--- PSU Reandin gue UREAUS. s in all. Gen. M'gr es, Iowa. THE STUDENTS JOURNAL s teachers schools and THEIR our Leagueancies bevoid sharp Of Kansas State University. BRUCE. to the Na- board Jour- paper, to-ill branches g now. e managers ers' Bureau fine line of Store. usset shoes Store. LEY'S. LEY'S. Counter. style. Shoe Maker. rence, Kan 不 St, rtist. and Meals. bs SON & SON. ERY, tts Street. ERY DAY. ROPRIETOR. COUNTER. Place. $3.00 $3.50 vrence, Kas Scars or Films Our houses Lids when all Pamphlet trees Falls, N. Y. --business, Shorndash graduates. WE PA of penmanship free d Gymnasium uncles. Newest 1207 high grade ents are all you.? Write rises, prices and pay you. and BOY'S TIES. 0 and up. PURSE." Bess and Mitts, ing Tourna- tet Covers. Packers, MPANY, description. ue DELPHIA. nestnut St. ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, MAY 25.1894. LOCAL NOTES. Ice at Griffin's. Are at Griffin's. McCurdy Bros, the grocers. Shanes photos are the best. Finest tobacco at Smith's. Shane's photos are the best. Abe Levy's $1 shirts can't be beat. For fancy and staple groceries go to J. M. JONES. Abe Levy has a fine line of straw bats. Strawberries, sweet and fresh at J. M. JONES. Jas. Edmondson is the man to repair your shoes. Prof. Blackmar's class in taxation did not meet Thursday. Go to Jas. Edmondson for neat repairing. 915 Mass, St. J. P. Cracraft went to Sabetha on business last Saturday. Bedell and Hutchinson, old students were visiting here this week. Lark Smith left Wednesday for Mer iden, Kan, where he has a position. If you have shoes that need repairing go to Jas. Edmondson, 915 Mass. St. Plants, cut flowers and floral decorations at Mrs. Luther's green house, Mass. St. We still sell the Palm Oil Bath Soap, made by Solon Palmer. It has no superior. LEIS DRUG Co. Buy your new straw hat of Abe Levy Plants, cut flowers and floral decorations at Mrs. Luther's green house. Mass. St. The Senior Pharmacy students have been doing some laboratory work in Toxicology. Go to Smith's News Depot for all the Kansas City, St. Louis and Chicago dalles. McCurdy Bros. are the grocers. Do not buy before seeing them and getting their prices. nificent church Prof. Duniap left for Chillicothe, O. Wednesday, being called there by the death of his father. Prof. Adams will leave for Ann Arbor the last of the week to attend Commencement there. J. E. Dyche, the Superintendent of Schools at Horton, was visiting the University yesterday. The Leis Drug Co. will sell you a tooth-brush that will hold its bristles, and at a very low price. You need a bath sponge and the Leis Drug Co. have the best stock to select from. Call in. Clubs will do well to buy their meat and groceries of J. M. Zook, as he can furnish both at bottom rock prices. Chancellor Snow gave his last lecture of the Evolution Course Thursday, on the subject: "Evolution and Religion." Call and see the new meat market in J. M. Zook's store. You can order your meat and groceries all at once there. For canned fruits and fine groceries go to McCurdy Bros. They have the finest line in the city. Give them a call. Mr. W. "Windy" Reno, Principal of Minneapolis High School, and Miss Maggie Rush, the Assistant Principal of the same school, are back to spend the summer vacation. Do you want good groceries? Then go to J, M. Jones grocery store. He sells all kinds of the best groceries to be had. See the new Straw Hats at Abe Levy's. Prof. Jones, instead of having the regular class exercise last Thursday, read to the Sophomore Class an article of his own upon "The Relation of Edmund Burke to Ireland." All Seniors having forensics or special reports due to Prof. Dunlap will please present them at the office of the English Department not later than Monday, May 28th. E.M.J.Horkins. An interesting meeting of the electrical seminary was held last Monday afternoon. Owing to the absence of Prof. Blake and Mr. Shepard the greater part of the hour was filled by talks from Mr. Rice and Mr. Topping. This was the last meeting of this year. The members will be given credit for work done in the Seminary next year, and it expected that the meetings will be of even greater interest than they were this year. Goto J. M. Zook's for fancy groceries. Go to Tipton's. Give Pat Graham a call. He will treat you right. Shame's photos are the best. See those #1 shirts at Ace Leys. J. S. Tipton is the student's barber. 