passed through the Last Saturday last Saturday. Shellabarger made a flying trip to Topeka, Wednesday. city last Saturday. Miss May Webster was at the Uni- tity Tuesday morning. Deverell will attend the High School Commencement to-night. Ed Martindale made a short visit to Emporia last week. versity Tuesday learning: Miss Helen Webber has left school to work under the year. Pickering will spend next Sunday at his home in Olathe. Miss Jessie Small of Topeka, will visit Lawrence friends next week. Miss Emma Bartell of Junction City, is visiting in Lawrence. Chancellor Lippincott spent last Sunday in the Capital City. Swope and I are in training for the mile walk on Field Day. the mile walk on Field Day. Hadley and Robinson have mounted a sail on their boat. ted a sail on their boat. Edson and Peabody attended a picnic in Topeka last Saturday. J. M. Steele, of Lawrence, was among Monday's visitors. Montgomery manipulates a microscopic moustache. Misses Anna Barker and Love visited the University, Monday. Frank Foster of '85, who resides in Ellsworth, Kansas, is in the city. Swope and Truitt journeyed to Baldwin on foot, Saturday. Misses Lucene Barker and Helen Webber spent Sunday with Topeka friends. Butler returned Monday from a visit in Yates Center. Miss Alice Penfield will remain in the city until after commencement. W. A. Jackson, of '88, visited in Lawrence last Monday. E. S. Meade brought his pony down from Menoken last Saturday. Hickey will keep his muscle up this summer by working on a farm. W. P. Brown and O.B. Taylor, of Leavenworth, will attend the Commencement exercises. Miss Gussie Price left Wednesday for Omaha, on account of the illness of her aunt. She will not return until next fall. Dan Nutting, a former student of K. S. U., recently received an appointment at Annapolis Naval Academy. Earhart watched the crowd at the Innes opening Tuesday evening, from a favorable point of view. Orendorf is in California and reports himself much pleased with his new home. Bailey, Sears and Dan Crew helped the Episcopal people entertain Tuesday evening. Flannelly left for home Monday to accept a position in his father's dry goods store. Prof. A. G. Canfield was unable to take part in the tennis game Saturday on account of sickness. Dr. and Mrs. Wm. Wm. MacDonald, of Boston, have been spending a few days with their son, Prof. MacDonald. W. L. Taylor, of Atchison, of last year's Law class, is visiting in the city. Rob Brown, an old and well-known student, spent last Sunday among friends in Lawrence. Prof. P. G. Williams is teaching temporarily in the Baptist University at Ottawa. Earl Smith has taken his final examinations and returned to his home in Kansas City. Finfrock attended the meeting of the Y. P. S. C. E. in Topeka last week. Miss Grace Rector of Bethany College, Topeka, is the guest of friends in this city. Fred Penfield of Fairmount, left for his home Tuesday. He will not return before next year. Ed Little, of Ness City, spent Friday in Lawrence with his Phi Psi brothers. Misses Rilla Van Hoesen and Inez Henshaw visited the University this morning. Herb Hadley will deliver the Alumni address at the Olathe High School Reunion, to-night. Will Spencer has left for Walla Walla, W. T., to take a position under Franklin Riffle. There is quite a colony of old K. S. U. boys at that place now, among them being Fra..klin and Albert Riffle, Adams, Springer, and Sloane. Miss Mary Miller will visit her sister in New Mexico, at the close of school. J. G. Sands, of Lawrence, has made an assignment to Dick Horton, of K. S. U. Ralph Twitchell, an old andpopular student, has just been appointed Solicitor General of New Mexico. K.S.U. boys are still coming to the front. Local. Oh! Those Doughnuts!! Now for Wascburn!!! The Kappas contemplate giving a picnic soon. Examinations begin next Thursday. The Bakerites will try it again Monday afternoon. The Law department graduates twenty men this year. The Baldwin girls say "Huggy" plays just too cute for anything. The ball club did itself and K. S. The ball club did itself and K. S. Advance lessons are over, and reviews are the order of the day. Final sub-fresh examinations in Geometry were held Wednesday. The Faculty have posted the schedule of examinations for next week. Snow weilds the baton of authority in Kellogg's place,in the Zoology cellar. The Y. M. C.A. is trying to find out the number of church members among the students. No.34 Bailey, Crew and Collins furnished vocal and instrumental music at Haskell Institute, Friday night. The graduating exercises of the Senior High School class will be held this evening at the opera house. Prof. Robinson showed his class in Virgil some very interesting copies of old Roman