The Weekly University Courier. Co LIBRARY OF G. W. HARRINGTON oks ES. ANN. Friend the best and Refresh excelled. the city. S, Amades, Can stic Fruits to always or Book Store. Students KAS. k building to loan airable rea security hall and see rangement INS, Sec. SUBSCRIPTION FIFTY CENTS PER YEAR. thing, XC ON'S clubs speeming year. you see him. Lawrence Shop PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. VOL. IV LOCAL. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, OCTOBER 2 1885. Contest. Again on top. The new sidewalks are dandies. Social Science Club meets to-day Patronize those who patronize you Let the Robinson avenue agitation agitate. Why don't some of the fraternities have a dance? No scheming trickery or wire pulling this year. The Board of Regents meet next Wednesday. Subscribe for the Courier at fifty cents a year. Prof. Robinson is again secretary of the Faculty. Give us a gymnasium. We can unrecruit it now. The fraternity goat has gone into winter quarters. Better and more music needed a both literary societies. The Lawn Tennis Club is lost. No reward for its recovery. The Turkish bath house will be closed after November 1st. Moonlight no more,but dark nights are good enough for us. The Hotel de Grabandehaw is a four dollar a week house. Prof. Brownell is trying to obtain Oread Hall for his lecture room. The COURIER is the STUDENTS' PAPER. Only fifty cents a year. The Cash Dining Association has two hundred dollars in the bank. The election of the contest program takes place in Oread to-day. The students seem to be letting the "light fantastic" alone this year. We are always on time, for it is "American, not English, you know." "Well, please make up your mind which one of us you are going to join." The clerk's office hours are from 10 to 12. Please let him alone at other times. Pershall has left, the Italian orchestra has gone. Yes, the boys are surely in luck. Gilmore says the only reason he takes the "nigger heaven" is because he can smoke there. The non-fraternity men should band together and down the Greeks in Ordeal to-day. Chapel speeches begin the week ending October 16. Sophs to the bat; Freshies on deck. The faculty were bountifully entertained by Prof. D, W. Robinson, at his residence, Friday evening. As the Natural History building grows, Prof. Snow's smile grows broader and broader. Socialist, communist, nihilist, anarchist! Go in, *Father Baker*, it don't hurt us, and it amuses you. See advertisement of J. L. Berkey. Seniors, bring out your plugs. The "rushing season" is over. It is about time to begin the lecture association agitation. A number of new books were placed in the library last week. Prof. Spring's History of Kansas will be published about October 10th. What is the matter with the boys? We haven't heard of a "crush" this year. The family of T. S. Pollock have moved to Lawrence from Osage county. Our exchanges will oblige us by putting Box 434 on our address. Otherwise your mail may not reach us. The Herald-Tribune copied many COURIER items and forgot to give us credit, but we forgive that. Private classes in constitution and physical geography will be organized next Monday. See the Chancellor to-day. The telephone is free for students to any part of the city, but you must pay a quarter to talk to your girl in another town. Every student should write his name and boarding house in S. T. Field & Co.'s students' register. Your home friends can find you then. The cigarette smokers long to fumigate the proposed greenhouse by means of a smoking-room attachment. Regents, will you, blight their fondest hopes? The students' re-union, held at the Methodist church last Thursday evening, was a very pleasant affair. Excellent music was furnished by Misses Marks and White. Notwithstanding the Common wealth's dire predictions, the special students in economics are coolly and pleasantly studying socialism, and as vet wear ordinary clothes. Sol. Smith Russell drew an unusually large house last Monday evening. His new play took well with the audience, and he was frequently encored. His support was very good. Why don't the boys take their girls horseback riding more than they do? Why, it is too hard work, of course; it takes both hands to manage a riding horse, while one does very well in a buggy. The general convention of the I. C. Sorosis will he held in Lawrence the last week in October, and Kappa Alpha Theta is said to be looking at Bethany with a view of putting a chapter there. The American Literature class has finished Emerson's Essays, and are now engaged in reading and discussing Irving's works. They are also pursuing a course of reading under Prof. Spring's management. The COURIER is not enlarged this week because the right sized paper is not in stock in Kansas City, and it will not arrive from Chicago in time for this issue. But look out for the enlargement next week. See advertisement of J. L. Berkey PERSONAL. Dot Mead is attending Washburn. J. I. Dunn visited Oread last Friday. Belle Love visited K. S. U. Friday. Gertrude Crotty will the arrow, W. C. Yearear will be with us soon Nellie Dow has returned to St. Mary's. Five professors at Sol. Smith Russell. Birdie Starr is enjoying herself at Denver. Barry Hateh paid us a short visit this week. Mrs. Dr. Marvin visited K. S. U. last week. Charles Simpson is attending school at Boston. Kate Merrill is visiting at Davids Island, N. Y. Willie Stimpson has entered the ranks of '20. Carl Cockins has returned to school at Cincinnati. T. F. Oakley is taking in the soldiers' reunion. Miss Mamie Swain has returned to Washington. Lillie Freeman is the latest Kappa Kappa Gamma. Maud Mansfield remains in Law rence this winter. Lillie Freeman received a visit from her mother last week. Fred Morris is in Topeka with the 4th Regiment, Co. H. Kate Field of Leavenworth is the guest of Emma White. Jennie Sutliff visited her I. C. sisters at K. S. U. Friday. A. D. Patterson and sister, from Oksalakeo, have entered. Kate Powell is taking lessons in oil painting of Prof. Simpson. Herbert