THE STUDENTS JOURNAL Of Kansas State University. JNE DOLLAR A YEAR. B]d'g. LOGAL NOTES LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1893. Griffin sells coal! Safeties at Howell's. Griffin, the coal man! "King of Scorchers" at Howell's. Pat Graham, No. 7, East Warren St. See Howell's bicycle ad on third page. Pocket knives at Smith's news stand Fountain nets at Smith's news stand Hollingberry makes student's dress suits. VOL. I. NO. 25. Buddleson is the students laundry agent. Miss Lottie Barber for novelties in millinery. Nic Kuhn, the tailor, 820 Massachu setts street. Everybody should send laundry with Huddleson. Pat Graham makes a specialty of student work. Custom made shoes at No. 7, East Warren street. Go to Miss Lottie Barber for new Spring bonnets. Best clothing at Hollingberry's, the practical tailor. Tobacco and cigars of the finest kind at Smith's news stand. Topeka and Kansas City daily papers at Smith's News Depot. Howell's wheels have Morgan and Wright pneumatic tires. Smith's news depot in Eldridge house block is headquarters for sporting goods The Leis Drug Co., are agents for Tyler's headache powders, they cure every time. Laundry gathered Monday and delivered Friday by Huddleson. Good work guaranteed. See our line of Hair and Cloth Brushes. We give you value for your money. Leis Drug Co. Go to the first shoe-repairing shop east of Massachusetts street on the south side of Warren. W. G. Nealy, of the electrical engineering department, has gone to Chicago on electrical work connected with the World's Fair. Why does the Santa Fe carry most of the passenger business in and out of Lawrence? Because it has eighteen daily passenger trains and gives the best satisfaction to the traveling public. If you want anything in the tailor line, give Nic Kuhu a trial. He will do your work as cheap as the cheapest. For photographic views taken about the state house in Topeka during the session of the legislature and "Kansas War" address, W. F. FAROW. What's the use of having friends if you don't use them. The Santa Fe route is the best friend Lawrence and the University has on earth. 811 Kansas Aye, Topeka, Kan. Go to Hotel Victoria when at Kansas City, Rooms ensuite or single. Baths and closets attached to each room. Rates $2.50 and $3.00 per day. Take Ninth St. cable from Union depot. Buckwalter & Co., Proprietor s. Struggling. Are you struggling with yourself and others about your Spring or Graduating Gown? These trifles are readily overcome after you inspect the many choice fabrics, suitable for street and evening costumes we are now showing. You ought to have one of our Empress Capes or Jackets, or New Kid Gloves. We solicit your trade. We know we can please you better than any other store. INNES. Fullerton visited in Atchison. C. E. Joslin was out of town Mondav. S. T. Gilpie was in Topeka last week. Dum spent vacation at Garnet. | Shockley returned from Leavenworth Monday. The Watkins club has finished its tennis courts. Jay Withington went home for vacation and returned Monday. Several independents gave a stag social last Saturday evening. A. J. and Dean Foster spent vacation in Kansas City and Gardener. John Steele has been thinking [ately of] taking treatment for obesity. Evans & Joslin are new sign painters. They have decorated their room. Fulton and Hutchinson spent a few days at their home in Marysville, Kan. R. W. Cone enjoyed a visit from his mother and aunt last Saturday. Liuville will assist Prof. Kellogg in the Zoological laboratory this half term. A. E. Huddleston set the pace for Leavenworth society during the past week. Miss Nora Lees and Miss Clarke spent their vacation at their home, Minneapolis, Kansas. Dr. Williston lectured at Sedgwick Monday night and at Music hall on Tuesday evening, The department of entomology is sending away a collection of myriapods to be described and named. Prof. Haworth is in Chicago on business connected with the geological exhibit at the World's Fair. The revival at the Quaker church was a popular resort for students who remained in town last week. Miss Nette Atkinson left March 29 for her home in Sterling, Kansas. Her many friends hope for her return next year. Chas. L. Dix, late of the engineering lepartment, took a short vacation in Kansas City before returning home. He will remain at Sterling. E. H. Lees, one of the enterprising junius of the Law school, left at the end of the half term. He expects to return at the first of next year a full fledged senior. Several students worked nine hours a day in the engineering shops during the spring recess. It is rumored that one industrious engineer borrowed the shop keys and had the lathes humming all day Sunday. Dan Hammond left Lawrence for Wichita on Saturday morning, and the Sunday morning Eagle said that Mrs. D. L. Hammond, a student of the State