FROSH MEET VARSITY IN FIRST SCRIMMAGE THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Coach Sprong's Yearlings Show Up Well Against Veterans on Stadium Field WILL BE DAILY PROGRAM Coach Clark's Men Make Consistent Gains While Carrying Ball Coach Clark sprung a surprise on University football followers yesterday afternoon when he had Coach Spring bring his huskgy group of yearlings on the Stadium field for a short scrimmage against the Varsity. This was the first time the freshmen have had Spring's scrimmage was about two days in advance to the date set for the first conflict between the two squads. If weight counts for anything, Coach Spring should have one of the strongest freshman squads which the University has ever turned out. The team which he put on the field last night was made up of eleven men of athletic ability and were faced with cases of considerable width. A constant steam of substitutes onto the field did not appear to diminish the aggregate size of the line-up. In view of the fact that they have been in training only about a week, Coach Spring's tyros did exceptionally good work against their more seasoned opponents. The variety carried the ball all the time and gained consistency. McAdams and Krueger at hats were charging the line with vigor and the work of the former in pulling down passes was worthy of special note. McAdams and Krueger back and both did good work on line plumgers. "Press" Wilson and Anders son took turns at handling the team, and put the backfield through some fast paces during the short time the scrimmage lasted. Black, McLean and Hodges at end did some nice tackles out time after time to make a hole over end for a good gain by McAdams or Krueger. McLean made two nice gains on fake formations. Cave showed well at tackle, charging the opposing line and as a rule opening up a hole where it was not being hit, played a steady game and passed the ball with considerable accuracy. Scrimmages against the freshmen will be a part of the program for the practice almost every day from now on. From the showing made yesterday, the first year squad will give each other some stiff opposition to Coach Chad's mon as soon as they have gained a little more experience. WOMEN MAY CHOOSE SPORT Beginning Students Must Take Physical Examination Every one in the eight freshman and sophomore classes in physical education for women, will have a choice of four sports as their work in gymnasium this year, instead of floor work. The sports are hockey, swimming, volley ball and tennis, and there will be four classes a day, starting sometime next week and lasting until Thanksgiving. After that, floor work will begin, and will consist of the regular marcheing, formal work, folk dancing, games and apparatus drills. There are about eight hundred now enrolled in the courses for women and two new assistants have been obtained. They are Elizabeth Dunkel, in gymnastic work and Gladys Classes, assistant in swimming classes. Classes started Monday, and all women have been given locker combinations, and directions for equipment themselves. First of all, every new student who is taking physical education, is required to have a physical examination from Dr. Bacon within the next two weeks. Schedules for examinations have been established. Students are to sign at the time it will be most convenient for them to have the examination. Those trying out for class teams, for making sweater points, will be given instructions later. However, the following sports and points have been announced by Miss Barto: those making class teams are given one hundred points, those making champion teams, fifty more points, and those not on the team, but will be given twenty-five additional points. It takes 1200 points for a grey sweater, and 1500 for a white one. Lawrence Morris, LL. B., '14, of Junction City, former University cheerleader, visited in Lawrence Monday. Hockey For Women Begins Next Week Hockey opens the athletic season for women on the hill next week. Interclass hockey presents one opportunity for making points towards Women's Athletic Association membership and a "K" sweater. Announcement of class practices will be made next week. According to the new constitution which went into effect September 1, 1922, only holders of 125 points or more are eligible for membership in the W. A. A. Hockey, baseball, basketball, volleyball, ball swimming, tennis, a perfect record or leadership in gymnastics work are the means by which the team will be for the coming year were discussed at a meeting of the Executive Board of the W. A. A. Wednesday afternoon September 20. BASKETBALL PRACTICE BEGINc Fifteen Players Appear at First Meeting Fifteen men reported for first basketball practice Tuesday night at Robinson Gymnasmis. Five of these men were from last year's varsity squad; the rest were freshmen from last year. The team was early