DAVIES. The Students' Tailor. A full line of Fall and Winter Goods just received. Suite... $18 to $25. Pants... $4 to $6. Call and see him before investing. At the Old Stand. A College Romance A certain young member of the Beta Fraternity was recently calling on a young Pi Phi friend of his. In fact he was taking Sunday dinner with her. The shades of night began to fall and our young hero did not return to his home the Beta House. Perhaps the blissful hours sped away so quickly that he was not aware of the approaching darkness. Six o'clock came still he tarried. By this time his companions naturally came to the conclusion that he had taken up his abode at the house of our heroine and in their brotherly love gathered up his effects in his dress suit case and sent them to him. Before, however, they reached their destination, he had left to return home and it was a great puzzle to the young lady the meaning of the valise till the cause of its mission was explained. She suggested to the messenger to return with the valise but the wily Betas had promised to pay him only on the consideration that he leave it there. Thereupon he returned for his pay and it was the sad (?) lot of our poor young hero to return and claim his property. A "Ducker" Ducked During vacation four students went up the Kaw for a day's duck hunt. The boat was flat-bottomed, the oars broken and the current of the river swift. The journey up the river was for the most part uneventful, excluding running up on sand bars or into brushwood. Two roast ducks sufficed as a dinner for the boys. In the afternoon they rowed across the river to an island. There three of the boys got out, the fourth one still remaining in the boat and collecting the guns. The boys on the bank took hold of the chain and told the one in the boat to sit down on the back seat of the boat, so they could draw the front end farther up on land. Then came a pull and a splash. All was not over—just out. The water was deep and cold. The man overboard grasped the boat and was soon on land. Just then it occurred to him that he had dropped the gun in his descent and he had to re-enter the relentless Kaw and recover his shot gun. 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. For Sale - Lawrence Journal paper route See H. H. Hess or W. L. Myers. Come in and see our Dress Suits at $10.00 $12.50 and $15.00. They are a great deal better made and better trimmed than the "Book agent send away clothes." We guarantee to fit and please you. For the latest novelies in Shirts, Collars, Neckwear, Hats and Caps don't think of going anywhere else but TAILOR MADE SUITS At Half of Tailor's Prices AT OBER'S. OBER'S, 821 Mass Street Senior Class Proceedings The meeting of the Senior class held Thursday noon was well attended. Mr Douglass made a report in regard to the Senior Annual. His report was adopted On motion it was decided that the pictures of the members of the class should appear in groups of seven on a page instead of having a separate half-tone plate made for each member of the class as has been the custom heretofore. Since the meeting many have expressed dissatisfaction thinking that this action was hastily taken and that the single plates would be preferable. The Annual promises to be a much more elaborate and successful affair than has been gotten out by any class of the University for several years. Mr. Boone presented the report of the committee on Senior play. The play is now completed. Messrs. Will Walker and Wilkie Clock were nominated for managers of the play; Mr. Walker was elected. On motion the play committee and the manager were instructed to assign the parts. The play is entirely original and will be highly entertaining, taken in, as it does, every phase of University life. TRACK MEN AT WORK. Some Recent Nebraska Records. Notwithstanding that we have no decien track, our track and field athletes are hard at work every night on McCook field. All through the vacation from fifteen to twenty were worked out daily. Now that the University has reopened men may be found on the field every nice afternoon making use of the scanty apparatus provided for the management In view of the coming Trans-Mississippi meet, which according the Nebraskan seems now to be an assured fact, some of the records made at the Nebraska's indoor might be of interest as showing the comparative form of the Athletes of the two Universities at this season. In the shot put Jewett put the big iron ball 39 feet, *inch*. In the pole vault, Benedict made to feet, and in the running high jump the best that was done was 5 