U. LIBRARY OF... S THE WEEKLY UNIVERSITY COURIER. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. NN, SUBSCRIPTION ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR. know or not. state celled the best and eshment Defriend CARLOR city. males. Candies to be found on K'S Store. s. Satisfaction Sectionery Season. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. VOL. IV. to loan a table real es- tacy is ample them be elsewhere building. INS, Sec. RENCE, KAN ge Co LOCAL. an. Board $3.50 Hard LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SEPTEMBER 18, 1885. At work Boat riding. Everybody. Moonlight nights. COURIER election to-day. Prof. Dyche attended the circus. The Senior class numbers twenty two. The Seniors are talking of plugs. Go in, boys. The pharmacists are getting down to work now. The tennis club have a good outfit for sale cheap. Prof. Pratt will give a social dance Monday evening. The fraternity goats are getting in their work in grand style. Look out for a Delta Tau Delta chapter here. So says rumor. The Phi Gamms had a pleasant little hop last Saturday evening. We need a landscape gardener to keep the campus beautiful. It will pay. The University music rooms are in the National bank building, opposite postoffice. The class in economics will study French and German socialism for the first four weeks. Important business is to come up in the Courier meeting to-day. Be sure to be there. If some boys don't wash their feet the vigilance committee will be after them. Keep clean. Some girls are wearing their hats in chapel. This spoils their good looks and makes them odd. Base ball seems to be taking a strong hold of the boys. Perhaps we may have a club this year. When we get our military department and medical college we will boom a chair of demagogery. A six year collegiate course has been established, in which music is the specialty. A good step. All persons interested in base ball should be on the ball grounds tomorrow afternoon at three o'clock. The regular election of officers takes place in Oread to-day. This of itself will secure a large attendance. If the young ladies' fraternities do not put their goats to some use before long we will think they lack enthusiasm. Be on hand at the Courier meeting and see that editors are elected who favor a military department, a medical college, a gymnasium, a greenhouse, etc. Joseph was sold into Egypt because he didn't keep posted. After he subscribed for the COURIER and learned the market price of corn, he got rich. Col. P. J. Fritz worked the circus as usual. We are informed, though, that he only got six tickets in place of ten last spring. Brace up, P. J. The Atchison people want to know how Blair and Crowell came in. Permanent seats in chapel will not be given the students until next Friday. A large number of students attended the Auction the latter part of last week. The engineering room will have three new drawing tables. Prof. Marvin has enterprise. Our Views department is now open to all students. Don't be bashful, but send in your Views. Some one has suggested that a lunch stand be placed in the basement. Why wouldn't it be a good scheme? A carload of "kids" who were refused admission here have gone to Baldwin, where they entered the Sophomore class. A. P. Fellows got first premium on his zoological collection at the fair. Russ took first on birds, and Riggs first on fret saw work. As far as we have been able to learn, the list of secret society initiatives is as follows: Phi Gamm, three; Phi Psis, two; and Sigma Nus, one. James Mears is very desirous to have a greenhouse on Mount Oread. He says that only a small sum of money will be required to start a very creditable one. We call the attention of the regents to the subject. The Chicago Alarm evidently takes us for a wild communistic paper, and our office for a regular arsenal. Oh no, Mr. Alarm, we are the most peaceable men you ever saw, and are not at all in accord with your crazy theories. Science Club, Sept. 18, 1885: Richard Short, Gimpsum; W. S. Franklin, Effect of earth's rotation on moving bodies; Prof. E. L. Nichols, Review of News. Meets in chemistry lecture room, at 3 p. m. All are invited to attend. WANTED:—Eight or ten smart, handsome, cultivated, young men to enter the fraternity of Sigma Nu. They must be as far advanced as Sophomore, must be able to dance well, and must be recommended by at least two of the lady fraternities. For further information, apply to G. W. H., this office. Will Jackson, of '89, was for a long time military instructor at Monroe's Institute. If the boys wish to start a military company, he has kindly offered any assistance in his power. We should organize at once and then it will be comparatively easy to change it to a regular department. Wake up, boys. Call a girl a chick and she smiles; call a woman a hen and she howls; call a young lady a witch and she is pleased; call an old woman a witch and she is indignant; call a girl a kitten and she rather likes it; but call a woman a cat and she'll everlastingly hate you. Queer sex, these women.