THE WEEKLY UNIVERSITY COURIER. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. SUBSCRIPTION FIFTY CENTS PER YEAR. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. Vol. III. PERSONAL. Alice Ropes is in town. May Churchill is in Lawrence. Frank Climer is at Burlington. Anna Loy is at home near Eureka Amia Isabella is in hospital H. E. Riggs is visiting in St. Louis. H. L. Call is flourishing at Topeka. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, AUGUST 1, 1885. Ed Cruise is at Appleton City, Mo. W. T. Reed is at his home in Newton. Victor Linley is visiting a few days here. Hattie Black is at her home in Media, Chancellor Lippincott is in New Jersey. Jep Davis is trying to keep cool at Ottawa. C. J. Smith will re-enter school this year. W. T. Lutz is working "mashes" in Denver. Willie O'Donnell is at his home in Stockton. Mina Marvin is attending the summer school. LeSeur is doing some engineering work in town. George Ropes spent a part of July in Wyandotte, Ed. Meescrvey is visiting old friends in Lawrence. Ed Stimpson is learning the car- penter trade. Emma White has returned from Leavenworth. Claude Highbargin is painting Prof. Nichols' house. dotte last month. Louis Rose will teach in Armor: his next winter. Ross Wemple is taking a vacation in New Mexico. dale next wint Lyda Jacke has returned from Johnson County. Johnson County Louella Palmer attends the summer school at K. S. U. Fred Bowersock is now treasurer town house of the opera house. Josie and Hattie Cook are visiting uncle in Chicago. W. E. Higgins writes of prosperity from Rich Hill, Mo. from Rich Hill, Mo. Eva Hoadley will enter the Freshman class next year. man class next year. Prof. MacDonald is in Cambridge, Mass., for a month. Miss Jessie Austin, '79, is spending the summer in Ohio. Mass., for a month. Ettie Hadley is visiting her Kappa sisters at Fort Scott. B. K. Bruce is rusticating at his home in Brunswick, Mo. W. L. Kerr has a position in the railroad offices at Ottawa. F. H. Smiley still holds his good position at Ottawa, Kan. C. B. Highbargin attends the summer school at the K. S. U. Maud Thrasher is visiting in the southern part of the State. Agnes Lowe is in Lawrence. Tom Doran says he is following the plow at Council Grove. Miss Kate Ridenour, '84, is spending the summer in the east. Prof. Carruth will remain in Lawrence through the vacation. Hattie Dunn is still at her home a few miles north of the city. Bert Monroe was seen in the "Historic City" a few days since. Jack Schall is working at the printer's trade in Lawrence. Paul Lernard is attending the summer school at the University. '83, Jo Grey is practicing law in the western part of the State. the western part of the Sullivan delivered a Fourth of July oration at Louisville, Kansas. brother is at Cation City, Co. Mable Gore is pursuing her musi studies during the summer. oration at Louisville, Kansas. Jas. Lawrence with a younger brother is at Canon City, Col. Miss Mattie Babcock is visiting friends in Greenville, Michigan. Carrie (Hastings) Fletcher will spend August at Eagle Springs. Frank Kelly, of Council Grove, will be with us again next year. Eva Howe will spend the remainder of the vacation in Lawrence. Victor Linley will study law next year with his uncle in Kentucky. Misses Ollie Thompson and Agnes Wright will return in September. R. E. Stout is engaged in local work on the Kansas City Journal. Prof. Arthur Canfield has been making frequent visits to Topeka. Carrie and Julia Watson will go to Colorado soon to visit their father. Frank Exline has removed his law office from Attica to Ashland, Kan. Charlie Elwell is frequently seen in Lawrence driving a span of mules. Nettie Hubbard is instructing in the Normal Institute at Ottawa, Kan. The Misses Powell are rusticating in the ruins of the Rake house. Nannie Anderson attended the Sunday school convention at Ottawa. Ada Briggs entertained the Mozart club at her home on Friday, July 17. in the parks of the Rocky mountains. Nannie Anderson attended the L. D. L. Tosh has opened a real estate office at Medicine Lodge, Kan. W. L. P. Burney is doing well as a young attorney at Medicine Lodge. Jennie Sutliff, of '86, does not think that she will enter school agan. Mrs. Annie (Mozley) Boddington leaves for England the coming Fall. Frank Exline, '83, paid his Lawrence friend a short visit last week. Olin Templin writes praises of the Olin Templin writes praises of the Courrier from Colorado Springs, Col. Scott Hopkins, '82, was visiting old friends in the city a few days ago. Prof. Dyche's latest addition to his collection is a healthy nine-pound boy. Miss Kate Stephens is recuperating at her beautiful home north of the city. Prof. Brownell is in Waterloo, N. Y. , visiting relatives until school pens. Laura Lyons is visiting Franc Hunt and Clara Coffin at Leavenworth. A. L. Burney is quietly rusticating on his father's farm near Harrisonville, Mo. Glen Miller makes frequent trips about the State to see his University friends. Scott Hopkins, '82, was visiting Clara Greenamyer has returned from a months eastern visit among friends. '87, Ella Ropes has returned from a two months visit in Wyandotte and vicinity. Hattie Haskell has gone to Manitou Springs, for the remainder of the summer. Dick Horton is not recognized now that he wears those immense (?) side burns. Prof. Marvin did the engineering work on the new natural history building. H. A. Smith has left Atchison to spend the rest of the summer in Effingham. Nettie Brown is at her home in Iowa, and will not return to K. S. U. next year. Frank Crowell made his Lawrence friends happy by a short visit a few weeks ago. Spangler's first case was a divorce suit; second, breach of promise. Doing well. Charles Linley is now managing an Atchison Bank, but will be back in September. Mamie Henshaw has lately returned from Olathe, where she made a very pleasant visit. Maggie Eidemiller and Fannie Pratt are visiting Alice Bartell in Junction City. Barry Hatch has