2014.12.18 星期四 Kansas University Weekly Editor-in-Chief: L. M, SIMPON, Associates: R. W. SMITH, GEO. BARCUS Literary Editor: H. M. CARY, Associate. WALTER. J. MEK, Society Editor: FREDERICA BULLENE, Local Editor. GERTRUDE HILL. Associates: BERTHA BOWEN, P. P. BLISS, W. J. BAUGARTNER, W. EARL DECKER, FRANK POST, CORA M. PERK, FRANK MATFCY, F. L. GLICK. Managing Editor: E. McSHEA, Associate: F. P. PRATT. Shares in the WEEKLY one dollar each, entitling the holder to the paper for two years, may be had of the secretary. N. G. Bennett, the treasurer, Frank Gray, or at the WEEKLY OPERICE. t Subscription price 50 cents per annum in advance. Address all communications to E, McShea, 716 Mississippi street, Lawrence, Kansas. Entered at the Lawrence Postoffice as second adult, on behalf of me. LAWRENCE, KAN., MAY 20, 1899. Everybody is glad to see the work begun for the new Chemistry building. The Glee Club gives an entertainment Tuesday evening in University hall. It is the first one this year and everybody should be there. The Senior Annual this year will be the best ever gotta out at the University. The students should each have one to take home and show to their friends that they may know what a good institution we have here. The students of the Missouri State University are holding a tennis tournament. It is proving to be a thorough success as many good players have entered making the the contest a spirited one. Valuable prizes have been offered to the winners of doubles and singles. There is no reason why K. U. has not the same thing. We have some fine players and if the matter was given attention we would have a tournament and perhaps work up an inter-state tournament. It was most encouraging to see so many students go into the spring oratorical contest, and especially so, since so many of the contestants; were Freshmen. A person becomes proficient in oratory only by long practice and if our students enter the oratorical contest in their Freshman year and continue the work, they cannot be state winners by the time they are Seniors. It is about time for K. U. to win the inter-state contest again and to the interest in the work continue to be such as at present we are sure to do it. One of the prime reasons for the increased interest in oratory here is Prof. Vickery's untiring energy in getting the students to take part in it and his excellent ability to train them. We will have the good fortune to have him with us next year and our prospects in oratory are most bright for the future. The inter-state debates held here have not been a success financially. It has been repeatedly demonstrated that by charging an admission fee, however large or small that it will not defray the expenses incurred in carrying out the debate. It seems to us that if a subscription be properly circulated among the faculty and students an ample amount could be secured to meet any and all expenses. A subscription has to be made any how and if it were made to cover all the expenses and no admission charged a much larger attendance would be secured and the management beset with fewer difficulties. The end of the year finds the purses of many students in a very flattened condition and these students hesitate before spending any money which is not absolutely necessary. Much of the support needed by our representatives in debate is lacking and they feel the need of encouragement. A free admission and care that no excursions and entertainments take place on the same evening will insure a large attendance and much college spirit at our debates in the future. The students of K. U. "did themselves proud" Saturday. Tom Smith led the "rooting" and such noise and enthusiasm was never before witnessed at a buss ball game on McCook field. Everybody "rooted" from first to last. Whenever K. U. had bad luck the "rooters" redoubled their efforts and whenever K. U. made a pretty play they went wild. The work of the "rooters" was very flattering to the team and school and under the leadership of Smith demonstrated that the students of K. U are most loyal. Organ Lecture Recitals Completed. Professor Penny completed his course of organ lecture recitals at the University, last Tuesday evening. During the ten lectures the history of the development of architecture and music was treated, beginning with the earliest time and closing with the modern period. Aside from being entertaining the whole was in the highest degree instructive, and reflected much credit upon all who participated. Professor Penny has not only impressed his auditors with his breadth of culture, but he has created an interest in the practical study of arts This series of educational entertainments is only a reflection of the course in the history of Fine Arts which is given each year by Professor Penny. Outside of the Fine Arts school comparatively little is known of this course. Its educational value as well as its culture quality make it well worthy the attention of every student of the University. There is scarcely another course of similar length in the University curriculum that contributes so much to individual culture as does the course in history of Fine Arts. The net receipts from the lecture recitals amounted