836 Mass. St. Raymond's mead is the most refreshing drink in town. The Senior Pharmacy class had its picture taken Thursday. Commencement announcements are being sent out this week. Prof. Blake has been confined to his room this week by sickness. Jean Wattle will furnish music for "hors" at reasonable prices. Special rates to students' clubs for fine groceries and meats at For fine guitar and mandolin music go to Jean Waffle. He will please you. Prof Hopkins will leave early next week for Princeton, where he will take the degree of Ph.D. J. A. McQuiston left last Friday for Colorado Springs where he will spend the summer. J. M. JONES. Boys, now is the to take your girls boat-riding and Dollie Graber will fur,nish you with the boats. Our Soda Water is always Ice Cold, and only pure fruit juice syrups used at the Leis Drug Co's. fountain. Money to loan on personal property at Pasargad Cham Bazaar Ernest Robinson, '63, who has been studying medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, is back for the vacation. 723 Mass. Street. Prof. E. H. S. Bailey is on the program of a Sunday School Institute to be held next Sunday at Blue Mound in this county. Don't forget that Gao, Hollingberry is the leading tailor and will fit you out in the noblest of summer suits at reasonable prices. There are many perfumes at Raymond's Drug Store that will please you. Have you tried Lundborg's Peach Blossom? It is the latest. The members of the Faculty were entertained last evening at the home of Prof. Blackmar, who gave a reception in honor of his sister. Rev. T. D. Wallace, of Chicago, who is to preach the Baccalaureate sermon this year, will preach on Sunday morning, June 3rd, at the Presbyterian church. To the graduating class: Shane will make your pictures at the lowest rates, and will not require that all pictures be taken at his studio in order to get the rate. If you expect to attend a business college write to Cocrod and Smith, Lawrence, Kas., Atchison, Kas., or St. Joseph, Mo. Their schools are the best. Catalogue free. Mrs. Graham's toilet preparations for the ladies kept constantly in stock at Barber's Bros.' Drug Store. Call for little book entitled, "How to Become Beautiful." The Seniors will have charge of the Y. M C. A. meeting at Music Hall next Sunday. This is to be the final meeting of the year. All men in the University are invited to be present. The meeting begins at 3 o'clock. The ladies, Physical Culture classes have been excused from practice for the rest of this term as Mrs. Clarke the instructress is so busy drilling students for the different Commencement exercises. Frank Whitzel, who fell and bruised his leg, has had to have an operation performed on it, because of the decay of the bone. Part of the bone below the knees has been removed. He will not be back to school this year. The members of the Senior Class are at present engaged in exchanging portraits. It is becoming quite the style to place something like this on the back of the picture: Archibald Smith, born June 1, 1860; M ___, In the Freshman Chemistry Class the students are required to make original experiments and to write the reaction. One young lady was required to make cornbread, and the following was found jotted down in her notebook: "Made cornbread; reaction, family all dead." Shane's photos are the best. Will Matteson visited last Sunday in Ablene. Ice at Griffin's. W. T. Bowen and Miss Edith Davis spent Sunday in Topeka. Get a chicken for your Sunday dinner at J. M. JONES. Summer underwear at Abe Levy's. If your shoes need repairing go to Pat Graham's on east Warren st. Shane's photos are best. I keep a full line of the best groceries in the land. J. M. JONES. Pat Graham will repair your shoes neatly and promptly at reasonable prices. Go to J. M. Zook's for fancy groceries. Shane's photo studio is the place to have your work done well and cheap Mr. D. F. Baker of '93, walked up to Lawrence from Baldwin last Sunday. The local editor of this paper is not responsible for certain items which appeared in the last edition. Students, when you desire a good clean shave go to J. S. Tipton's barber shop 873 Mass St. R. C. Hopkids had a wonderful experience on his visit to Kansas City last Saturday and Sunday. Do you want good clothes at the most reasonable rates? Then go to George Hollingberry and he will fit you out. The best place in the city to get your spring, summer or dress suit is at Geo. Hollongberry's, the practical tailor. He guarantees satisfaction and is bound to suit you. "Deliciosa" Waltz; "Vera May" Polka; "Matalroi" Waltz; "Bone-Brake" Schottische, by R. S. Saunders, are the latest things for mandolin and guitar. See them at Bell's Music Store. Prof. Preyer has just had a set of easy octavo studies for the piano published by Olin Bell. Music teachers wishing something easy in octaves for their pupils will do well to examine them. Miss Cora Becker has received a letter