THE WEEKLY UNIVERSITY COURIER. oceries ausage. dy. SUBSCRIPTION ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR. etts Street. Order. your laundry I delivered to fancy, which uses shirts are them out we class shirt for PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. Tables ons EAM etts Street. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. VOL. VI. Personal. Mr. Nutting is slowly recovering Milt Reed has returned to school W. E. Curry spent Sunday in Topeka. Joe Rolston visited Kansas City Thursday. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, OCTOBER, 14, 1887. Rob Curdy is expected down from Topeka Sunday. Prof. McDonald is still unable to meet his classes. O. B. Taylor visited his home the first of the week. Prof. Blake is still ill and unable to attend classes. Clinton Hase, of Beloit, will enter the University soon. W E. Curry was down to see the President yesterday. Several new students have entered the department. Mr. Chas. Hunlew, an old student, returned Wednesday. returned Wednesday. Miss Lucile Pennabaker is now in black and gold. Chas. Johnson returned from Aitch in the University this week. Mr. Al Curdy visited old scenes at the University Wednesday. C. E. Adams is visiting old friends in the University this week. the University Wednesday. Charley Hall, an old student, visi e University Tuesday. Fred Pentzer is expected to visit his Sigma Chi brothers soon. W. T. Reed arrived in Lawrence Monday and will re-enter school. Allen Coypock, of Superior, Neb. visited the University yesterday. E. A. Raymo, of Ottawa, visited the University the first of the week. Mrs. Carruth heard the Professors classes yesterday, the Prof. being absent. Prof. Wilcox is meeting his classes at his residence during the cold weather. Prof. Marvin has drawn up plans for the Lawrence Art League Association. J. W. Winslow, of Osborne county was shown through the University Tuesday. Prof. Marsh and several other of the Profs. have put gas stoves in their rooms. Mr. Dyer, of Springfield, Ill., was shown through the University Tuesday by his nephew, Harry Gilbert. Mark Otis leaves for Atchison the first of next week to attend his brother's marriage. E. L. Swope, our business manager, has been under the weather for the past few days. Oscar Poehler a former student, who now lives at Jetmore, Kansas, visited his Beta brethren Tuesday. Mr.LeSeur returned from Kansas City yesterday where he went with the body of the late Mr. McCamish. Will Otis, of Atchison, an old student, will be married to Miss Grace Herrington, of the same city, on the 20th. Mr. and Mrs. Hutchins, of Kingman, parents of Bion Hutchins, visited the University the first of the week. Miss May Webster has been detained from classes on account of sickness due to our recent cold weather. The Chancellor attended the reception extended to President Cleveland and party in Kansas City last evening. Miss Mamie Tisdale and Miss Lyle Hynes visited Kansas City yesterday and will represent K. S. U. in the ball given in honor of the President. Chancellor Lippincott visited Kansas City yesterday and will shake hands with the President in behalf of the University. Mrs. Forbes and Whittset, of Carthage, Mo., were shown through the University Tuesday. The latter is the sister of Fred Pentzer, law of '87. Dr. Summerfield has been at Yates Center this week attending to important legal business. Prof. Green heard his classes. E. S. Rice, a Junior of '86, has reentered to complete the course with the class of '88. He was detained from entering at the beginning by a severe attack of typhoid fever from which he has not yet fully recovered. Law. It is one of the requirements of the department that each member of the Senior class in order to graduate must read law in the office of a regularly practicing attorney, and Prof. Green a few days since made a round up to see if the boys were located, and found Roberts in the office of Harris & Harris with his feet on the desk and reading Bill Nye's address to the Mayor. King was nursing his burnsides and cleaning stiprots for Spangler. Jacobs was polishing the stove in the office of Barker & Summerfield. Gilmore was sweating legal oaths at a refractory stovepipe which he was vainly trying to put up in Judge Thacher's office. Wolley was dusting carpet for Alford. Fidler was scrubbing out for Riggs & Nevison. Peairs was sweeping down the cob-webs and reading Peck's Bad Boy, in the office of Hugh Blair, and Palmer was sawing wood and advising Patterson on points of domestic relations. The others are still to hear from. Some of the Pharmacy students are very indignant on account of a certain article which appeared in our last issue. Don't let your angry passions rise for something else might happen which will raise you to the sky. We humbly apologize however, if we in any way touched a tender spot. Local. Did you see Cleveland and his wife? A new club on Kentucky street. No base ball Saturday,nothing but rain. No. 6. The Senior plug has made its appearance. The I. C.'s held a special meeting Tuesday. Profs. change rooms and students a little lost. The Phi Psis give an informal hop this evening. The radiators are being put in Snow Hall this week. The Juniors and Seniors have been classified. Are you satisfied? The oratorical association paid a sixty per cent dividend last Tuesday. The Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A hold a joint prayer meeting this evening. The third forensic lecture was postponed last Saturday on account of the rain. Five new gas stoves for heating purposes were put in the University Friday. Several students have been requested to call at the Chancellor's office this week. All of the students did not sit in the parquett at the opera house Monday night. The civil engineering students are exempt from forensic writing. Oh happy ones. The German society met yesterday afternoon. The meeting was profitable to all. Many of the classes did not recite