Y THE STUDENTS JOURNAL Of Kansas State University. ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. LOGAL NOTES LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 1893. Best cool for heating at Griffin's. Lease spent Sunday in Wichita. Send your laundry with Huddleston. Hollingberry makes student's dress suit. Cigars and tobacco at Smith's news depot. VOL. 1. NO. 15 Huddleston is the agent for students' laundry. Prof Stevens is making a collection of Kansas plants. Best clothing at Hollingberry's, the practical tailor. Londborg's latest perfumes for sale by the Lees Drug Co. Miss Lulu Hoover received a visit from her brother Friday. Register in the orateorial association book, on general bulletin board. Wanamaker & Brown splendid suite $15 at Hollingberry's. The best road to health and wealth is a warm room. Get your coat of Griffin. Smith's news depot in Eldridge house block is headquarters for sporting goods Mrs. Wilcox gave the Y. W. C, A., a talk in Adelphic hall yesterday at 5:00 o'clock The list of those who are to speak in chapel next term, and their dates, has been posted Andrew Foster is thinking ]of entering the races for a claim if the strip opens next spring. The annual election of officers of the Oratorical Association will be held on Tuesday, Feb 7. Herbert Jenkins and Guy Taylor are now looting at Burghart's, corner Adams and Ohio. Thousands of people on every floor, at all hours of the day. Bullene, Moore, Emery & Co. Karsas City. Prof Geza Von Dome will receive punis for violin instruction at music hall on Mondays and Thursdays. Prof. Haworth went to Chicago the latter part of last week to make arrangements for the geological exhibits, Supt Meserve of Haskell Institute will address the Historical Seminary Friday. Jan 26, at 5 p.m., on Indian education. When you think of dry goods doesn't the store naturally come to mind? Bullene. Moore, Emery & Co., Kansas City The magnificent establishment bounded by Grand Ave., Walnut and 11th streets is Bullene, Moore, Emery & Co The oratorical contest was postponed on account of a conflict of dates with the Glee Club. It will be held on Tuesday, Jan. 31. Proof shears of the forthcoming catalogue are received daily. There will be several changes in the arrangement of the catalogue. Prof Dyche and his men are getting along well with their work at Chicago They have the animals grouped and considerable of the ground work built. The extreme cold of the last month has hindered them s'mewhat. Visitors to Kansas City are always sure to see the greatest of her mercant tile enterprises, with its immense building and splendid service. Bullene, Moore, Emery & Co. What lovely skating for the past six weeks. Yes, and what horrid colds, and watt rough faces and hands. Stop in at Raymond's and get relief from these annoyances. The Cream of Roses will smooth the roughe skin. When the mass meeting was announced shortly before noon Friday, the hearts of a great many students choked up the breathing apparati of their owners. Who was the senior who pawned his class ring? Laundry called for and delivered by Huddleston. The Leis Drug Car. carry the boss line of Toilet Soaps. The January number of the University Quarterly is out. Pliny Harmon is now rooming on Pennsylvania street. The only way to keep warm is to have good fuel. Get it at Griffin's. Stop that cough with Maple Cough Drops. Leis Drug Co have them. Thousands of people on every floor at all hours of the day. Bullene, Moore, Emery & Co., Kansas City. The chart for the oratorical contest will be opened Saturday morning at 7:30 at the Santa Fe ticket office. Miss Georgia Brown is teaching a number of University students to dance. She is a good instructor and her class is increasing. The very latest styles and newest creations are always to be found upon our shelves. Bullene, Moore, Emery & Co. Kansas City. At a recent meeting of the faculty of the school of law, Prof. Gleed was elected representative to the University council, and Mr. Brownell secretary. At a meeting of the faculty of the school of music and art last Friday Mr. Preyron was selected representative to the council, and Mrs. Dunlap, secretary. Friday, evening, February 2; at Merchants Bank Hall Miss Georgia Brown will begin a second term of lessons in dancing for beginners and others. Spee Of all the themes written by the members of the Sophomore English class during the past two weeks, those by Miss Mabel Hall were accorded the highest rank. Porter Edminster, Law,'90, has been writing considerably for the press of late. A short novel of his appeared recently as a serial in a San Francisco daily paper. The lecture room in Snow Hall is soon to be fitted up with electric light and a magic lantern. It will be for the use of the whole University and will be a great congenience. Gentlemen are invited to visit our men's furnishing department for correct things in men's wear. Bullene. Moore, Emery & Co, Kansas City. We invite the students of the University to take advantage of all the conveniences of the store. Bullene, Moore, Emery & Co., Kansas City. Clyde Brown's oration, "The Crusades," which was delivered at Adelphic, is considered one of the very best delivered this school year. Brown gives great promise as an orator. 