War Atlas! 16 Pages of COLORED MAPS Cuba and Havana Harbor, Philippine Islands and China, THE West Indies, BEST Spain and Portugal, MAPS North America, United States, PUB- Europe, Flags of all Nations, LISHED $4 worth for 25c. Printed on calendared Paper, Bound in Paper. (Under City Library.) J. S. BOUGHTON'S SNAP SHOTS AT LOCAL NEWS J. W. Green, was in Topeka last week. J. W. Green, was in Topeka last week. John Marsh spent Sunday at his home W. H. Buttomer of Olathe visited his son John Friday. Dr. Ewing of Wellsville visited friends on the hill Thursday. A. P. Jackson went to Topeka with the troops Tuesday. Brooks, 97, came up from Kansas City for the Phi Deltie party. Mr. Clarence Cowley has been visiting his brother this week. Mr. Rose of Ann Arbor is visiting the Y. M C. A. people this week. The bad weather has greatly retarded the practice of the track team. "Toujours jeanne" at the Home Store, 1105 Massachusetts street. Lawrence Cowley enjoyed a visit from his father and brother this week. When you are in need of good coal just call telephone 186. J. Standing. W. C. Hoad spent Saturday and Sunday with his parents at Lecompont, Garden seed, flower seed and bulbs at Mrs.Prentissi', 105 Massachusetts street E. J. Leland who was called home by the death of his mother has returned to school. A number of students will go with the University team to Baker Monday afternoon. Mr. Le Monte Taylor has been called home to Kansas City by the death of his uncle. Troy Steam Laundry, 1306 Massachusetts street. Phone 231. Pitman & Hay University agents. Miss Barry, of Fort Riley, has been in town the past week the guest of the Misses Bullone. Prof. Carruth delivered the commencement address last Friday evening at the Kingman High school. It is reported that the Lawrence volunteers under Funston will be among the first to go to Cuba. Mr. H. W. Rose of Ann Arbor stopped over with the V. M. C. A. boys Wednesday and Thursday. Miss Louise Smith came over from Leavenworth the first of the week and spent several days at home Go to the Tipton Barber shop and Bath rooms, and get a bath ticket, 7 for $1.00 15 for $2.00, 24 for $3.00. Ed Sample has almost recovered from the sprain which he received in his knee on the ball field Saturday. While alighting from a hack Saturday evening Mr. F. C. Scammon had the misfortune to sprain his ankle. S. C. Runnold of Dickinson county and J. M. Bunten cf1 Scranton are the latest additions to the Junior Law class. Miss Tina Creager, who was called to her home in Concordia, by the death of her father, has returned to school. Troy Steam laundry, 1306 Massachu setts street. Phone 231. C. E Rose, University Agent. Give him a trial. Scholarships in two of the best business colleges in Kansas City, for sale. See or address J.O. Hall, 1202 Kentucky street. The first game of the Kansas inter-collegiate league will be played today between Kansas University and Washburn here. Mr. H. M. Rose of Ann Arbor has been here this week in the interest of the Y. M. C. A. Mr. Rose is a member of the Beta fraternity. Dr. R. Curdy of St. Louis, formerly a student here, was on the hill with the Phi Gams Wednesday. Dr. Curdy will spend the summer abroad. 50C WILL BUY Ain of those fasty sterling silver handles nail fleets, shoe horns, button hoots, curling irons, cuticle knife, letter seal. We will save you money on silver nov- ment. 1034 Austin St. Fine tobacco and cigars at Smith's News Depot. The WEEKLY election will take place next week. The McCook field fence is badly in need of repair. The spring cleaning of the University grounds is in progress. Fine line of new candies at the Home Store, 1105 Mass, street. The Junior Laws begin the study of Domestic Relations Monday. John and Fred Northrush spent Saturday and Sunday in Kansas City, Kansas. Plants, cut flowers and floral decorations. Luther Green Houses, south Mass. street. Get your spring hair cut at the Tipton Barber shop; where you always get the best. Plants, cut flowers and floral decorations Luther Green House, south Mass. street. Plants, cut flowers and floral decorations. Luther Green Houses, south Mass street. We cordially invite the ladies of K. U. to visit our hair dressing and treatment parlor. Dale Gear has gone to Kansas City to join the Blues with whom he will play this season. W. W. Raymond '94 of Leavenworth Standard. was the guest of Hilliard Johnson Saturday. MISSES PETERSON & HUTT. The work on the shops will not be begun for at least a month. Plans and contracts are being submitted now. Prof. Rice who was called to the southern part of the state by a lawsuit returned Thursday and took up his work. Barber Bros. are exclusive agents for Rockwood's chocolate candies. Tl e finest grade of candies on the market. Troy Steam laundry. 