to more than $200, which amount was appropriated to the pipe organ fund. Much interest was manifested in the course, and it is hoped that it will be repeated next year. LAW NOTES. I William Dredrick was in Toneka several days this week. C. F. Whitaker came up from Kansas City Thursday to take the quiz on Bills and Notes. Class in Bills and Notes was increased quite perceptibly Thursday by a number of Seniors. Ferd. Burton who has been absent from the Junior class several weeks attending to oratorical matters has returned. Ernest Robetally Junior Law, is manager of the Haskell Indian ball nine and leader of the Haskell band. The Juniors expect to take the championship in base ball of the University next Thursday The case of the state vs. Buttomer was taken up by the moot court Monday and a jury impanelled. The court then adjourned till Friday. R. W. Smith went to Kansas City esternay. M. Wulfleuhler, '95, came down from Leavenworth Saturday night to attend the Phi Delta Pi initiation. Chas. R. Cooksey left for his home in Washington yesterday. He will go over and by wheel. The Junior and Senior Laws will play a practice game of bass ball today. Dr. W L. Burdick delivered the baccalaureate address of the high school at Washington last Senday. Dr. Burdick gave the *Juniors* a vacation yesterday. He went to Tonganoxia to deliver the commencement address at the Academy last night. is the man who caters to the wants of the cheap man, the careless man, the ignorant man. We are not fishing for that class of trade. We like to print for particular people people who know what good printing is. The Cheap Printer --or any others. Raymond & Co., Lawrence, will meet any price, thus saving express charges. We stand behind the goods. All Photograph Supplies Fresh and Reliable. Boat Livery. Boats...25c Per Hour Boats...$1.00 Per Day O Cutler & Son, LAWRENCE, KAN. Special Rates Made tq Pleasure Parties. ---O--or any others. Raymond & Co., Lawrence, will meet any price, thus saving express charges. We stand behind the goods. All Photograph Supplies Fresh and Reliable. Call at the boat house near the bridge SOCIETY. The marriage of Miss Margaret Browt of El Reno, Ok., to Mr. H. Chandle Gardner of Kansas City, took place Wednesday at 1 o'clock at the home of the bride's uncle, Mr. Alfred Whitman. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Orello Cone, pastor of the Unitarian church, in the presence of a large number of friends and after a wedding breakfast the bride and will make their future home. The wedding was charming in its simplicity and in the perfect beauty of the surroundings, the ceremony being performed on the front lawn in a bower of green leaves and snow balls. During and before the ceremony Mrs. Olin Bell played Mandslassohu's wedding march and the wedding march from Lohengrin. The bride was attended by Miss Merial Whitman as maid of honor and three bride's maids, her cousins,Ruth Whitman and Mary and Lola Brown. The ushers were Messes L. C. Diggs, Waldo Whitman and Wm. Warren of Kansas City. When the bride's bouquet was thrown at her departure Miss Nettie Manley was the fortunate young lady to receive it. Mrs. Gardner is a well known graduate of the University and a member of the Pi Beta Phi fraternity, The Glee Club concert which is to be given next Tuesday evening promises to be one of the great society events of the year. Last Saturday evening the Betas gave a very delightful hop at their chapter house in honor of Mr. Don McDairmid of Nebraska University who is a Beta and also a member of the Nebraska base ball team. Those present were Mrs. Davies and Mrs. Berger of Kansas City, Misses Grace Crace of Garnett, Loren Leslie, Dolly Davis, Agnes Lee, Satie Taylor, Edna Warkentin, Bess Ayres, Della Frazer, Camilla Andrews, May Sxton, Lucile Cross and Frederica Bullene; Messrs. Nichols, Griggs, Copley, Parent, Bradford, Adams, Davies, Carroll, Tobey, Housh, Warkentine, Kane, Simpson, Stewart, Simpson, Bliss, Silvers, W. B. Greenlee of Chicago, Webster Wilder of Topeka, Frank Housh of Oskaloosa and Don McDairmid of Lincoln. Mr. C. V, Royal is wearing the Sigma Nu colors. Miss Florence Hawk entertained the First Seven Girls club Thursday afternoon at her home in West Lawrence. The occasion was in honor of Miss Hawk's birthday and proved a very delightful afternoon. The extra guests and members of the club were Misses Agnes Hansen, Gertrude Becker, Camilla Andrews, Augusta Finloun, Louise Moore, Satie Taylor, Gertrude Hill, Marjorie Bunker, Winslow Hutchinson, Gertrude Bouhton and Mame Spencer. The young men of the Zenda club gave a very delightful bop Thursday evening in Pythian hall, Sommer's orchestra furnished excellent music for the dancing which was made especially enjoyable by the coolness of the evening and the electric fans. The young ladies in their dainty summer gowns helped make it a very pretty party. Among the out of town guests were Mr. W. Burke of Fort Scott and Mr. Horace Swayze of Topeka. The young ladies of the Kappa Kappa Gamma fraternity have issued invitations for a pavilion party to be given next Saturday evening in honor of Miss Lee Reese the newly initiated member. About eight of the Phi Delta with their young