—Sabeth Herald. Has B. C. Preston been disappointed? PERSONAL. Chas. Hickok will not return this year. Benj. Cobb will not return this year. Will Little has returned home. Archie Watson will farm it this year. A. W. Postlewaite will be back next week. W. H. Smylie visited here this week. Bob McAlpine came in Monday. Henry F. Smith is visiting C. D. Dean. Ed Cruise is very sick at Wyandotte. Florence Reasoner is teaching in Topeka. Dent Hogeboom is a new Phil Gamm. Alma Newby visited K. S. U. Wednesday. E. J. Patchin is teaching near Oberlin. Jennie Suthff visited old scenes Wednesday. Kate Wilder will be a Sophomore this year. Guy Shultz will not be with us the first session. Sarah McCaddon has returned to Leavenworth. Harry Radeliff will not climb the hill this year. Thomas Murtey is teaching near Solomon City. Barry Hatch has gone to his home at Fort Riley. Alice Noble climbed the hill one day last week. Prof. Miller took charge of his classes Monday. Jim Lawrence visited his old friends Tuesday. E. P. Stebbins will be with Oread again this year. A. C. Chapin has entered for another year's work. J. W. Ohrum is in the insurance business in this city. Valentine and Hogeboom will go to Topeka to-morrow. Hon. Geo. R. Peck visited Lawrence last Saturday. Prof. Williams, of Topeka, visited our University Wednesday. Clara Wilson gladdened the hearts of her L. C. sisters by her return. Horton and Blair went to the circus on "comps." Lillie Insley, of Leavenworth, visited our University last Friday. Ed Cornell, of Wyandotte, writes that he can not be with us this year. E. F. Neal has returned, and is ready for work. Mamie Tisdale will take music again this year. Ed Gildemeister is now in Council Grove. He will not be back this year. T. II. Rockwell will leave for New York in a few days, where he will enter Columbia college. T. F. Doran is back. Nannie Anderson has returned. F. G. Kelley will not return this year. Nannie Anderson has returned, Inez Taggart is back for the year, Kate Burns is back from Ottawa. Charles Spencer is a Freshman this year. Sue Miles will attend school next session. John Sargent has returned to Kansas City. Clara Poehler visited K. S. U. Tuesday. Stella Lewis will not be in school this year. Fred Liddeke is back for another year's work. Prof. Sayre has his classes all arranged now. Jennie Peebles is with her class again this year. Dot Mead makes society lively at Council Grove. Morgan is running the Chase county Leader. Minnie Wakefield and sister have returned home. Miss Gertie Crotty enters the Freshmar class. G. W. Harrington is ready to boss Orcad, as of old. Obe Taylor and A. L. Swope are the new Phi Psis. Agnes McKinnon has returned for another year's work. Miss Mee Sullivan visited friends in the city for a week past. John Kemmerer's wire fence took first premium at the Bismarck fair, Martin Rice is one of the bright lights of the Freshman class. Bennett has not left for Ann Arbor yet. We are getting anxious. G. U. Smith, of Bethany, West Virginia, visited K. S. U. last week. B. C. Preston, of the Sabetha Herald, enters school again for the year. P. C. Young is in town. He contemplates entering the law department. Prof. Lindley Spray presides over the welfare of the Lawrence High School. Roscoe Learned of the Senior class of the High School, enters the Freshman class. W. S. Whirlow has the position of principal of the Ottawa High School for the coming year. Mamie Swain left yesterday for a short visit in Leavenworth. She will return in a few days. Bruce was in town a couple of days last week. His school in Leavenworth begins Monday. The Phi Gamms took in WillJackson, of Atchison, and Harry Deford, of Ottawa, Monday night. Geo, McMillan still holds his position in the general freight offices of the A., T. & S. Fe. to Topeka. A. J. Smith is back for hard work Charley Dailey is blooding at Salina. Ed Franklin came back last Monday. May Henry will not return this year. Cora Kimball will be a Junior this year. Minnie Collins will not return this year. B. J. Dalton is back for another year. Webster Davis wilt return in a few days. Frank Talbott will be back in a few days. Al Curdy gets his paper at Humboldt. Sam Forsha is holding Hutcheson level. H. L. Call is in a law office in Topeka. Lillie Claypool is with her classes again. Edna Maxwell is enjoying herself in the east. Cora Henshaw is chief artist at Mettner's. Pliney Soper will take the law course here. Wm. Snyder, of Lincoln, Ill., is the new Senior. C. C. Dart is in the land business at Dallas, Texas. Johnson county sends Ossie Jackson back for another year. J. O. Ward reports everything booming at Larkin. Harry Shawhan is in a dry goods house at Clay Center. Alice Bartell, of Junction City, visited K. S. U. last week. Minnie Raught is making society lively at Brookville, Pa. Franc Hunt is a belle of Leavenworth. She will visit here soon. B. W. Woodward has changed the old Baker place so that it could hardly be recognized. It is now without doubt the finest residence in town. Senator Geo. J. Barker, of Lawrence, and Chas. S. Gleed and Prof. J. W. Gleed, of this city, have formed a law partnership under the firum name of Barker, Gleed & Gleed, with offices in the Bank of Topeka building, in the suite of rooms hitherto occupied by Messrs Gleed & Gleed.—Topeka Capital. Kansas University rejoices over the success of the Gleed boys. The University COURER of Lawrence says that Miss Jennie Dunn, a former K S. U. student, is teaching school in Minneapolis. The COURER is behind the times. Miss Jennie Dunn changed her name to Mrs. Jennie Hurley nearly three months ago, and has retired from the pedagogies. Solomon Valley Democrat. Thanks, for the correction. Brother Keys. Much joy to Jennie Dunn Hurley. is a pa iking l chan being enic wa rain. teaches wrence ugh,' uy. s tick pt. 1 poli ay nig s bac ior la r '85 in thi Farlan ting in ns go sit to of h his and H Friday eached ch Su chat h "plug Pra Satur son, o d K. gives conv OF For T. Fi ture rs bef s elec by E [ass,'] ald cture ts of write brig ion, Can ond rt i has He al a i tr r. M at y ninc ton d a Se J. E. PARKE, BOOTS AND SHOES.