feet, $4 \frac{1}{2}$ inches by La Salle. Harwood guitar and mandolins at Strafon's Drug Store. The Eighth Annual Session of the Kansas Medical College, Topeka. Kansas. Begins Tuesday, September 14, 1897, and will continue twenty-six weeks. Every facility for the practical and scientific training of students of medicine is afforded --- Well Equipped Laboratories, Ample Hospital Facilities, Clinical and Dissecting Material in Abundance WRITE FOR CATALOGUE AND FEES. J. E. MINNEY, A. M., M. D., Dean. R. S. MAGEE M. D. Secretary. J. E. MINNEY, A. M., M. D., Dean. R. S. MAGEE, M. D. Secretary. Meet to Be Held Arbor Day April 17- Faculty Race a Feature. JOCKEY CLUB RENDEZVOUS. What rollicking good times are always had at the meet of the K. U. Jockey club, every student who was here two years ago will remember. The club has been organized, and the third meet will be held the afternoon of Arbor day, Friday April 15, at the race tracks. For that afternoon frovility will reign supreme. Well known students will be seen in the role of jockeys, stable boys, peanut and pop-corn vendors, to say nothing of course of those important personages the judges, timer, and starters. It is whispered, too, that a certain popular student of diminutive frame but with sporting instincts, resplendent in a bright waist coat ordered directly from New York, clad in a suit with the loudest of checks, with patent leathers and tan spots to match, and from whose shirt front will sparkle the largest glass diamond ever put on exhibition in Kansas, will, in flat violation of the Cubbison or any other Law, make up a book and sell pools on the races on the grounds. The races are warranted to be on the square, pulling under the wire will be positively forbidden and any plunger found tampering with the jockies will be promptly ruled off the track. The program has not been entirely made up but the sport presented will be fully up to the standard set by the K. U. Jockey Club and far and away ahead of that offered by such minor organizations as the New York or Sheepshead Bay Jockey Clubs. Prizes of great value will be given to the winners and a 'Varsity cup to the winner of the K. U. Derby. One of the most entertaining as well as one of the most hotly contested events, will doubtless be the Faculty Sweepstakes. An admission fee of twenty-five cents will be charged. According to the traditional policy of the club, the proceeds will be devoted to the Student's Loan fund. The officers of the organization are Carl Cooper, president; Dana McVicar, vice-president; Fred Wood, secretary; Vctor Boone, treasurer. Entries will close Thursday, and should be handed at once to the secretary. Entries are open to any student in the University. Nebraska Debaters Chosen. The University of Nebraska chose the nine men who will compose her debaters with Kansas, Missouri and Colorado at two preliminaries last week. The men choose where they will go in the order of their rank, and it is likely that Warner, Matson and Perry will be the team that will meet our representatives. Baker, who was the mainstay of Nebraska's team here last year, won second place in the preliminaries, and will doubtless be the leader of the team that will represent Nebraska at Colorado. Straffon's Drug Store is a good place to buy your mandolin, guitar, violin and banjo strings. Go to Henshaw's for text books, fine stationery, fountain pens etc. 917 Massachusetts street. THE MODERN BUSINESS SCHOOL. Improved Methods of Instruction in Business, Shorthand, Penmanship and English Courses. Best Penman of any College in this part of the Country. Elegant Illustrated Catalogue and Specimens of Manpenship Free. Write for them. BOSTON BUILDING, COR. EIGHTH AND WYANDOTTE STS. For All the News Papers delivered in time to read before coming up the hill. Leave orders at the WEEKLY office or at Smith's news stand. Subscribe for the . . . Kansas City Times. Among the late arrivals at the Library of the unusual collection of letters of some of the finest men of the century: NEW BOOKS AT THE LIBRARY. Letters of Matthew Arnold; collected and arranged by George W. E. Russell, 2 vols. Dante Gabriel Rossetti; his family letters; with a memoir by William Michael Rossetti, 2 vols. The Letters of John Keats; edited by H. Buxton Forman. Alfred Lord Tennyson; a memoir by his son. 2 vols. Letters of Emerson; a correspondence between John Sterling and Ra'ph Waldo Emerson. OTHER ARRIVALS ARE: Do Quincey and His Friends by James Hogg. Poems of William Wordsworth, edited by T. Hutchinson 2 vols. The Age of Wordsworth by C. H. Herford. The Early Life of Wordsworth, by Emile Legouis. The Poems of Ossian, translated by James Macpherson, with an introduction by William Sharp. tury; Edified by Alfred H. Miles 2 vols. Literary Types by E. Beresford Chance. The Poets and the Poetry of the C- ternate. Edited by Mical H. Huez-Berola The Principles of Criticism by W. Basil Warfeld. 