received an appointment to West Point from President Cleveland. L. C. Jackson, of 78, familiarly known as Jack, is doing a good business at Wichita. Edna Maxwell has returned to her home in the east. She will not return next year. Prof. Arthur Canfield started Saturday for a visit to his home in Manchester, Vermont. The Misses Reeves write from Los Angeles, California, of a pleasant summer's vacation. Will Spencer has not decided whether to return to the University next year or not. W. S. Franklin is "working" northern Kansas in the interest of Spring's History of Kansas. Prof. Bailey is hurrying the workmen on his new residence, in order to complete it ere school opens. Mamie Swaim, formerly of '87, is spending the summer at her home in Washington, D. C. Prof. Kingsley, of the Leavenworth High school, will teach at a ladies' seminary at Rochester, N, Y. R. J, Curdy has been visiting with friends at Cottonwood Falls and is now at Yates Center. No. 42. E. C. Little is to be found at the University making himself familiar with the duties of clerk. Prof. Williams conducts the Wyandotte County Institute, with George Rose,'84, as assistant. W. H. Johnson and L. M. Powell are at work as instructors in the County Normal Institute here. Laura Lyons, Ben Akers and Nate McCague celebrated the Fourth of July with Nellie Dow at Olathe. Prof. "Kick" Elwell, of Baker University, a former K. S. U. student, has gone to his home in Vinland. Geo. N. Mickel is working in his father's office this summer. Mickel, Sr., is treasurer of Rocks County. Miss Hoagland is attending the summer term at Fulton & Trueblood's school of oratory at Kansas City. A Mr. Holmes, nephew of Doctor Munford of the Kansas City Times, will probably attend K. S. U. next year. Everybody will be pleased to hear W. H. Britton has again been advanced in the Santa Fe offices at Topeka. Percy Russell, '83, made a short visit home, and then returned to his ranche in the western part of the State. W. J. Morse has been admitted to the bar and now looms up as one of the promising attorneys of the Oskaloosa bar. Prof. L. W. Spring has just placed the manuscript for his History of Kansas in the hands of the publishers. The book will be out early in September. Miss Mamie Meade, sister of Miss Libbie, one of our former University belles, attended the mdsummer Phi Gamm hop. W. H. Johnson will conduct the Normal Institute in Rooks County for the coming month. He will be assisted by Foley. E. F. Caldwell, as a stockholder and member of the board of directors of the Lawrence Journal, begins life quite promising. Fred Bowersock was elected Vice President of the National Amateur Press Association at its recent convention in Boston. Crane and Gilmore are spending the heated term fishing in the ponds on Gilmore's father's farm. They report royal sport. W. S. Jenks, late superintendent of the Holden, Mo., schools, will assist Supt. Greenwood, of Kansas City, in the institute at Abilene. Ernest Himoe takes an interest in his father's medicine manufacturing company, and will for a few years at least, make Lawrence his home. Prof. Jas. H. Canfield attended the Williams college commencement. In a letter to the Topeka Capital he contrasts Williams to K. S. U. not at all to our discredit. Hannah Oliver, Frank Prentiss, Anna Murphy, L. H. Leach, Mina Marvin, E. F. Stanley, Ella Coltrane, Z. K. Billingsley and Marcia Wood, will represent the University in the Lawrence schools next year. Prof. Wyman, of the renowned Omaha Business College, and more recently of the Kansas City National Business College, has accepted the principalship of the Business College here. We congratulate Prof. Mcllaravy. Dr. Marvin having resigned his position in March, as superintendent of Haskell Institute, was relieved from the arduous duties thereof by his successor, about the 15th of July. The Doctor expects to look after his private affairs now for a time. The many friends made by Prof. Campbell during her sojourn here will be interested to hear of her marriage to James T. Eaglesfield, of Monroe, Mich. The Courier extends hearty congratulations and best wishes for a long and prosperous life to the newly wedded pair. Bion S. Hutchins sues the editor of the Kingman Courier for libel of character to the amount of $10,000. He has had provocation sufficient. A poor way to gain redress of grievances however great. Seldom pays. Bruce is rusticating at his home in Brunswick, Mo. It is understood he has been tendered the principalship of the colored schools of Leavenworth for the coming year. He will probably go to Columbia or Yale for a law course, however. Our old friend Albert S. Riffle is now draughtsman and assistant to Mr.H.D.Bush, engineer in charge of the truss bridge of the Northern Pacific. The work is much more difficult than the same work in the east, as the country is so unlike our eastern states. L. H. Leach has been elected by the school board of this city to the principalship of the central school. W. H. Johnson will be principal of the Emporia city schools for the coming year. W. C. Stevens will assist him. L. M. Powell has a position in the Newton schools. Jessie Austin and Kate Wilder in the Abilene schools. F. H. Clark principal of the Beloit schools. S. M. Cook principal of the Solomon City schools. Mr. C. D. Dean, who has ably filled the position of city editor of the Herald-Tribune for the past year, severed his connection with that paper Saturday evening to accept the city editorship on the Lawrence Journal. Thoroughly loyal to the interests of his employers, and conscientious in all respects, his loss will be severely felt by the Herald-Tribune. His energy and ability will prove to be one of the elements of success to the Journal, as well as to himself. To use the words of an experienced journalist, he is a man that "makes no mistakes." Admitted by some, personally liked by others and respected by all, he will undoubtedly do well, and we sincerely wish him success in his new field.—Gazette.