THE WEEKLY UNIVERSITY COURIER. t week were "'and' There Miller, W. Y. te Mc- clane, Isdrae, May Marks, PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. SUBSCRIPTION FIFTY CENTS PER YEAR was made generally Sunday, ang the up the In this , class, short bi- this will the use VOL. III. ast year 19 18 16 15 10 9 11 10 10 LAWRENCE, KANSAS, AUGUST 14, 1885. 118 m now, are. The 's moth- Smith is courage ma. y way I was sit- with w it end of called his et that a caist are what do a string e; isn't get back their rec- easonally sumum and we are op- only say: n.” s issue is the result Courier of any utical de from E. inning full those de- ur Text- se in K. only them with the mail with- and see us d we will & Co. the frat, THE COURIER To be Enlarged by October First. FORTY-SIX ISSUES PER YEAR THE STUDENT'S FRIEND THE STUDENT'S FRIEND. The best advertising medium for students and ladies dress' goods trade fo Lawrence business men, in the city. One Dollar per Year, Beginning September 15. SUBSCRIBE AT ONCE. LOCAL. Prof. P, J. Aldrich, of Boston, has been selected as Professor of Vocal Music for the coming year. Miln, the famous tragedian, will act Shakespeare at Bowersock opera house about September 6th. Regent Peck and family visited the University, Wednesday, in company with ex-Land Commissioner McFarland. The Highbargin house has received many improvements. The usual jolly Highbargin crowd will be in luck this winter. No.43. Marshal Prentice, known to the boys as Old White Hat, is again city circulator for the Lawrence Journal. He is as practical as ever. The last annual catalogue of the Lawrence and Atchison Business Colleges will be mailed to any address upon application. E. C. Little, '83, our new clerk, has been sending great packages of catalogues to the summer institutes. Cyrus Crane has helped him. Prof. Bailey has gone to the northern lakes. He will return by way of the national science meeting at Ann Arbor, where he will meet Prof. Nichols. J. V. Humphrey, E. C. Little, Frank Thompson, Spencer, Davis and Elliot, attended the funeral of their Phi Psi brother, J. W. Mulvane, at Topeka. Our new catalogue is a model and should be in the hands of every one thinking of obtaining a profitable education. - Lawrence and Atchison Business Colleges. The students will find four new professors here. Miss Rudolph, of Latin, Dr. Sayre, of pharmacy, Dr. A.M. Wilcox, of Greek, and J.W. Gleed, of Law. This makes twenty-three professors. During repairs on the church the Presbyterian们 hold their services in the opera house. Dr. James Marvin preached there to a large congregation last Sabbath. Our catalogue gives the best idea of what is done at a first class business college, of any ever published. The ways of how we teach are fully explained. Lawrence and Atchison Business College. Prof. L. L. Dyche, our Kansas Nimrod, has been offered a higher salary at Emporia Normal and at the Arizona University, but he prefers to stand by his alma mater. Prof. A. E. Olin, of this city, late superintendent of schools at Eldorado, has been appointed to the new chair of English literature in the Manhattan Agricultural College. The salaries of assistant Professors Brownell, Dyche and Sterling, have been raised to $1,000 per year. They and Profs, Carruth, Stevens and Gleed show that our regents appreciate our alumni. The Lawrence and Atchison Business Colleges afford every facility for imparting a practical business education which is valuable to the farmer, mechanic, artisan, teacher, minister and the lawyer, as well as the merchant and banker. The Grant memorial exercises were held in the city park last Saturday. Although the hottest day of the year, a multitude attended. The business houses were heavily draped in mourning and ornamented with Rohe's artistic cartoons. Col. Arthur Gabrowskii, superintendent of Haskell Institute, is a neat, trim looking man, who means business. He is of Polish birth and was in the Confederate army. He is a thorough gentleman, and our students will be pleased with him. PERSONAL. Prof. Snow's paper on the web worm, the wheat straw worm and the hessian fly, in the Kansas agricultural report for June, has been found so useful that a new edition of 10,000 copies has been ordered. How is that for our State entomologist? Annie Bell is at her home in this city. Dyche, Jr. has good lungs. Rose Wagner will reenter Perdue this fall. Prescott visited in town last week Evelyn Smith will visit Mary Miller next week. J. A. Prescott visited E. C. Little last week. Will Snow is studying entomology this summer. Alice Noble has been visiting in Humboldt. Emma White will not be with '88 until January. Miss Anderson of Atchison enters school this fall. J. W. Gleed makes frequent visits from Topeka. Hayslett "came home" a couple of days last week. W. W. Brown of Burlington will return next year. Carrie and Julia Watson left last week for Colorado. Flora Leis has been quite ill but is now convalescent. R. H. McAlpine is trying to keep cool in Wyandotte. Albert Fellows is studying dentist ry with Dr. Wright. Supt. Parrish has twelve or fifteen men cleaning house. Neal was in town a couple of days the first of the week. Bell Parker is teaching school in Trinidad, Colorado. Lizzie Harr, normal of '82, now resides in Wyandotte. B. F. Shinn of Chanute will enter the law department. W. F. Davis