writings, Wednesday. Misses Clark, Mushrush, and Haskell were initiated Saturday afternoon by the Kappa Alpha Theta fraternity. As the term grows to an end, the Virgil lessons grow larger, and that unhappy class is now doing double work. The Field Day Committee are said to be meeting with unexpected success in collecting money from the students. The banquet of the Senior Laws will come off on the evening of June 6th, and that of the Senior Pharmics on June 3rd. Cornell students have been forbiden by the authorities of Ithaca, to give their yell on the street. It is the rumor that the Spring party of the Kappa Alpha Theta fraternity will be held May 31st. Addie Jewett's orchestra, of Topeka, will furnish the music for the Commencement exercises. Mrs. Lippincott was thrown from her carriage Wednesday while coming down the hill, but fortunately was uninjured. The Juniors and Sophomores have been requested to make the immediate and final selection of their next year's courses. Now is the winter of the students discontent, and everybody, from the festive Prep. to the mighty Senior, crammeth nightly. The last Sophomore themes of the year are due to-day, and many a poor Soph has done the "midnight oil" racket in preparation. The Times is making the best record for meanness of the small potato variety, of any publication that has ever been issued at K.S. U. Frank Miller, of the Electrical Engineering Department, has left for Kearney, Neb., to take a position with the Western Engineering Co. Dolly Graeber will soon add two new boats to his fleet. They are built after the pattern of the "Margarette" one of his most popular boats. The Sophomores have finished Faust and are now finishing with a study of the sources and variations of the Faust-legend. This has been a very pleasant term for the class, and they pronounce Mrs. Carruth the paragon of teachers. Dr. Howland lectured before the Unity Club this week on "Our Territorial Acquisitions." The lecture was one of the most interesting and instructive of any of the course. Kellogg and White have returned from the Phi Delt convention, at Lincoln, Neb. White was elected secretary of this province for the next two years. At the banquet, J. M. Lambertson responded to the toast "Our Ben," in honor of President Harrison, who is a member of this fraternity. The tennis games played at Topeka last Saturday, between Brooks and Whitman of K. S. U., and Phelps and Sheldon of Washburn, resulted in favor of Washburn in the doubles, and of K. S. U. in the singles, the scores bein. 6-5, 5-6, 3-6, and 6-4, 5-3, respectively. The schedule of studies to be offered by Prof. Canfield's department next year, has been posted on the bulletin board. A very interesting list of subjects is presented. Profs. Bailey and Sayre, accompanied by a number of Pharmacy students, went up to Lcavenworth Tuesday to attend the annual meeting of the Kansas Pharmaceutical Association. The long talked of Junior picnic game off Saturday at Eudora. The full mandolin club was taken down and the day spent in dancing and boating. All report a most enjoyable time. The Colby Echo reaches our table this week with a very excellent article on "Instruction in Latin in Preparatory Schools," in which the writer urges the alternation of text books and more attention to translation at sight. The approach of the Commencement festivities, reminds the old students of the reception tendered the Hon. I. W. Weed, of Kentucky, and the Hon. Abraham Levy, of Lawrence, by the students of the University, two years ago, and of Mr. Weed's memorable snipe hunt. The Freshmen botanists say it makes them weary to perambulate the suburbs of Lawrence within a radius of five miles, to find a few paltry specimens. They would gladly exchange with the Sophomores, who loll in the laboratory two hours a day, and call it work. The University lawns, under the influence of the lawn mower and the water works, are looking fresh and neat. Every time we look at the grounds we wish that the University had a greenhouse on Mt. Oread, to furnish plants and shrubbery for decorative purposes. The following from the Las Vegas Optic will be joyful news to the many friends of Mr. Twitchell in K. S. U. "Judge Whitman has inaugurated his judicial career by letting out Mr. Crist, Governor Ross' solicitor general, and confirming the title of Mr. Ralph Twitchell to that snug berth. The Optic does not know Mr. Crist, but it knows that Judge Whitman is an honest and capable judge and that Ralph Twitchell is one of the oldest young lawyers in the south-west." Mr. Twitchell will undoubtedly fill the position of Solicitor General of New Mexico, with credit not only to himself but to his alma mater. Fine Summer Underwear at Abe Levy's. ---