University, arrived last evening. Dan will have to explain. At the meeting of the American Dialect Society in Chicago next summer, Prof. Carruth will read papers on the language used to domestic animals, and the employment of school children in dialect study. The society was formed four years ago, at Harvard, for the investigation of the various English dialects of America. The dialects are studied with reference to pronunciation, grammar, vocabulary, and geographical distribution. Prof. Kellogg returned from California last Friday. He brought with him some valuable additions to the cabinets of entomology. Among them is a collection of scale insects. He says that scale insects are the great pest of California and are at present the great subject for economic study there. His classes began work on Wednesday. The Betas repaired the tennis courts in south park Monday. Barnum Brown returned from his visit to the north part of the state Monday. The class in Nineteenth Century literature is studying Sheldon's Adler. W. A. Matteson was in Abilene. M. A. Gorrill left school at the end of the half term. He will return next September Miss Henrichs visited at the home of Miss Bosworth, near Ottawa, during vacation. Clarence Sears has an article in the March Review on The Standard of University Living. The Sigma-Chis gave a dance Monday night at Frazier's hall. About forty couples were present. The Review for March, which was issued Tuesday, contains an interesting article from the pen of John J. Ingalls. The city Y. M. C. A. bath rooms were put in running order Monday evening. They will soon be opened to members. The tennis courts about town have been repaired, and the season is in full sway with a large number of students. Ice cream parlors will do a big business this summer, judging from the number of bets for the cream made in the halls lately. Boarding clubs have been growing less popular with the students during the past month. Several are on the verge of dissolution. Chas. Frederick, '92, is visiting his many friends at the University. He has been surveying for a railroad in southern Kansas. The April number of the Agora will contain a reply to Col. Phillips' attack on the young crowd, written by an ex-student of the University, C.S. Finch. A University picnic would be the next thing in order for the Independents to try their hands at. It would probably become a fixture and increase University spirit. The Board of Regents meets today. The appropriations will be assigned to the various departments and the location of the new buildings will probably be determined. Many people in the East think that the University is located in Topeka. A bill of lading recently received shows that a box intended for the University was sent to Topeka and laid there some time. A number of students gathered at the home of Miss May Spencer Friday evening in honor of Miss Ensign of Topka A very pleasant evening was passed in games and conversation. The Freshman Botany class have finished the study of cryptogams and have entered the laboratory to study the morphology of flowering plants. Some members of the class have shown considerable ability in the study of cryptogams and doubtless will continue the study of them independently. Prof. Dyche has written from Chicago asking for the photographs of Commanche, taken at different stages of mounting. These will be exhibited by the side of the horse. Things are getting livier every day in University circles. The World's Fair craze is still on; dancing has assumed the form of a mania; base ball and tennis are raging; boating and picnics are on the tapis; field day sports and amateur theatricals absorb all conversation; until, in the *swirl* of society and athletics, the student must hunt for the nine hours to devote to studies. D. D. Gear was in Kansas City. F. J. Lange spent vacation in Seneca Holton and Topeka. A number of professors spent vacation in garden making. The change of seasons is not very conducive to hard study. Prof, Williston's family has gone east to spend the summer. Len. Steadman spent the vacation at his home in Junction City. Walter E. Wilson was home for several days during the vacation. Ralph Elmore visited his home at Nortonvillan, Kau., during vacation; C. W. Armor returned Tuesday from a few days' visit in Atchison. Herb Levy is spending a prolonged vacation in the Windy Wonder. C. H. Lease returned yesterday from Wichita where he visited for a week. A set of castings for a new lathe has been received by the electrical engineering shops. M. A. Smith will not return to school this term. It is reported he will go to Chicago soon. M. Sreymour Davis has been appointed state architect in place of J. G. Haskell. Many students and professors are addicted to bicycle riding. It has not become fashionable with the lady students however. S. J. Hunter