THE STUDENTS JOURNAL. 17 arly of the the call city of ka for the Uniiduring he was ear men rely reof ceraused Univer- Percy Leland is clerk in the Wichita State bank. Jim Owens, '93, will study law at the University this year. Spooner Library will be dedicated about the first of October. Steinberger will be assistant in Pharmacy this year. He will also play foot ball. Howard Martindale is clerk in the Madison bank at Madison. He will return in September. W. W. Reno, '93, will continue to teach school at Minneapolis, and E. C. Hickey '93, at Chapman. Misses Sholer and Douthart have been conducting physical culture classes at Wamego and Pratt. E. H. Lees, who graduated from the Law School with the class of '94, is President of the Alumni Association of Cooper Memorial College. Shellenbarger has been offered the position of Physical Director at Drake University in Iowa. It is, however, probable that he will return to K. U. Later reports have it that Chancellor Canfield will not accept the offer of Ohio State University. Our local on page sixteen is, therefore, incorrect. D. F. Jantzen will teach near Newton. Joslin is running a drug store at Rossville, and Lewis Voeltzel is working in a drug store at Kansas City, Mo. Professors Haworth and Williston attended an irrigation meeting in Western Kansas a few days ago. If the dry weather continues much longer we may expect irrigation meetings under the shadow of Mount Oread. Students who took the examination at the University in May, for teachers' State Certificates, think it is about time that a report was made by the examiners. Those who desire to teach this year want the certificates to help them in getting positions. It is hard to see why it should take three months to read and grade a few examination papers. Claudius C. Stanley will probably stump the State in the interest of his father, who is Republican candidate for State Superintendent of Public Instruction. Chancellor Snow's party, who are hunting insects in the Magdalena Mountains near Magdalena, New Mexico, report very good success, having already obtained about five hundred specimens. They also had one exciting adventure, a sudden mountain storm filling the canon in which their camp is located and almost washing them away. Beside the Chancellor there are in the party Will and Frank Snow, Case, Kahl, and Menke. They will return about the first of September. The prospects for an avenue up Mount Oread are brightening. After consulting with the City Engineer, Mr. R. W. Sparr has assured the City Council that if the city will appropriate $600 the rest of the amount necessary for the undertaking can be raised by private subscription. At a recent meeting of the council it was voted to appropriate the $600 whenever the private subscriptions were raised. This avenue is to begin at the intersection of Ohio and Berkley streets, and will pass diagonally up the hill toward the water tower. This is an improvement that should be made at once, as there is now no good road up Mt. Oread. Many of this year's law graduates have already begun to practice law. Rufus Melvin is at Lawrence; Thomas D. Bennett at Phoenix, Arizona; Ralph Campbell at Kansas City, Mo.; J. M. Challiss at Atchison; the two Cox brothers form the firm of Cox & Cox at Independence; A. F. Cranston at Parsons; A. E. Dempsey at Perry, O. T.; J. C. Foulks, law offices Mexican Central Railroad, City of Mexico; Pliny Harmon, firm of Hamilton & Harmon, Clifton; W. E. Higgins, with Lathrop, Morrow, Fox & Moore, Kansas City, Mo.; A. R. Miller at Salida, Col., S. C. Morgan at Denver; L. A. Parke teaching institute near Russell; W. E. Railsback in Buchan's office at Kansas City, Kansas; T. S. Salathiel at Independence.