THURSDAY. OCTOBER 4.1934 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Enrollment Represents Widespread Distribution Students From 100 Counties in State Are Entered in University Euroment in the University this fall is representative of the country from coast to coast. It includes students from both Europe and the five foreign countries and comprises the most widespread distribution of students in the history of the Universi- In Kansas 100 different counties are represented. Douglas county leads with an enrollment of 744 students. Shawnee county leads with an enrollment of 982 counties are all over the 100 mark. Missouri leads in out-of-state enrollment with 547, most of which come from Kansas. Below is a list of the counties of Kandu, States, and countries with the number of students enrolled from each. Total Counties in Kansas 100 Total enrollment 3255 Number of Other States 36 Foreign Countries 6 Kansas City, Mo. 447 Other Missouri 100 Following is the enrollment by coun Allen Anderson Atchison Barton Barten Bourbon Brown Chase Chase Chinquapine Cocoa Cheyenne Clark Cloud Coffee Cochino Cowley Crawford Dickinson Doohan Edwards Edwards Ellis Ellsworth Finney Franklin Geary Graham Grant Greekey Greenwood Harvey Hodgman Jefferson Jewell Kearsey Kingman Labette Lane 17 43 Lincoln 1 49 Linn 1 13 Legan 1 11 Logan 2 23 McPherson 2 26 Marion 1 20 Marion 1 27 Meade 1 13 Meade 1 11 Mallock 1 11 Montgomery 7 31 Monge 3 31 Morton 10 13 Nenahua 2 17 Neosho 2 11 Norton 11 43 Osage 30 43 Ottawa 14 43 Purence 14 43 Purence 14 Pottawatomi 13 13 Pratt 13 13 Reno 12 24 Republic 16 24 Riley 12 49 Rooks 15 49 Rush 11 59 Saline 45 Scott 27 3 Scott 13 3 Sedwick 111 5 Shwaine 258 19 Sherman 5 Smith 7 24 Stafford 16 30 Summer 13 4 Thomas 6 24 Washington 13 37 Wilson 11 1 Woodson 11 Other States and Countries Arkansas 1 Arizona 2 California 10 Colorado 10 Connecticut 4 Florida 1 Georgia 1 Hawaii 5 Illinois 12 Indiana 3 Kansas 7 Kentucky 5 Maine 3 Maryland 9 Mississippi 11 Michigan 4 Missouri 647 Mississippi 8 Nebraska 14 Newada 1 New Mexico 19 Mexico 1 New York 21 North Dakota 7 Oklahoma 7 Okahanna 71 Oregon 13 Oregonia 13 South Dakota 6 Tennessee 7 Utah 3 Vermont 1 Wisconsin 6 Wisconsin 6 Washington D.C. Hawaii 2 Michigan 2 Philippines 13 Panama 1 Porto Rico 1 Art Exhibition on Display Group of Water Colors Presented in Thayer Museum J. M. Kellogg, professor of architectural design in the School of Engineering, and Joseph Elden Johnson, e33 have combined to present the current water-color exhibit in Spooner-Thuyer Museum. Mr. Johnson received first prize in the art competition. Both of these artists appear to be ardent lovers of the beauties of nature, for all of the paintings portray some pleasing aspect of nature. Mr. Johnson's contributions, of which there are 11, are scenes from travels this year in France and Spain, as well as include a scene near Lawrence Professor Kellogg's group of 24 paintings consist of work done in 1632, 33 "34, chiefly at Laguna Beach in California. Some of the titles of the scenes taken from the beach are descriptive of their content. "An Overflowing Sea," and "Quiet Water," and "Old Schrooner." The exhibition, which is on the top floor of the museum, will prove exceedingly interesting, even to the layman. It will close Oct. 16. OREAD HIGH SENATE ELECTS OFFICERS AT FIRST MEETING The Oread Senate, student governing body of the Oread training school, elected Ralph Lee, president; Richard Trece, vice president; and Mae Rappard, secretary-treasurer at its first formal meeting of the school year. The desk, chair, microscope and records kept by Dr. F. H. Snow, professor of Entomology and for many years Chancellor, are preserved in the Entomology A Shrine to Dr. F. H. Snow Plans were made for the annual Field Jay which is to be held tomorrow Committees were appointed to take charge of the picnic. Carlyle B. Dwees, Edward Montgomery, and Dorothy Dean Vlets are the other members of the Senate. Snow Collection Enlarged Professor Beamer Presents 3,000 Specimens to Museum To the famous Snow Entomological collection have been added some 3,900 spec specimens. This huge addition to be Snow collection, already numbering approximately 25,000 specimens, has seen made possible through the efforts of R. B. Hamer, assistant professor of entomology at Montana College in Montana, Utah, Florida and their parts of northwest and southeastern United States. The new specimen which contain 29 different species were sent