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. Is your face the portion of your anatomy that causes you the most trouble? "Is it pimples, blackheads, etc?" "Blush of Roses" will clear up that complexion, and Rymond has it. When you are up town you cannot help feel the influence of that great industrial motor. For blocks around the crowds are going to, and coming from Bullene, Moore, Emery & Co's. We make special rates on all kinds of engraving work, such as calling and waiting cérds, programs etc., etc. Schaum & Hershaw, 915 Massachusetts street. Glee an Banjo club concert tomorrow night. Best coal for heating at Griffin's. The oratorical contest next Tuesday night. The Glee club has learned some new songs. Prof. Dunlap lectured at Abilene last Saturday. Fred Carmer, of Lincoln, was on the hill last week. The State University will lead in the state oratorial contest. Prof Stevens entertained his class in systematic botany Friday evening. Prof. Adams lectured before the Unity club Wednesday last on Socialism. The chancellor is busy with his esti- mate of expenses for the next two years. There is only one thing a man can always and when he looks for it: trouble. Will Deford, Tom Flannelly and Fred Dobson registered in Lawrence this week. There are only two kinds of men; those who are caught and those who are not. The Freshman and Sophomores will organize a moot house of representatives next week. The race track is open only to the 2 30 class. Only sophs who have thorough-breds need apply. Members of the faculty are giving an unusually large number of lectures in the towna of the state. A University girl' who is to marry a "Mr. so and so" soon, signs herself "Mrs. so and so elect." The gymnasium is flourishing. The latest event is a sparring match between Dumm and Humphrey. Schaum & Henshaw the only strictly first class line of stationery in the city. 915 Massachusetts street. Ed Young, the great trick banjoist, will positively appear with the Glee and Banjo club tomorrow night. A bright student remarked that the new Columbian stamps are large enough to give a man the licker habit. Prof. Haworth is having several photographs prepared from microscopic sections of mineral formations. The University Glee and Banjo club will furnish music at the meeting of ex-studens s at Kansas City February 1. A complete line of school supplies prices low as the lowest, Schaum & Henshaw, 915 Massachusetts street. The Annual committee have the last photographs prepared. They will be sent to the engraving company at once The University Columbian exhibits fund needs more money. The concert Friday night at the opera house is for its benefit. Railroad tickets, steamship tickets, theatre tickets, concert tickets, every- thing except lottery tickets at the Santa Fe city ticket office, Leis' Drug Store. The members of the classes in eighteenth century German literature have read since vacation Herder's Cid, and have prepared and read before the class papers on Hamann, Claudius, Winkelmann, F. H. and J. G Jacobi, Voss, Buerger, Mendelssohn and Iffland. It has been suggested that persons connected with the various college newspapers in the schools represented in the state oratorical contest meet at Topeka about the time of the state contest and organize a college press association Those interested send their names to the Argo Reporter at Washburn College, Topeka. Holber has just joined the Sigma Chis. The next excitement will be Valenti nes. Dolly Graebner has postponed his ice carnival indefinitely. Miss Bessie Gibson, of Topeka, was in the city last week. The state oratorial contest takes place in Topeka February 17. The moot senate is the liviest organization in the University. Miss Alice Pendelfd, of Leavenworth, was in the city last week. The Sigma Nu fraternity gave an informal hop Friday night. Since skating is at an end for the present the students will have to find some other amusement. Kelsey is looking for the man who wrote up the G. mansion article in one of the late issues of the STUDENTS JOURNAL. The winner of the oratorical contest at Salina was I, V Bull and his oration is on "Political Legitimacy." Earl Brown got second place. The University Seminary held its regular meeting Friday afternoon, Mr. Blood read a paper on "The Restriction of Immigration" The University Glee club doesn't sing "Ta-ra-ran Boom desay," and that alone ought to make a big difference in the number that attend. Baker