1306 Massachusetts street. Phone 231. C. E. Rose, University Agent. Give them a trial. Troy Steam laundry, 1306 Massachusetts street. Phone 231. C. E. Rose, University Agent. Give them a trial. Scholarships in two of the best business colleges in Kansas City for sale. See or address J. O. Hall, 1202 Kentucky street. J. F. Hall, 97 who has been teaching in the northern part of the state, was visiting friends in Lawrence Tuesday and Wednesday. The Freshman Botany classes spent Tuesday morning hunting specimens on the north campus. J. F. Hall, 97, who enlisted with the Lawrence volunteers, has gone to McPherson, Kansas, to organize a company and to gain a lieutenancy. Mr. Fred Matthews of the Electrical Engineering school left last Saturday to accept a position in Hiawatha. Mr. Matthews will return next year. Irving Morse, 'gr, whose wife died recently at Kingman, Kansas, will return soon to Louisiana, where he is superintendent of a large sugar refinery. Students desiring an up-town boarding place will do well to try the Warren street Dining Hall before locating elsewhere Everything new and up to date. Mrs. M L Bunn, proprietor. E. E. Voigts has withdrawn from classes and will leave next week for Pueblo to take the position of assistant chemist and assayer with the Pueblo Smelting and Refining company. The receipts from the Kansas-Nebraska ball game were $76.50, and the guaranteed expenses of the Nebraska team were $75 The advertising expense _was about $5, so that the game lacked but little of paying out. W N. Morgan, '85, has in the Hutchinson News one of the best newspapers in Kansas. It is the last Associated Press paper toward the southwest, and has a great 'snap' in these times of war news. Mr. Morgan is a rustler from his youth. The Kingman high school recently graduated a fine class of eight: Thyra Amos, Edna Harlow, Lilian Horner, Elsie Hale, Bessie Hutto, James Murray, Abbie Shelley and Herman Tipton. Six of these took the Latin course,and all hope to come to the University. They will be cordially welcomed. Superintendent Glen O'Brien seems to be doing excellent work. May day was uneventful. Sunday night a number of special police guarded the University ground and although footprints of freshmen could be seen behind almost every tree on the campus, no flag was raised. Preston P. Gillette, of Kingman, who was a student of K. U. in the early '60s, is now a leading member of the Kingman county bar, and will probably be the republican nominee for district judge this fall. Mr. Gillette was 'as sober as a judge when in the University, and certainly has the qualities which should be found upon the bench. He has abstained strictly from politics thus far, and it seems to be a case of the office seeking the man. We trust it may catch him. CHANCELLOR SNOW AND THE VOICE His Reply and the Voice's Distortion of it - The Temperance Organ Responses to Publish the Correspondence: There has been some comment on the unwarranted placing of Chancellor Snow's name among the "only two college presidents who stand up to be counted as favoring a liquor resort." The WEEKLY publishes below in full the correspondence between the Chancellor and the Voice both before and after the issue of the Voice of April 14, in which the so-called "standing up" is chronicled. Shortly after the crusade of the Voice against the Princeton Inn, the following letter was sent out to all American college presidents: New York, December 8, 1897. Dear Sir: EDITORIAL ROOMS OF "THE VOICE." The questions below fully explain them. selves. Would you kindly indicate brief replies to them and mail to us in the enclosed envelope? The favor, we assure you, will be highly esteemed. Respectfully. EDITOR OF "THE VOICE." 1. Are you of the opinion that an elab orately furnished and attractive drinking-place for s u'lentures, under the patronage and direction of professors and trustees of a college, serves to lesson the evils of interpenance among students by keeping them away from less republiable saloons, or in any other way? Meeting these questions fairly and squarely in the spirit in which they could only be construed from the wording, that of a disposition to have both inquiries answered from the standpoint of the best way to fight intemperance, under different surroundings, the Chancellor replied: 2. What steps, if any, has your institution taken, either directly or indirectly, toward preventing or discouraging drinking practices among your students? LAWRENCE, II Dec., 1897, Editor Voice, New York City. Dear Sir. - In answer to your inquiries I will say: 1 I am of the opinion that the Princeton Inn, under the restriction which I know to exist in its management, is on the whole of service to lessen the evils of intemperance among students. 2. In Kansas all sale of liquor is prohibited by the constitution and by legislative action, consequently we are not troubled with the dangers of public drinking places. The faculty of this University use their influence to in every way discourage drinking among students. This they do by regulir instruction in the department of Hygiene on the evils and dangers of the use of alcohol drink and in making it a misdemeanor to use intoxicating liquors to excess. In the past ten years we have expelled and suspended about a dozen students for drinking. Yours sincerely. Chancellor This reply limiting the answer to the first question to Princeton alone is twisted and contorted by the Voice into a general statement favoring what "The Voice" calls "respectable drink shops" and the Chancellor heralded to the world as their champion. Such an unwarranted construction of a letter bearing upon its face evidence of hostility to intemperance and a disposition to judge of the measures most expedient to lessen drinking in each individual college by its own peculiar condition, called forth the following from the Chancellor: Editor Voice: My attention has been called to your issue of April 14th, in which you place me before the public as one of two American college presidents who "stand up to be counted as favoring a liquor resort of a highly respectable character as promoting temperance among college students." This is a false and libellous statement, and I call upon you