to Morgan Jebard of the Philadelphia Academy of Sciences for study and early for addition to the Kansas collection. Eighty-eight of these species are entirely new to the Snow collection and are regarded as a valuable addition. The greater part of the new specimens were of the order erythropodytes, while the snow collection nee the most complete in this section of the country. Prof. Frederick Beamer has an additional collection of the same order which are an yet unclassified and rare form. Only four specimens collection until some time next spring. Austin H. Turney, educational adviser of the University, has moved his office to room 121 Prazer hall. Mr. Turney, who conducted the psychological tests for all new students recently, will advise those students in regard to their academic discipline, and there is opportunity to recruit their departmental advisers. This new office serves in two capacities. It is a test bureau service in which rather complete permanent records of the psychological and achievement test scores as well as academic record of achievement are maintained, an advisory aid for students in education, especially juniors and seniors preparing to teach. Test Scores Now Available Austin H. Turney Moves Office 6 Fraser Hall HENRY WERNER TESTS BEER FOR LAWRENCE AUTHORITIE Harry Werner, men's student advise- and state food analyst, has completed re-tests on the alcoholic content of beer from ten establishments in Lawrence under temporary restraining order because of error in the original tests was raised by a chemist for the Anheuser-Busch brewery at St. Louis, Mo. According to Professor Werner, an beer tests taken have been made in the regular manner either by himself or his assistant and under his supervision. SHORTHAND and TYPEWRITING It's never too soon to note important fashion changes in formal evening wear, for when changes do not come about often when what is most important are all imperious because of their rarity. Almost a rule href="http://www.matthewmurray.com/" has been Send the Daily Kansan Home! Avenues of Fashion by Esquire Special class at 3:15 p.m. for K.U. students, at Special tuition rates. Class start Oct. 8. Lawrence BUSINESS COLLEGE Phone 894 o favored by university men that it has always been referred to in terms that have a distinct campus flavor. The renewed interest in the three-ball, notched lapt, natural shoulder, moderately long loat, is the important story in clothes or fall. A famous Madison Avenue ball made this model, almost to the exclusion of all others. Because of its nonchalant, easy and almost careless appearance, there is small wonder that it is now a favorite university men's now an accepted fact. are very definite swing of the fashion pendulum to roughish fabrics has gain brought into the picture the type of jacket that for many years has been With this small but revolutionary change there is a new double-breasted white waistcoat for wear with tails the instead of being square across the bit. This keeps it from looking over the top of the trousers. This new model and its smartness is undoubtedly the careful matching of the spread o the wing in a dress collar with the sleeve. The dress collar, assuming that the butterfly is of proper length, has a wing spread (if this sounds a bit circumvented it will slightly beyond the ends of the tie. the reason for the favoring of double-breasted waistcoats against the conservative single-breasted models. Pie A La Mode UNION FOUNTAIN Sub-Basement Memorial Union The open road Suppose you came suddenly upon two roads. One straight, well-trodden...the other thin and twisting off into undegrowth. If you didn't want to arrive at any place in particular, you might choose the latter. But not otherwise. Before you, as buyer, run two roads. One is the road of knowledge of an advertised product Thousands use it. There's no mystery about it, no doubting, nothing hidden. It leads the way definitely to a fountain pen, a floor wax, a tooth-paste that will give you satisfaction. When you use an advertisement, you use an open road. When you don't use advertisements,you go the doubtful road. You have only hazy knowledge of the product ahead. No trade-mark or name to depend upon guides you. The result may or may not be worth the effort. You don't know. Read the advertisements. Anything widely advertised --- automobile, hat, shoe, hair tonic --- has proved itself good by advertising. Advertisements put you on the open road to satisfaction.