of Junction City is one of the new boys. Walter L. Howe is still at work in the Merchant's Bank. Fred Morris of '88 was last seen climbing Pike's Peak. Miss Lena Beard will study music here the coming year. W. B. Johnson will serenade his next girl at Emporia. Ella Ropes goes to Winfield next week for a short visit. F. A. Marshall is attending the Leavenworth institute. Hattie Fellows is in the city studying the art of painting. Myrtle Jetmore of Topeka will enoll with the Freshmen. Lena and Sue Miles have been in Lawrence this summer. Josie and Hattie Cook are at lake Minnetonka, Minnesota. Mrs. C. C. Dart is visiting her parents in Cottonwood Falls. May Walker is at her home in the southern part of the city. S. P. King of Agusta, Kansas, with enter the Junior law class. Cora Kimball and Laura Lyons will swell the ranks of '88. Grace Pickering of Olathe will enter K. S. U. in September. A. F. Yoho is still solid and a big baseball at Leavenworth. Hattie and Mabel Haskell are en jovying life at Manitou Springs. Julia and Kate Powell receive their Courseus at Parker, Dakota. Lillie Wiggs has lately returned from a six weeks visit in Indiana. Carrie Fisher will visit Kappa sisters and friends in Lawrence soon. Harry Rushmer of Kansas City will enter the department of Pharmacy. Ida Ryus, a former student, is at home to her friends in Wandyotte. H. A. McLean, all reports notwithstanding, will return this year. R. J. Curdy has charge of his father's branch store at Yates Center. Maud Mansfield and Carlie Cockins visited in Kansas City this week. Miss Dana of Madison quits teaching to attend the University this year Alice Litchfield is in Kansas City perfecting herself in the study of art, Prof. Robinson started Monday for a couple of weeks vacation in Michigan. Morgan writes from Cottonwood Falls of "lots of fun with the home girls." Miss Carrie Bauman visited in town a few days last week. Spangler was happy. Mary Miller has been visiting Evelyn Smith in Abilene for the past week. Annie McKinnon of Concordia, Kansas,will reenter K. S. U. in September. Ettie Hadley has returned from a pleasant visit with the Kappas at Ft. Scott. Cora Pierson and Alice Noble are visiting with Fannie Pratt in Humboldt. We are glad there is at least one woman in the faculty. There should be more. Cora Henshaw returned this week from a pleasant visit in Ft. Scott and Olathe. Miss Florence Baker of Lafayette, Indiana, is visiting friends in Lawrence. Miss Mamie Henshaw returned Monday from a long visit in the country. Prof. Marvin is doing some engineering work on the natural history building. Prof. and Mrs. Sterling and daughter are camping in the western part of the state. Annie Loy will teach in the Solomon schools. She spent the summer at Eureka. W. H. Johnson and C. F. Foley are instructing in the Rooks county institute. Jack Schall and Harry Riggs assist in keeping the city girls from getting lonesome. Carrie Morse will not enter school this year, but will teach near her home at Emporia. Ned Messervy, '82, visits Ft. Scott occasionally. Bays are pleasant summer resorts. C. D. Dean, as city editor of the Lawrence Journal, is making city matters buzz. Will Little is speculating in wild lands in western Kansas. He will re- turn however. H. A. McLean has been engaged in the law office of Doster and Boyle, Marion, Kansas. Clara Poehler climbed Mt. Oread last Monday. She will not rejoin her class till next year. W, H. Brown guards the Kansas University through the silent watches of these summer nights. Clara Coffin,Franc Hunt and Laura Lyons are attending the Leavenworth institute. S. Burkholder, winner of the Woodward prize, is canvassing for General Grant's Memoirs, in Morris county. U. G. McAlexander, once of 187, now a leading cadet at West Point, is home this summer on a furlough. Prof. Snow's Natural History building has the cellar dug and the foundation started. Snow visits it three times a day. Highbargin, Springer, Horton and Riggs are taking a special course in house-cleaning under Professor Parrish. Colorado Springs, Maniton and Idaho havu a number of Lawrence girls to climb the mountain heights during vacation. Mary Miller returned this week from a visit to Abilene. She will enter Wellesley college the coming year. Agnes Clarke, '84, returns to-morrow from Del Norte, Mexico, where she was visiting for several months past. L. M. Powell is taking a months rest at St. Marys. He will enter the Newton schools as Principal, September 14. he favorite resort of students. W. C. Yeager was through Lawrence about the first with a lot of cattle, which he placed on the Kansas City market. "General" Sullivan killed the Douglas county Auditor and will soon "prohibit" the Lawrence druggists. The pen is mighty. Nellie G. Thacher has just returned from her pleasant South American trip. She tells of explorations and adventures manifold. Julia and Kate Powell write from Barker, Dacota, of cool weather and a pleasant me. Say there are no boys equa. o the K. S. U. laddies. The Young Men's Christian Association flourishes. It meets Friday evenings and Sunday afternoon. Its pleasant reading room and parlors are W. L. Kerr is editor and half owner of the Ottawa Daily News. Kerr always was a daisy on the local department on the COURRIER and no doubt will make a fine newspaper man. Only don't lapse into poetry.