lady friends drove out to the lake Saturday evening for supper returning later by moonlight. The Kappas initiated Miss Lee Leese and Misses Edith and Eleanor Perkins last Saturday evening at the home of Miss Virginia McCorry. The Women's league reception which was to have been given yesterday at Mrs, Woodward has been postponed until next Saturday. Miss Gladys Morgan gave a very delightful dinner party Thursday evening at her home on Ohio Street. Dinner was served about 6 o'clock and each guest received as a souvenir tiny bells tied with K. U. colors. Later in the evening the young ladies were escorted to the Zenda club party. Those present were: Misses Lee Rees, Maud Best, Cora Peck, Dolly Davis, Abbie Noyes, Maud Savage, Clara Jaedicke, Amber Robinson, Emma and Sue Gheebring. Call at the city library for the latest and most popular books of fiction. Library located in Lawrence National Bank building. We are making very low prices on Guitars, Mandolins, Violins and Banjos, to close out stock on hand. STRAFFON'S DRUG STORE. Mr. J. H. Mustard, '94, now a student in the Rush Medical college at Chicago, was on the hill Tuesday. Wm. BEAL. G.F. GODDING. BEAL & GODDING. Livery, Hack and Boarding Stable No.812 and 814 Vermont Street. Telephone 139. Lawrence.Kan. Always Open. Livery, Boarding and Hack Stables. NEW RUBBER TIRE RIGS. 200 716 New Hampshire St. Telephone 100. Lawrence Business College. Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Typewriting, Pennmanship, No Vacation, Enter, at any dip. National Bank Building. I.C.STEVENSON, Principal. Wright. Kay & Co. Manufacturers of High Grade Fraternity Emblems, Fraternity Jewelry, Fraternity Novelties. Fraternity Stationery, Fraternity Invitations, Fraternity Announcements, Fraternity Programs. Send for Catalogue and Price List. Special Designs on Application. 140-142 Woodward Avenue, Detroit, Mich. PREMO CAMERAS, From $5.00 Upwards. The sum of fifteen years' experience, the brightest skill and perfect workmanship. More improvement than any other camera. Catalogue free by mail. Rochester Optical Co. Rochester, N. Y. Don't Send Away For Premo Cameras All Photograph Supulies Fresh and Reliable. ODD3 AND ENDS. Students! Pennsylvania has appointed a committee to have charge of an exhibit at the World's Fair in Paris in 1900. It is the intention to arrange a composite exhibit with Yale and Harvard representative of the American University. Pennsylvania will probably prepare the anthropological and ethnological part of the exhibit. The first annual meet of the Inter-collegiate Cross County association will be held sometime in November and probably in New York City. Yale, Princeton, Pennsylvania, Cornell and Columbia will send teams. Each university will be permitted to enter ten men, seven of whom will run and the first four men finishing will be the team proper. The distance to be run will be six and a quarter miles. It is quit probable that other universities will join the organization. Out of employment during vacation can make from $3.00 to $6.00 per day by selling the only Pump Governor on the market. Every user of wind mills or hard-working pumps buys it. Exclusive territory and steady work guaranteed. Experience unnecessary. For particulars call on or address H. FLEMING H, FLEMING, 821 Alabama Street, Lawrence, Kansas. THE RAND-McNALLY Expansion Atlas. PIZE, OPENED, 20X21 INCHES. Containing Maps Taken From the Rand-McNally Indexed, Atlas of the World. Don't Confuse this with the cheap atlasses issued during the Cuban war. It is twice the size of the smaller attasses. It contains all elements of the attack. Special maps pertaining to those countries that are now of special interest to us. CONTENTS. MAPS Twenty six feet of New, Elegantly Colored Maps A la vez Inches, with Special Maps of Harbors of Oluentesgade, Santiago de Cuba, Havana, Mantazas, and Cardenas PORTE RICO and the Port of San Juan 1x14 BAYSIDE, MI; HARBOR, MI; PORTO RICO and Harbor of San Juan 12x14 inches THE WORLD A beautiful, Map, 28x21 inches in size, with course of Steam Vessels Distances, Ocean Currents, Telegraph Lines, etc. COMMERCIAL separately at 75 cents. CORNERly separated at parts of the Pacific Ocean, 32x14 inches in size, with courses of Steam Vessels NORTH AMERICA, 14x12 inches, NORTH AMERICA, 14x12 inches, EUROPE, 14x12 inches, ASIA, 14x13 inches. ASIA, 11x12ftlines, APRICA and Suez Canal, 14x9t inches. REAEING MATTER. (Equal to 30 ordinary pages) A chronology of War Events from April 21st to the signing of peace treaty by President McKinley. Just about the right amount of readling matter relating to the Philippines, Cuba, Porto Rico, and Hawaii. Their resources, history, location, area, population, chief cities, products, agriculture, inhabitants, exports, imports, etc. A Special Large Scale Map. 28x21 Inches in Size of Manila Harbor. A MARGINAL INDEX accompanies each map, giving location of most important localities, with population, etc. The combined retail value of the maps alone is $5.00. By printing these at one time and in very large editions, we can afford to retail the Atlas at 50 CENTS, POSTPAID TO ANY ADDRESS. Send remittance in postage stamps. Atlas and K. U. Weekly One Year for 75c. 14