THE STUDENTS JOURNAL. 11 THE LAWRENCE BUSINESS COLLEGE. LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK BUILDING 11 $ \Delta $ LAWRENCE, KANSAS. Established in 1869. Oldest in the state. Owned by the Coonrod & Smith Business College Co. and operated in connection with the Atchison (Ks.) Business College and the St. Joseph, (Mo.) Business University. Most complete and practical commercial and shorthand courses offered in the west. Inter-collegiate business practice carried on by correspondence among the pupils of the three colleges. A handsomely illustrated 64-page catalogue containing full information concerning courses of study, tuition rates, etc., will be mailed free upon request. Address. A.C.OONROD. Secretary. Lawrence. Kansas A. G. COONROD, Secretary, Lawrence, Kansas. LOCALS. Miss Grace Duff enjoyed a visit from her brother last Sunday. Plumb's father visited him for a short time Wednesday. Miss Edith Davis will probably return to the University next term. Was Prof. Adams ever a Prep. Medic.? His cat came back last Monday. "Billie" Madden went home Wednesday eve. He had suddenly become fat. Some very interesting papers on economic subjects of the Political Economy class. Jaque says the cider is all right, but he objects to holding the sack while the others hunt. A picture of the blond haired maiden would be cherished by some of the students. Plumb, Baldridge and Squires are great pedestrians, they walked to Tonganoxie last Sunday. Miss Anna Edwards will spend the vacation with the Misses Cook at their home in Herrington. Miss Willie Tomilson of Topeka was the guest of Miss May Cook last Saturday and Sunday. Ask Morgan, Welch, and Williams how they enjoyed their snipe hunt last Saturday evening. The library will be open every day through vacation, except on Christmas and New Years days. The rolls of the University reveal the gratifying fact that there are now 837 students in attendance. A movement is on foot to have an all-Kansas all-Missouri foot ball game in Kansas City on Christmas afternoon. Misses Ella and Lingah Anderson departed yesterday for their home in Morganville to spend the Holidays. Sherman was down visiting friends at the University last week. He will start for South America sometime next month. The foot-ball team of the University of Chicago went through town yesterday. It was on the Missouri Pacific westward bound. Clyde Miller has become very much interested in the lectures on Hygeine. He did not even want to miss the one given a week ago yesterday. Will Bowen spent Sunday in Topeka. Charlie Lease has returned from California. He visited the University of California while out there. Prof. William Hill of the University of Chicago has been forced to take a vacation for his health. He has over worked himself since he has been a Professor in the University of Chicago. Prof. Hill is a K.U. boy. George Norberg, '93 of Pharmacy school visited K. U. friends last Sunday. He is located in K.C. and is doing a prosperous business with prospects of owning one of the finest drug stores in the city in a short time. The Economic Seminary met last Monday evening and listened to an interesting and valuable review of James Hale's "National Railways" by W. C. Dick. It then adjourned on account of the elocutionary entertainment. L. D. Kirk and wife are visiting friends and relatives in Lawrence. Mr. Kirk is a graduate of the Law department and at present a practicing attorney of Enid Ok. He says that no graduate can afford to do with out the Students Journal.