utronize G e thawing ought to other RD. Coal e, Kansas N RS! socially. prices. TAILOR up stairs. CH, DW oderate. A CO., ers in nery IALS. 4. complete KS ool use THE WEEKLY UNIVERSITY CES. LSON, IST, KAN. ER'S work. e Charges. IENDS. RS, arlor THE CITY. NCE, KAN. Cigars. ge Co. an. to loan at ible real esty is ample see them be- elsewhere, building. INS, Sec. SUBSCRIPTION FIFTY CENTS PER YEAR. ge. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. Vol. III. LOCAL. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. Get Your Record Straightened. Catalogue. White hats have made their appearance. Read L. Bullene & Co.'s VOLUN TARY. Read L. Bullene & Co.'s VOLUNTARY. "I can never be to them as I was once." All Oreats should be on hand this afternoon. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, APRIL 17, 1885 Moot court has adjourned until next October. The Sophs had an examination in zoo yesterday. The Freshman picnic seems to have lost itself. Miss Blood's prices are lower than anywhere in town. Plenty of beer and pretzels at the Providence club now. The Seniors are now discussing free trade and protection. It is rumored that Will Little will start a ladies' frat here. Look out for a big sensation in the social world in a few days. Workmen have been repairing the ceiling of the chapel this week. The Phil Gamms will have a social hop in their hall this evening. The third hour history class has been having quizzes all this week. Several books are missing from the library, and should be returned at once. There will be an election in Oread to-day. This of itself ought to draw a crowd. W. C. Spangler has been appointed to represent the laws commencement week. The Juniors have changed the night of their entertainment from May 8th to May 1st. The Senior law class ddr not meet last week, owing to the absence of Prof. Green. Query: Did Little borrow his hat from his visiting brother, or his washwoman's boy? Miss Hattie Haskell entertained a few of her friends at her home last Friday evening. Barnes has been added to the Oread committee to select June orator in place of Preston. The dam will soon be completed, and the river will then be in good condition for boating. Senator Plumb telegraphs that Sec. Bayard will surely be here and address the societies in June. A Freshman remarked on seeing a party of hunters starting for geese, that "the Sophs had better lay low." The Seniors have ordered their invitations for commencement week. They are the handsomest ever issued. Eighteen Seniors; thirty-six Sophs; twenty-two Juniors; fifty-eight Freshmen; total, one hundred thirty-four. The Science Club will take another trip in a week or two, and Prof. Bailey says it will not be to Kansas City. Everything is serene in the frat world this week. No expulsions, no resignations, not even a good sized row. The electric bells will be placed in the University in a few days. What will we do without Ross and his noisy old gong? The tennis boys have finally raised money enough to get the apparatus out, and are now ready for business or pleasure. Now do the lovesick lads and lasses wend their way to the fortune tellers, and are made happy for the small sum of a quarter. The faculty must wake up and attend chapel a little better or the Courier will be compelled to publish the black list again. The Kappa Alpha Thetais will entertain the Phi Kappa Pis at the residence of Miss Hattie Haskell, on the night of April 24th. Friday, April 9th, Mrs. Prof. Canfield left for the east. Sunday, April 12th, the prof. appeared with a new overcoat, kid gloves and cane. Prown grows lazy as he grows old. He now refuses to distribute the song books to the boys, and has erected a stand where they can help themselves. The ladies of the K. S. U. will do well to call on Miss Kate Blood, opposite the jail, on Pinckney Street, for the best work and latest styles in dressmaking. The Y. M. C. A. has re-elected Mr. Burr secretary of the association for another year. He has made a good officer, and a better selection could not have been made. Cards are out announcing the marriage of Mr. Fred A. Stocks and Miss Sallie Loveland. The wedding will take place at Independence, Wednesday, April 29th. We extend our hearty congratulations. The Phi Delta Thetas and the Kappa Kappa Gammas entertained Mr. and Mrs. Ridge at Harris' Saturday evening. Mr. Ridge is the president of the province of Phi Delta Theta, and Mrs. Ridge is an enthusiastic Kappa. Chapel appointments for week ending April 25th: Monday, A. J Seart, G. R. Schultz; Tuesday, Belle Smith, E. F. Thompson; Wednesday, Hattie Black; Thursday, Jennie Divelbess, Miss Hunt; Friday, W. Lane, Luella Palmer. Alas! One of the best friends of the students of the University in the city of Lawrence is Wm. Wiedemann. He is one of the most substantial stand-bys of our college papers. Do not forget him in the coming ice cream season. A ride, and by my side, A lose to me so dear. Next day the bill I pay, Alas, to me so dear. Some ingenious person has decorated the blackboard in Prof. Spring's room with drawings of the different fraternity pins and surmounted them with the following motto: "A fraternity is the outgrowth of a childish desire for mystery and breast pins. Prof. Dyche is devoting his time to mounting specimens. His collection is assuming good proportions, and the work reflects great credit on the prof. Some of the recent specimens are a white crane, double crested cormorant, white brant, golden eyed duck, a new gull and a large number of ducks. The Kappa Chapter of the I. C. Sorosia desires to correct any erroneous impressions which may have been created by floating reports in regard to the withdrawals of Jeannette Oliver and Clara Hunsicker from the society. It wishes it understood that the resignations were wholly voluntary, and