Kansas University Weekly. 141 Griffin the coal man sells ice. Students buy their canes at Smith's News Depot. Prof. E. H. S. Bailey is using Metol, a photographic developer which has recently come into use in Germany. For shoes go to The Cash Shoe Store. 823 Mass. street. Any one desiring a sample copy of the Western Collegian can obtain it of R. L. Stewart in the basement of the main building. Get your ticket early for the University ball as the girl you desire to take may make an engagement with someone else, if you don't hurry. If a suspender "suspended in suspense," And from suspenders suspending is demanded absence. It naturally follows in logical sense. It naturally follows in logical sense, That "suspending" suspenders is foolish nonsense. The University ball next Friday evening will be attended by several Lawrence people who are especially interested in University social life. Thirty styles of fancy colored dress goods are ready—brocaded figures, broken checks, plain colors, and mixed effect. Dressy, serviceable, inexpensive; 36-inch, 25 cents. Weaver's Easter Sale of dress goods. Griffin's telephone is No. 88. Talk to him about your coal supply. University Ball. The grand University ball, so much talked about, will occur in the Armory next Friday evening. Several members of the faculty and many students will be there to make the occasion one long to be remembered. The leader of the orchestra which has been secured, says that the music will be the best ever heard at a ball in Lawrence, and that from a musical point of view if from no other, the ball will be decidedly successful. The committee have worked hard to make this ball the leading social event of the University year and from the present indications their efforts will not be in vain. Remington & Royal; pink and white, like ladies' cheeks, at 1025 Mass. St. Library. Among the books most recently received are the following: Selected Poems of Mathew Arnold, in the little Golden Treasury Series. The Foundations of Belief, by the Right Hon. Arthur James Balfour. John Brown and His Men, by Richard J. Hinton. This book is one of a series on American reformers, edited by Carlos Martyn. A Practical Hand-book of Drawing for Modern Methods of Reproduction, by Charles G. Harper, author of English Pen Artists of Today. The book is daintily and appropriately bound in black and white. Sancho Panza's Proverbs, and others which occur in Don Quixote, with a literal English translation, notes, and an introduction by Ulick Ralph Burke. The Arthurian Epic, a comparative study of the Cambrian, Breton, and Anglo-Norman versions of the story and Tennyson's Idylls of the King, by S. Humphreys Gurteen, M.A., L. L.B., graduate of the University of Cambridge. The Study of Art in Universities, inaugural lecture of the Slade Professor of Fine Art in the University of Cambridge, by Charles Waldstein, Littt. D., Ph. D., L. H. D. Mr. Waldstein is an American, a graduate of Columbia College. Prince Henry the Navigator, by C. Raymond Beazley, M. A., F. R. G. S., Fellow of Merton College, Oxford. This book is one of the Heroes of the Nations series, edited by Evelyn Abbott. We quote from the preface: "This volume aims at giving an account, based throughout upon original sources, of the progress of geographical knowledge and enterprise in Christendom throughot the middle ages, down to the middle or even the end of the fifteenth century, as well as a life of Prince Henry the Navigator, who brought this movement of European Expansion within sight of its greatest successes."