Bullne is in Topeka attending the soldiers' reen Laura Lyons and Emma White went to Toppea Wednesday. Edna Maxwell is attending a ladies' entirely at Washington, Pa. Mr. Clarence Cheney, of Baldwin, national University, forgave this week A. C. Markley spent Saturday and Sunday at his home near Carbondale. Cora Kimball returned Monday from a nutting excursion near Vinland. Prof. McDonald gives an instrumental solo in Oread this afternoon. Maud Mansfield was seen in the balls of the University last week. Rose Wagstaff is attending school at Perdue, Indiana. She is forming there a chapter of the K. K. G. fraternity. '88, May Webster, returned the first of the week from a short visit to the country. H. E. Riggs took in the soldiers' reunion at Topeka Wednesday and Thursday. See advertisement of J. L. Berkey F. C. Keys is at the reunion. H. R. Linville is again at school. I. A. Alwes may leave Saturday. Allen is a new Phi Psi. A. L. Adams went home Saturday. F. C. Keys is at the reunion. M. J. Keys visited old scenes Monday. B. T. Chase has the genuine legal scowl Riggs is taking in the reunion with Adams. '89, Harry Deford, goes to Ottawa to-morrow. Jennie Peebles went to Topeka yesterday. John Dunn was a visitor at Oread last Friday. Alice Ropes sings in the Congregational choir. Dent Hogeboom went up to see his girl Sunday. A. F. Yohé's father dropped in on him last week. Rob Rankin is taking in the soldiers' reunion. William Snyder has donned the shield and dagger. Alice Penfield appeared last Friday with the I. C. dart. Gilmore was installed as president of Orcad last Friday. George Lewis says he heard fifteen shots the other night. '77, Andrew Atchison, of Dunlap, was in town last week. Miss Ida Wade, Normal of '85 is teaching near town. Prof. Aldrich leads the choir of the Congregational church. Dr. Roberts has come from Hutchinson to take pharmacy. S. R. Wharton, formerly of '80, has a new boy, at Sabetha. '87, Cora Kimball, spent last Saturday and Sunday in Vinland. C. S. Gleed is soon to wed one o Toooka'ts fairest dawntheers. L. A. Stebbins can be counted among the married students. Frank Marshall was kept from his classes last Friday by illness. Lizzie Bell was missed from he classes day before yesterday. Fannie Pratt was unable to attend school the middle of the week. '87, J. B. Shanafelt, subscribes for the COUER at Franklin, Neb. Webster Davis is at Garden City He subscribes for the COUNER. Chas, Albright, of Baldwin, played encheur with Sharrard last week. '84, Mary Gilmore, will spend the winter at her home near Endora. Helen Grover has stopped school. She hopes to return next session. Cora Henshaw and Ettie Halley were seen in the halls last Friday. L. W. Cummings has been obliged by illness to stop school for this year. Laura O'Brien, a new member of '89, wears the golden key of the Kappas. No.4. '85, W. Y. Morgan, returns for the opening of the law department, Oct. 13th. See advertisement of J. L. Berkey P. A. Huber is a new Sigma Chi. Flora Newlin has donned the dart of the I. C.s Misses Birdie Taggart and Alice Gress have enrolled. Mrs. Prof. Canfield will deliver a lecture before the art class in a few days. Miss Annie Sterling, who has been visiting her brother, has returned home. M. E. Pearson, Normal of '85 will teach in Leavenworth county the coming year. '87, Maggie Cox, was married to Fred Scott at her home near Lawrence, last week. Prof. Bailey has added Jolly's Spring Balance and a Thermostadt to his apparatus. Geo. H. Ropes came down from Topeka last Saturday and returned Monday evening. '87, B. C. Preston, former editor of this paper, has gone to Lawrence. -Sabeth Herald. Ida Engle, Lou and Nellie Palmer went up to 'Topeka yesterday to attend the soldiers' reunion. John Prescott was called home by the sickness of his grandmother, and returned Tuesday. Sadie Emery is the happy possessor of the grand piano that received the first premium at Bismarck. '85, W. Y. Morgan, writes from Cottonwood Falls, "The Courier is bound to win, everywhere." "87, E. A. Gildemeister, writes from his farm at Council Grove, "I am not dead, but nearly exiled." The University has another friend. He was born to Mr. & Mrs. Don Rankin last week, and weighs 9 pounds. Miss Mamie Lyons was thrown from a buggy at the ball grounds Saturday and quite seriously injured. George Bowen, of Baker University, visited the University Wednesday Mr. Bowen thinks of entering our University. '83, Prof. Sterling, took the first prize on his botanical collections at Bismarck fair. He keeps even with he students. Cora Pierson entertains the Kappa Alpha Thetas to-morrow afternoon and evening at her home in the west part of the city. Dr. Sayre has gained two new students in pharmacy this week. The doctor attends to two classes and one demonstration each day—the work of three professors usually. '83, J. F. Tucker, passed through the city this week on his way to Harvard Theological School. He was at Yale last year. He says, "The Correr personalis and locals are just what I need. "85, S. M. Cook, writes from the Solomon schools saying, "The Corrier is a welcome guest, bringing back memories of my connection with Kansas University." Thanks, Bro. Cook. We shall so write that you will rightly influence your 300 pupils. See advertisement of J. L. Berkey. Dollar Fee Friday Morning Senior law is a patriot s visiting ikting a sp l change th rath. ugh, '85, y. s ticket pt. teaches a wrence. r '85 is in this so ting in the political ay night. s back agi for law clas ns goes he sit to Willie eached in th ch Sunday of Kansas h his parent Friday and and Bert I Friday and on, of Tech d K. S. I gives the conversat hat he loc "plugs" to J. E. PARKE, BOOTS AND SHOES. Pratt and Saturday i setured on t rs before th lass, Tuesd ald has a pictures to be of music writes from bright spot ion, regular Canfield pond hour, rt iu Ne has entered He was f al academy i trying t r. McLaren at you mig incott dec ton last d away 1 Seniors fright rec mother a . The lit children thols has Dubocseq amp and a queen of I