is on the program of the Y.M.C.A. conference next Saturday to be held in Kansas City. His subject is the Y.W.C.A. in the University. Herbert Thompson spent vacation in Edwardsville, M. A. Smith in Cawker City and Chester Dum, in Beloit. Professor Templin lectured in Olathe last Saturday afternoon before the county teachers' association. Major Shockley has left the University to accept an appointment to the U.S. naval academy at Annapolis. He will start for the east in about two weeks. The Boston courier has accepted several charming pieces of verse written by Mr. Lange. Mr. Lange's poems are favorites and receive many favorable comments. W. C. Fogle will read a paper on "Junior Y. M. C. A. work" at the first district conference of the Y. M. C. A. at Kansas City, Kan., next Saturday. Dr. Burke, of Argentine, a former student of the University, was on Mt. Oread last Tuesday. He is very well pleased with the University and its prospects. The Sophomore class in elocution finishes the course in declamations next Monday, and the remainder of the course will consist of weekly debates on questions of the day. There are two vacancies on the invitation committee of the Independent dancing association. Filling self-appointed offices causes considerable comment among the members and an interesting time is expected at the next meet-meeting. A few more weeks will give to the trees their leafy dress. The green branches will shade the hot payment and, meeting overhead, will turn the long auctions into verdant bowers. As thou dusk of evening falls and the pretty town girls begin to promenade, the heart of the freshman will lead him to the chase, and when the soft moonlight and the twitter of the mandolin makes enchanting a thousand lovers' lanes, the student will take back all he said of Lawrence in the cold, dreary winter long before. H. D. Wilson was in Holton during vacation. F. A. Lutz has withdrawn from the University. Miss Mary Snow spent vacation in Kansas City. McLaughlin visited with Watt in Car- bondale during vacation. O. R. Searl visited with Plumb in Emporia for several days. M. A. Smith is visiting friends in Cawker City. He will return next week. C. R. Troxel stopped in Topeka on his way to Abilene last week. Miss Effie Loader apent last week at her home in Clay Center. "A middirected postal card," is the way Mustard explains the information which he received by mail that he arrived safely in Lawrence after, a pleasant visit in Abilene. The vote of one law student was que- tioned Tuesday on the ground that he could not vote in Ohio and Kansas in the same year. Prof. Williston lectured at music hall Tuesday evening on the Prehistoric Animals of Kansas. His lecture was illustrated by views from the magic lantern. Boating was never so popular as it is this spring. This most fascinating of athletic sports has been gaining favor with the students for the past three years. There is no longer lack of enthusiasm and crews were early organized and practice begun. Our course on the Kaw river is acknowledged by experienced rowers to be exceptionally fine and insures a high position to K. U. crews in the future, when we may enter inter-collegiate boating contests. Thi year eighteen crews have been training for the spring races and from early dawn to dusk the clash of oars and muffled sound of various epithets, and the splash of waves coming over the end mingle and reverberate on the shores of the historic stream. A Change. An important change has been made in the method registering students at the beginning of each term. Instead of filling out cards for each study pursued, only one card will be used, which will be obtained at the registrar's office. The student will write on this card the subjects he wishes to pursue, and then take it to the instructors teaching them. Each instructor who admits the student to his class will sign his name to the card. When the student has secured the signatures of all the instructors under whom he desires to do work, he returns the card to the registrar for approval and registration. By this method each professor will know the number of studies pursued by each student, and, if the student desires to take too many studies, his application for entrance into some of the classes can be rejected. By the present method the student can enter as many classes as he chooses and thus cause much needless work for the guides and committee on number of studies. Students ! ! Will you let the chance of your life go by? Greatest bargains in books and supplies ever offered in this city. We would be pleased to show you what we have, C H Trouser Rock. C. H. TUCKER Crew Book Store. Students! If you want the latest spring suits for the least cost, call on O. P. Leonard, Merchant Tailor, 733 Massachusetts street. Be sure to get prices before buying elsewhere. 1