from the Zoological Directory of Berlin, Germany addressed to Cora Becker, Esq., Assistant in Historical Geology. The class has already dubbed her Esquire Becker. Mr. Daniel Hooker Spencer, a graduate of '83, who has been studying medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, is in Lawrence to spend his summer vacation, and visited his many University friends this week. Mr. Spencer was one of the business managers on the STUDENT'S JOURNAL last year and the STUDENT'S JOURNAL takes great pleasure in welcoming its friends. Engineering Notes. The Civil Engineer's Club are to have a club bdil in a few days. Different groups of the Senior engineers in the class in specifications and contracts are working on the following subjects: A design for an easy carriage drive to the University, an extension of an electric light plant for North Lawrence, the installation o a plant for an electric road to connect the University and the town. The Civil Engineers' Club was addressed Thursday by Prof. Green on "Legal Points Connected with Engineering." Next week they will listen to a talk by G. M. Walker. At the regular meeting of the Language Conference held last Friday evening, the election of officers for the ensuing year was held. Those elected were: President, Dr. A. M. Wilcox; Secretary, Miss Margaret Menet; Programme committee, Prof. Sterling, Miss Eugenie Gallo and Miss Florence Parrott. The conference has been very successful in the past year and the present officers intend to do all in their power to make it even more successful. The Language Conference. Great Millinery Sale. Mrs. Gardner is the old reliable milliner of Lawrence. All goods give perfect satisfaction and the great sale this week proved to the ladies that everything in the millinery line was sold at the lowest prices ever seen in Lawrence. Now is the time to get your stylish trimmed hats. The Senior Class have decided to give the net receipts from the play to the Senior Loan Fund. The larger the audience the larger will be this fund. SENIOR CLASS PLAY' SNOW HALL Wyland spent Sunday at Hesper, Kansas. Prof. Dyche has received some more skins of wild-cats and ocelots from Texas. The latest from the taxidermy shop is the following conundrum: "When did George Washington take his first carriage ride?" "When he took a hack at the cherry tree." Six more sketches of fossil peccaries from Goodland, Kansas, came in this week. Tucker is making some bromide portraits of distinguished chemists for Prof. Bailey. As soon as the outside work on the new library building is completed and grading done, a photograph of it will be taken and the pictures of all the University buildings will be grouped on one plate. The optional botany class have had their pictures taken. Vol. II. No. 35. The botany department is preserving in alcohol specimens of plants in all the different stages of their development. These are to be used by the classes in Histology. Each student is to have a plant assigned him of which he is to make a careful study. The results of his investigation are to be embodied in a Thesis. The Physiological Botany classes are performing some striking experiments. Overton is taking a few day's vacation. Miss Becker lately received a pamphlet from Germany, addressed to "Corn Becker, Esq." Dr. Williston has just received from Comanche County, Kansas, the fossi remains of an elephant. Prof. Haworth is still collecting minerals in southeastern Kansas. A party of a half dozen from K. U. will go to the Bad Lands of South Dakota this summer for the purpose of making collections of specimens in paleontology. They will start immediately after Commencement. Their base of supplies will be Hermosa in the Black Hills, and their camp will be on White River. The party will be under the direction of Dr. Williston and will include besides him Messrs. Overton, Case, Hill, Brown, Riggs and Dickinson. The Bad Lands are rich in fossils and it is to be hoped that the trip will prove a profitable one. The party will be gone until about the first of August and may go as far as Yellowstone Park. The fossils to be found are mostly large mammals. The Civil Engineering Society. Capt. G. M. Walker will address the Civil Engineering Society on Thursday May 31, upon the subject: "How Engineering Aids in the Advancement of our Country." The talk will doubtless be interesting and instructive and all students are invited to attend. Prof. Green of the Law Department addressed the Society yesterday afternoon. Miss Rosa Ridgeway who is to be the first graduate of our new School of Elocution gives her graduating matinee at Music Hall to-morrow afternoon. The proof for the catalogue