10 Years on The Novel, A. A. Jack. The New Fiction and other Essays on Literary Subjects, H. D. Traill. The Landscape in Poetry by Francis T. Palgrav. Style, Walter Raleigh. Handbook to Tennyson's Works by Morton Luce. Side Lights on Shakespeare by L. Rossi and E. M. Corbould. Shakespeare: Puritan and Rescusant by the Rev. T. Carter The Thackerays in India by Sir William Hunter. Lorna Doone by R. D. Blackmore Philosophy.—History of Intellectual Development by J. B. Crozier, volume I. LATIN—Haper's Dictionary of Classical Literature and Antiquities; edited by Harry Thurston Peck. SOCIOLOGY. Hull House Maps and Papers by Residents of Hull House. Woman's Share in Primitive Culture by O. T. Mason. Juvenile Offenders by W. D. Morrison. State Railroad Control by F.H. Dixon. Punishment and Reformation by F.H. Wines. Southern Side Lights by Edward Ingle. The Present Distribution of Wealth in the United States by Charles B. Spahr. Wages and Capital by F. W. Taussig. Taxation in the United States Under the Internal Revenue System by Frederic C. Howe. A very valuable collection of religious books, consisting of sixteen volumes published by the Unitarian Association has been presented to the library through Mr. Samuel Elliott of Cambridge. Outlines of the History of Religion by C. P. Tiele. Other religious books received are: The World's Religions by C. F. Bettany. For Sale: Lawrence journal paper route See H. H. Hess or W. L. Myers. New Starts in Life by Phillips Brooks. Base Ball Challenge. The Rose club challenges any boarding club to play base ball at any time and at any place. It has been decided to repeat "Held by the Enemy" which was given with so much success by home talent a short time ago, and it will be given again at the opera house on Wednesday night of next week. Miss Brown will direct the repetition in the same careful manner that the first presentation was given, and some additional features will be added to the play. This week two new makes of Eastman Kodaks will be offered by Woodward & Co. The Eastman goods are standard, honest and inapproachable in quality. For Sale: Lawrence Journal paper route. See H. H. Hess or W. L. Myers. FOR First-Class Photos .. SEE .. F. F. MEITNER. 719 Massachusetts St E. D. F, PHIL IPS, M. D. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Lawrence, Kansas. Telephone 82. Residence Office 1301 Conn. St. 745 Mass. St. ZUTTERMEISTER. PURE CONFECTIONS and JNFE ICF CREAM Wood and Coal FINE ICE C Oysters served in any style. Phone 188. 709 Mass. st. A. WHITCOMB & SON Florists, Call on O. D, PICKENS, Carmen New York and Quilty Sts. New York 11.8 Plants, Cut Flowers, Floral designs, etc. Lawrence National Bank. UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY. CAPITAL, $100,000. --in no other school in the west will you find such commodious and elegantly furnished rooms, such thorough and practical courses of study, as well as those with such facilities for aiding graduates as a thorough investigation of Does a general banking business and issues exchange on all the principal cities of Europe. J. D. Bowersock, R W. Spurr F. W. Barteldes, J. D. Bowersock, A. Henley, R. W. Williams, J. G. Haartlash, A. Henley, R. W. Williams, DIRECTORS. J. D. BOWERSOCK, R. W. SPARK, President. WALTER L. HOWE, H.E. DENSON, Cashier. 2nd Vice President. F. H. KLOCK, Proprietor. Klock's Restaurant. STUDENTS' BOARDING PLACE. RATES: Meals 20 Lents. Board by Week $2.50. Meal Tickets $3.00. 816 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kansas. [INCORPORATED.] There Are Other Business Schools--But Spaulding's Commercial College will show. This old and reliable institution is just entering upon its Thirty-second year and is prepared to give practical instruction in Book-keeping, Typewriting, Telegraphy, English Branches, etc., at lowest rates. 20 Rooms. 17 Teachers and Lecturers. Staffage Catalonia free J. F. Spaulding, A. M., Prest. East Wing New York Life Bldg, KANSAS CITY, MO. J. W. O'BRYON. DENTIST. Over Bell's Music Store. Lawrence, Kan. Students As well as other people know that the place to buy groceries is at J. M. JONES. GOOD BOATING Is within the reach of every K, U. student. The prices are reasonable. the boats are clean and perfectly safe. See us at the BOAT HOUSE.