90 The Courier-Review. LOGALS. And. Pampel's cat didn't come back. Miss Korns recently visited the penitentiary. Martindale changed his room one night last week. Clark wears, yet, another medallion over his honest heart. Fred Bonebrake and Ernest Blaker spent Sunday with us, Blue chips are worth five whites at the baccarat game now. Prof. Murphy chaperoned Todd at the irrigation convention. A. B. Bates will partake of John Hessin's turkey on thanksgiving. Maud Smeltzer spends Thanksgiving with Viola De Weese in Wamego. The latest acquisition of economical landlades is the celluloid towel. When it comes to hustling milk up at training quarters, Moody is right in it. Jack Lahmer's pipe is coloring up. Don Stevenson is helping him to do it. Prof. Blackmar lectured before the commercial club in Lawrence Tuesday night. Lost.—The fifth stud of the first row of "Birdies" shirt. Please return to owner. Jim Kelsey wants the Ladies Home Journal added to the Electrical Engineering library. Miss Schaum will visit her cousin, Miss Green in Kansas City, Mo., during the holidays. Lyons has quit the Savoy and will probably go to the Delmonico. He couldn't conform to customs. Miss Eva Way, a member of the sociology class, will visit the Topeka reformatory and make a special study of reform systems. Chamberlain searched fruitlessly for "something that wasn't there" in anatomy class Friday. Madden put the class on to the joke. Of the two Fletcher boys, it is said that Roy is the handsomer while Charlie is the more popular among the girls. Jim Kelsey and his comrades have a prairiedog down in their community with which they are wont to amuse themselves in their idle moments. The Junior and Senior Seminary room in the northwest corner of the library is the scene of the wildest confusion when Kingsly, Lyons and Fair get in there together. Abe Levy's windows are more artistic than ever this year. Abe has a way of making every thing show off to the best advantage. Take a look at them the next time you go by. It has become quite a fad in University circles for the girls to take dinner at the young men's club one Sunday and to return the compliment by inviting them the next week. "Swift," the young gentleman who waits on the table of the Ladies' Club for a nominal consideration, will be dismissed and a girl will take his place. This is the age of suffrage. On the 17th, at Mrs. D. C. Haskell's, the Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. had a very enjoyable time. Last Friday Doctor and Mrs. A. M. Wilcox were at home to social committees of the two associations. Cards are out for the wedding of Miss Mary Stone to Mr. Edward D. Ellison next Wednesday, at the Episcopal church. The popularity of the bride lends great interest to the event. The groom is a Princeton man, now a rising young attorney of Kansas City. The football game Saturday morning between the Betas and the Phi Gams was witnessed by about twenty-one enthusiastic girls, who, in spite of the early hour and low temperature, managed to arrive on the field in time to see the ball put in play and, of course, stayed to see the prodigious feats of valor and strength performed by society's favorites.