of the School of Pharmacy was sent to the state printer Monday. Prof. Sayre very pleasantly entertained the students of the School of Pharmacy last Friday evening at his home. Rev. Chas. M. Sharpe of El Reno, Ok., was the guest of Geo. O. Foster this week. Mr. Sharpe intends to spend the summer in Lawrence and take special work in the University next year. He was formerly a student at Butler University in Indiana. Prof. W. H. Carruth addressed an equal suffrage meeting at Kanwaka, in this county, last Friday evening. Pinero's beautiful comedy, "Sweet Lavender" was presented at the opera house last Friday evening by an amateur theatrical company headed by Miss Bertha Creighton of Kansas City. The play was given for the benefit of the Athletic association. THE COLLEGE WORLD. The Wesleyan Advance is advancing. Compare these three clippings: Our newest exchange is the Ariel, a bright and interesting paper published by the students of the University of Minnesota. The front page, however, was printed in Impressa, imprinted on the advertising were absent.-Rocky Mountain Collegian. The cover of the Collegian is certainly artistic and appropriate, but the contents might be considerably improved.—Ariel. We find the advertisements on the front page of the Students' Journal of Kansas University, the most interesting reading in the paper.—Ariel. Athletics. Although the Ariel resented the jab which the Collegian gave her, she is evidently strenue on the idea which accompanied it and forthwith she looked around for somebody to use it on. When you want to spit out your spite on somebody else, Ariel, it would look better if you would rack those massives brains of yours for something new. The action of the Faculty in refusing to recognize any person as a bona fide student, when the object of his scheduling was known to be that he might participate in athletics, is to be most highly commended. Let us have pure athletics or none. Since college athletics exist solely for the benefit of the students it is a mistaken idea to endeavor to get outsiders to participate. It stops us from developing material from among the students and lowers the standard generally. We would recommend that no student who has not been regularly scheduled for full work for at least three terms, and whose class record during that time has not been satisfactory, be allowed to compete in any inter-collegiate contest. The eastern colleges have adopted a vigorous code of rules to govern athletics, and we can see no reason why somewhat similar rules should not be adopted here.—Vidette Reporter, U. of I. In the fifth inning, however, the Indians began to play ball, and Buckhart, Augusta, Peters and Winchester scored for Haskell. This tied the score. Baker failed to get a man first. The Indians and the Bakerites furnished amusement for a large crowd of spectators last Saturday at McCook field. The game, although rather rocky, was close and ended in a scrap. The umpire, Cowtes Mud, was an Indian, but his decisions were as fair as possible. The Bakerites, who could win neither by continual kicking nor by playing ball, got very tired in the ninth inning, and went home disgusted. The game was awarded to Haskell. The Bakerites started out well and managed to keep a good lead. At the end of the third inning the game stood 7 to 2 in their favor. Williams and Stone scored for Haskell in the eighth, and Carpenter made a run for Baker again making the score a tie, 9 to 9. In the sixth inning Haskell drew a blank, and one Bakerite crossed the home plate. Score, Baker 8; Haskell, 7. Neither side scored in the seventh, and Baker was confident of winning. In the ninth the Bakerites were dissatisfied with a decision made by the umpire and left the grounds. The game was promptly awarded to Haskell, 9 to 0. The positions of the players were as follows BAKER. BAKER. Pardee, s s Hoffman, r f Toumy, c Toomy, c Markham, p Carpenter, 3 b Brown, 1 b Messon, 2 b Lefroy, 1 f HASKELL. Stover, ss Williams, rf Peter, c f Burkhard, c Cweet, p Choteau, 3 b. Augusta, 1 b. Tongquual, 2 Winchester, 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Haskell...0 1 0 1 5 0 0 2 0 -9 Baker...1 2 4 0 0 1 0 1 -9 The Base Ball team did not cover itself with glory on its recent trip although it managed to pull one game out of the fire. On Tuesday the score was Minneapolis 18, K. U. 12, and on Saturday, Minneapolis 12, K. U. 5. Monday's game at Salina was won by a score of 25 to 15. Get a ticket to Kansas City and go down to the game and yell for K. U. to-morrow. A little encouragement of this kind goes a long ways. This is the last game of the season and Missouri should be defeated.