is said to be practicating base ball already. Our boys should do like-wise. We have plenty of good material if it is only developed. The edition of the STUD-NTS JOURNAL is kept at 1,000 copies, and this is believed to be the largest circulation of any college paper in the country. -Lawrence Journal. The oratorical contest was postponed so that the Glee club could have that much bigger house. The boys ought to have the opera house crowded. The library has just purchased of Mrs John Hutchings 172 volumes of the Edinburgh Review, bound in half calf The library now has a complete set of this valuable publication. The colleges at Emporia are already making arrangements for taking a big crowd to the state oratorical contest. Why don't the state association ask for an open rate of one fare? Prof Stevens is having prepared photographs of trees as they appear now. He will have the same trees photographed when the leaves come out Such comparative pictures will be useful in lectures. There's an impression out that the University faculty is putting on a he extra large edition of the SUDENTS JOURNAL, but it is not so. The young men running the paper have found that 1,000 copies each week are needry and are paying for them.-Lawrence Journal. The Northwestern Law R-review is the name of a new publication of the law school of the Northwestern University at Chicago. Its editor-in-chief is H. S Hadley. The first number gives evidence of a good publication and in appearance it is very neat. The moot senate met Tuesday night with President Adams in the chair. Senators Eitting, Matthews, Build, Foulks and Phillips qualified and took their seats. Senate bill No. 1, introduced by Senator Rush, of Minnesota, was passed. It extends the civil service rules to postmasters and employees. A bill to open the world's fair on Sunday was passed. The senate adjourned until Monday night. P. P. Campbell, of Pittsburg, was on the kill last week. Do not ask your instructors for your grades this time. Prof. Blackman will lead in the meeting at Music Hall next Sunday. Two box parties will attend the Glee and Banjo club concerts. A number of new students have entered the University since the holiday vacation Prof. Blackmar delivered the last lecture in the political economy course at Kaneas City last week. Prof. Blake lectured to a crowded house at Topeka on the 18th. His subject was Illusions in Art. The Zodiac Club, a ladies literary club, is the moving spirit in the Lawrence University extension society. W. E. Higgins sang two solos at the young people's meeting at Music Hall last Sunday afternoon. There is only one class of University girls that chews gum and that is those who spend most of their time in the halls. Prof. Dunlap will deliver the first series of lectures before the Lawrence extension society on English Literature of the 19th century. The Glee and Banjo club concert is for the benefit of the K. U Columbian exhibit fund. It is a fine concert. Only 50, 35, and 25 cents. There are about thirty candidates for places on the University base ball nine. The men who expect to get on the team need to be practicing. Last Sunday afternoon Music Hall was well filled with the young people of the city and University. A special quartette furnished very acceptable music. These services mix the Christian young people of the churches of the city with those of the University. The new University catalogue will be out before very long. It will show the largest number enrolled there is on record. University extension is popular in Lawrence as everywhere else and the choice of the first course indicates that the literary instinct in the town is not extinct. On one of the bulletin boards at the University is this, "The melancholy days have come, the saddest of the year." This is the week of regular semi-annual examinations. There ought to be no slip in the Kansas legislature on the library bill which will no introduced in behalf of the State University. Prof. Kellogg's book on bugs, alone is worth all to the farmers of Kansas that the University will ask—Kansas City Star. Prof. Erasmus Haworth, who is in charge of the Kansas department of mines and mining at the World's fair writes that he is more than pleased with the way things book in the mines and mining building. "We have been treated better than we hoped," he said, "the only thing now lacking is money to go ahead with the work." College fraternity men all over the United States are watching with interest the outcome of a special convention of the Sigma Chi fraternity which has been called at New York to decide whether President elect Cleveland, though not a college man, shall be made a member of the college guild. The principle involved and the decision reached will have a distinct bearing upon the whole fraternity world with its many thousand of college graduates.