further, that it is not responsible for any comments made in the college papers. The next lecture of the course will be delivered next Tuesday, by Mr. Jas, W. Steele. This lecture should be largely attended. Mr. Steele was the editor of the Kansas Magazine, and has written several books and stories of border life. He is quite well known as a writer, his non de plume being Deane Monahan. The lecture will probably be one of the best ever given, and will well repay the trouble of climbing the hill. Let us give Mr Steele a rausing audience. Orophilian Reception. Orophilian will this year, as usual, extend her members of the Senior class a reception as a token of the regard in which they are held for the work they have done in the welfare of the society. It will be given at the home of Miss Clara Greenamyer, on Vermont street. Miss Clara's pleasing faculty as a hostess will insure its success. The date was set last week for April 24, but there is some talk of changing to one week later. How many girls are engaged for commencement week. What the Courier Would Like so Know, How many persons Riggs has told his latest secret to. If a lecture isn't better than a theatre. Where the next fraternity row will occur. What is the matter with Sharrard and Crowell. If it is proper for widow landlads to court law students. If the lawn tennis club isn't one to be proud of. How many sub rosa frats there are here now. Who will be the first young lady to join it. That everybody had paid their subscription to the COURIER. Ask Burney about the "honey." PERSONAL. Graham will visit in Ohio this summer. Kate Merrill went to Topeka Tuesday. P. A. Huber was hit by a ball last Saturday. J. E. Curry made a flying visit home last week. Miss Sarah Brown is taking a short vacation at home. Miss Mina Marvin climbed the hill Wednesday morning. Miss Kate Frederick visited K. S. U. Monday morning. Miss Mamie Woodward has returned from the east. Mary Gilmore is expected home from the east to-day. Noble Prentiss will lecture one week from next Tuesday. Mr. George Lewis has donned the shield and dagger of the Phi's. Mary Henry has resolved to return here no more as a student. C. V. Penn, student of '81-82, has been quite ill, but is now better. E. J. Pachin went to his home. Oberlin, Decatur Co., Thursday. Jennie Peebles goes to Eudora today to spend Saturday and Sunday. Thos. Finney, of the Indian Territory, is visiting Dr. Frank Finney. E. M. Cox has left school and gone to Summer County,where he will reside. No.32. M. E. Gamble, who has been quite sick with pneumonia, is back in the halls. Nettie Hubbard and Pearl Young now share each others joys and sorrows. Miss Della Sloan, of Topeka, visited her brother, A. L. Sloan, last week. Miss Alice Cummings visited at home in Nortonville the first of this week. C. S. Metcalfe attended Sunday school at the Unitarian church Sunday. Miss Lena Moulton took her examinations last week, preparatory to going. S. A. Detwiler is now engaged in railroad surveying at Bordeaux, Nebraska. Miss Franc Hunt will be over from Leavenworth to-day to visit her friends. Mary Miller gave a lunch party to a few of her friends last Tuesday evening. Minnie Wakefield is improving rapidly, and will resume her studies next fall. Mr. W. T. Hartley, of Wabash College, attended the Phn Psi meeting last week. Prof Bailey is one of the faculty of the "Correspondence University," of Chicago. Nickel is head cook of the Providence club. Beer, sausage and pretzels forever! George B. Watson, '84, has fully decided to attend Columbia law school next year. Miss Maud Mansfield has returned to hard work at school, after a short but pleasant visit home. Geo. Nicholson, assistant general passenger agent of the A., T. & S. F. road, was in the city last week. Mr. W. F. Holt, a member of Phi Kappa Psi from Waback College, was in the city last Saturday. A few of Miss Kate Stephens' friends spent the evening most pleasantly with her last Tuesday. Prof. Miller has resigned his position as conductor of the Normal Institute of Douglas County this summer. Miss Anna Kenyon, who has been visiting with Miss Socia Buckingham, has returned to her home in Reno. J. W. Ohrum has withdrawn from the University and will devote himself to the insurance business. The Courier wishes him success. Miss Clara Hanback, who has been visiting with Lillie McMillan, in Chicago, has returned to her Kansas home. Mr. Al Chambers, of Wabash College, spent Sunday with W. L. Smith, the religious man of the Tennessee Street boarding club. Prof. L. M. Spray, of Topeka, in making his remittance to the COURIER this week, "taffled" our management considerably. Mrs. S. M. H. Gardner and Mrs. A. H. Wilson, of Fayetteville, N. Y., visited the University last Monday morning. Mr. T. E. Neal and his sister, Miss Nora Neal, stopped off one day with E. F. Neal. They were returning from New Orleans. Spangler and Glen Miller are regular attendants at the "auction." They are laying in a supply of household goods for future contingencies. P. L. Soper sprained his ankle quite severely at Quinney. He is now able to hobble around. Mr. S. will not attend commencement this year. J. C. Smith left this week for Dorrace, Kansas, where he will be engaged in the mercantile business for the summer. He expects to return next year. M. J. Keys, '84, is principal of the Solomon City schools. He is also editor of the Solomon Valley Democrat. It is rumored he will in the near future make the heart of a fair maid of Delphos, Kansas, happy. DeWitt Bowers had a very happy surprise on his 22nd birthday, April 2nd. He visited his father at Delphos, Kan., on that evening, where to his surprise he found a large number of the "elite of the town" had gathered to celebrate his birthday. He received several handsome presents from his friends.