to retract it. I have always been and am now a prohibitionist and will not be counted as favoring "a liquor resort" of any kind. My reply to your inquiry sent out to the college presidents last December was very similar to that of President Eliot, as any one can see by reading my letter. My information concerning the character of the Princeton Inn was derived from "The Outlook" of NEW ARRIVALS AT OBER'S. April 23.1898 Neckwear, New, Late and Stylish. Negligee Shirts, Swell Patterns, All Sizes, Late Productions in Collars. THE OBER CLOTHING CO. 821 Mass. St Nov, 20th, 1897, in which it is stated that "It is a well conducted inn of a high claes having an excellent reputation. It has no bar, unless a sort of counter over which a mug of beer or something to eat may be handed to the waiter who is serving a guest at the table, may be so entitled. The rules of the inn do not allow distilled liquors to be sold to the students; nor even beer to be sold except to upper-class men." It was and is my opinion that such a hotel in a town where the license policy prevails may serve to lessen the evils of intemperance among students by keeping them away from disreputable resorts, and I am of the opinion that the great majority of those presidents whom you have quoted as answering "No" to your inquiry will agree with me on this point You will oblige me by printing this communication, and also my communication of Dec. 11th, in your next issue. 821 Mass. St. F. ·H.SNOW, F. •H. Snow, Chancellor of the University of Kansas. The Voice has declined to publish the Chancellor's letter and the only thing left to do seems to be to place the correspondence before the public. The letter refusing to publish says that the Voice can see little similarity between the Chancellor's and President Eliot's response. Any member of these classes is eligible, but application must be made to the proper committee before the end of this month. The reply of President Eliot, of Harvard university, to which the Chancellor refers as being practically his own in substance and spirit it as follows: "It by drinking place you mean a novel I think it might in a city or town where a license-policy prevails. If you mean a bar—that is, a place for drinking alchoic drinks without eating—I think a bar always dangerous to the public health and morals. In a place where the no-license policy prevails—like Cambridge for example--your question would always be answered in the negative." And yet President Eliot is placed among the negatives and Chancellor Snow among the affirmatives upon a proposition which neither directly answered in the form put, simply because the question admits of no general answer but must be determined by the environment. Next years Juniors and Seniors in the schools of Arts and Engineering should keep in mind the D. H. Robinson memorial scholarship supported by the alumni association of these schools. Who Will Get It? This scholarship is worth $100 a year and is a general one. Last year it was held by R. R. Price of Hutchinson and this year by Alfred M. Myers of Peabody. The committee having the matter in charge is composed of Profs. Stevens, Carnruth, Martin, Franklin and Barber. Senior Play Rehearsing, Seniors have commenced to rehearse the play in earnest. From present indication this will be one of the most popular plays ever given by a senior class. It was written entirely by local talent and some of the "hits" are said to be rich. Judge Dobson of Kansas City, who has been instructing the Senior laws on Corporations, has just finished his course and s succeeded by Dr. Summerfield who will teach Equity Practice. We cordially invite the ladies of K. U. to visit our hair dressing and treatment parlor. C.E. ESTERLY DENTIST MISSES PETERSON & HUTT. You will be pleased with our style of doing business. If you have been buying your furnishings where they were behind the times and replenish your wardrobe from our up-to-date stock of Neckwear, Shirts, Collars, Cuffs, Hosiery, Underwear, etc Office over Woodward's Drug Store SEVER ALL YOUR OLD TIES. W BROMELSICK. A. GIFFORD, M. D. Physician $ ^{\wedge}_{\mathrm{D}} $ Surgeon. Lawrence, Kansas. Ass't Surgeon Kanaas Div U. P. R. R. Res. 115 Quincy St. Office 913 Mass. St. Office hours from 2 to 5 p.m. STUDENTS' SHOEMAKER, A W. CLARK, M. D., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Residence 1224 Tennessee Street. Office over Woodward's drug store. Telephone 181. |AS, E. EDMUNDSON, 9:15 Mass, St. A W. CLARK, M. D., STAR BAKERY HENRY GERHARD & BRO. Prop's. We Solicit the Patronage of the People. Wm. Wiedemann. ICE CREAM PARLOR. And manufacturer of Fine Confectionery FOR GO TO Student Trade Solicited. GO TO LINDSEY'S FINE SHOE REPAIRING. 836 Mass. Stree. 843 Mass, Street, Oscar Meyer, 201- Dry Good store. Lawrence, Kan. H. McCrory. DENTIST All Kinds of Coal CULBERTSON & THEOBURN. Basement of Merchants National Bank THE PHOTOGRAPHER 933 MASS. STREET. on short notice and in clean condition Tel. No. CULBERT& THOBURN WILLIS EDWARD BUMGARDNER, M D., D. D. S. DENTIST 809 Massachusetts street. A. P. HULTZ, Dentist. No. 735, Mass, St., Lawrence, Kan. CHAS. HESS Meat Market. Choice Fresh and Salt Meats always on on hand. Telephone 14, 941 Mass. St. MARION-SIMS College of Medicine. St. Louis, Mo. Superior advantages in every department of the university or cataloge and other information address. DR. Y. H. BOND, Dean, DR. H. W. LOBE, Secretary, Arseno Olive Street Send for a catalogue of the dental department. -