Wednesday on account of the coldness of the weather. The halls are the warmest portion of the building, judging from the number of promenaders. Even our present spacious reading room is not too large for the number of students this year. The Kansas City Daily Journal will soon appear on file at our library. Now for the Times. Colds are much more plentiful than good lessons and drug stores are reaping a bountiful harvest. The Sophomore Greek and Latin classes and the Junior Greek class beheld the President yesterday. The large number of students who attended Modjeska witnessed a rare treat and all were well satisfied. A student of Baldwin taking sick, returned to his home in Levenenworth and died within a week. The Senior class of Baker University were up in Lawrence purchasing their class hats, black silk plugs. A large number of students visited Kansas City yesterday, taking advantage of the cheap rates and Jeffersonian "simplicity." Prof. McDonald's classes have had a vacation for the last week on account of the illness of the professor. The ball game of Sigma Chi versus Phi Delta Theta was not played last Saturday on account of the rain. Cone is now high authority in the meteorology class, on all subjects pertaining to rain-gauges, eddies, etc. Prof. Canfield's class in American Politics is indexing authorities on Washington's administration this week. The German literary society held a very interesting session at the home of Prof. Carruth yesterday afternoon. Prof. Canfield's classes have recited in Prof. Carruth's room the past week on account of the cold weather. Prof. Canfield gave a talk on the "Study of U. S. History" before the members of the Y.M.C.A.the first of the week. The Seniors and Juniors names were posted on the bulletin board Monday. There are twenty-two Seniors and thirty Juniors. The boys who occupied the "student's parquett"Monday evening said they noticed quite a number of unescorted ladies in the audience. Mr. Crocker says it will be about two weeks before the building can be heated by steam. Why are not more men put on this building? A great many students attended Mojeska Monday evening. There was also quite a number of professors noticed by the ever watchful students. Saturday evening's Tribune contained a thrilling account of a river scene, in which a sail boat and four University students were the principal characters. The Athenaeum literary society will soon have a new piano, but we advise the members to collect all money first or else their musical instrument will go the way of Oreads. Miss Josie Hutchings, the well known vocalist of Lawrence, will participate in the musical feast to be given in Topeka in a short time. Topeka Democrat. The Unity Club at its meeting Friday evening outlined a very interesting program for the coming winter. Some of the faculty and students are among its prominent members. The Athenaeum literary society elected officers last Friday. They were; Tresident, W. C. Moll; vicepresident, M. L. Hackett; secretary, Miss Rosa McMurray; critic, J. A. Mushrush. Some of the students have lately been taking books out of the library without the knowledge of the librarian. This is not only a sneaking cowardly way of doing, but it is also an offence subject to a heavy fine. A Sad Accident Monday evening about 7 o'clock, C. R. McCamish, a student of the University, met with an accident which resulted in his death about 1 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. Several students had gathered in one of their rooms at the residence of Mrs. Henshaw, on Kentucky street, and were enjoying themselves in a friendly discussion, as the close of which Mr. McCamish undertook to punish the other boys for interrupting his speech. One of them jumped upon the bed, another ran out of the door, and a third McCamish seized about the waistie intending to throw him. As he raised him from the floor, his foot caught under the stove-leg, and they fell, McCamish on top, his chin striking his comrade's hip and his shoulder on the floor. The result was, according to the physician's diagnosis, a dislocation of the spinal column, producing paralysis of the entire body. His fellow students at once rendered every assistance in their power. They immediately sent for a doctor and would have notified his parents at once but the injured boy earnestly requested them not to do so. He afterward recovered the use of the upper part of the body and his doctor did not think his injury was necessarily fatal. At 1 o'clock Tuesday morning he became unconscious and remained so until his death. He was attended by Drs. Mottram, Horner, Morris and Hull. The sad accident has cast a gloom over the entire school. The deceased was about 21 years of age. His parents reside at White Church, Wyandotte county, Kansas. He was a member of the Freshman class, this being his first year in the University. He was considered a very bright student, and held the highest esteem of his professors and schoolmates. At the request of the parents the body was sent to Wyandotte Tuesday afternoon, accompanied by Chancellor Lippincott, Prof. Sayre and O. C. LeSeur. The following is a full list of the Senior class according to the classification recently posted. If some unforseen event or some "bunk" in examination try their souls, on next June they will become a burden or an honor to society: W. S. Allen, F. H. Bowersock, W. Harvey Brown, May Churchill, W. R. Cone, Frank Crowell, A. C. Cunkle, T. F. Doran, E. C. Franklin, Paul Goddard, Josephine Gilmore, W. E. Higgins, Gertrude Hunnicutt, F. C. Keys, Mamie Manley, F. H. Olney, J. A. Prescott, Joseph Rolston, W. W. Russ, F. J. Savage, C. E. Springer and Clara Wilson. They number twenty-two from the Collegiate department. The Pharmacy department will probably graduate sixteen, the Law department twenty, and the Music and Art department one or two each make the total number of graduates sixty. Youman's Celebrated New York Hats at Abe Levy's.