for practice to start, Dr. F. C. Allen wants the men to begin thinking about the game and have the fundamentals well in mind. The work consisted of basket shooting, which was followed by a lecture on rules, etc. A light illustration of about what was given in order to warm the men up a bit before going to the showers. Among the men who reported were the following: Capt. Endtock, John Wolf, Walsh Bowman, Freed Prederer, Ward Hilt, Vern Wilkins, John Cole, Trustan Ackerman, Gene Wimmer. Sport Gossip Yale, with the prospect of a very fine team, has arranged a very difficult schedule. If the Els get over the bumps ahead of them, Yale can claim the national championship—this side of the Pacific Coast. New York, Sept. 21 (United Press) -- Football schedules for the major competitions in 1922 are a mixture of some extraordinary games and some exceedingly soft sailing. On successive Saturdays from Sept 23, the New Haven eleven will play Bates, Carnegie, North Carolina, Iowa, Williams, Army, Brown, Maryland, Princeton and Harvard. That is, some schedule! In marked contrast to Yale, there is the case of Cornell, one of the best scoring teams of 1921, with the Instead of giving the team a schedula that would allow it a real ranking after the season, the Cornell management arranged games that look like an obvious ambition for an unde- cated season. outlook for a great combination this fall. Cornell plays St. Bonaventure, Nigara, New Hampshire State, Iowa Wesleyan, Columbia, Dartmouth, Alli bright and Pennsylvania. Your— Dartmouth is the only hard spot on the schedule. Prinetinee has breathing spells with some easy games scattered between contests with Virginia, Colgate, Chicago, Harvard and Yale. The "Big Three" has been accused in the past of falling for the lure of set-up, but Yale, Harvard and others have up some real opposition for 1922. Lafayette, Washington and Jeffer son, Pittsburgh, Dartmouth and Syracuse have nothing to boast about and Pennsylvania has the Navy, Pittsburgh and Penn State as its hardest games. Yale's schedule has been mentioned and Harvard has only a slightly easier task against Middlebury, Holy Cross, Bowdin, Centre College, Dartmouth, Florida, Princeton, Brown and Yale. By neediness the name of Alexander Gatewood, tenor, and senior in the School of Fine Arts, was omitted from the list of former students in that school now holding positions. He has been employed as an instructor in voice at the negro Agricultural College at Stillwater, Oklahoma. The day is not far distant when a national championship may be awarded unofficially through a large number of important inter-sectional games. The list of east against west and south this fall is most imposing. Some of the major intersectional battles are North Carolina and Yale Iowa and Yale, Centre and Harvard, Florida and Harvard, Virginia and Princeton, Chicago and Princeton University of the South and Penn, Alabama and Penn, Wabash and Jefferson and Jefferson and Syracuse, McGill (Cinnah), and Syracuse, Kansas and Arny, Georgia Tech and the Navy, St. Vincent (Cincinnati) and the Navy, St. Louis and Notre Dame, Georgia Tech and Notre Dame, and the Army and Notre Dame. Suit Top Coat Gabardine Overcoat— TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY ROOFS for boys. Low prized room in desirable location from Hill, 939 Indiana. Phone 1788 Black. S-25 STEWARDESS wanted at 939 Indiana. Phone 1788 Black. S-25 Should carry this label— ? ROCK CHALK? ? ? ? ? Regular Special Genuine Imported Chinese Sewing Baskets Prices as easy as honest merchandise can be sold ___ 5 sizes 75c to $2.50 39c to $1.37 The Round Corner Drug Co. 801 Mass. If it's advertised we have it Lawrence Mosquitoes Can Be Sucked Out of Room When mosquitoes disturb your slumber on a summer night, don't be awake swaiting and swaying, is the woman an engineer who asks that his name be written. Take the screen out of one window, open it wide and set an electric fan about six feet inside it, pinned out. The direct blast from the fan will draw a lot more air with it, so that there will be quite a breeze out through the open window. Any mosquito who comes near the window will get it out if it gets into the stream it will be whisked outdoors. Once out, its motive power is too small to bend its way back against the artificial wind. Sooner or later any flying insect in the room will wander into the danger zone, so the room is emptied and kept free from the "alder-stompers" fresh air drawn in is drawn in through a screen open seer or window. This engineer got his idea from the vacuum pump that is used to remove the last traces of air from vacuum tubes used in radio. Most of the air is pumped out mechanically, but a few molecules loosely bound. So the tube is connected to a sort of chimney where it is flowing with heavy mercury molecules from a boiling pot of mercury below. The molecules of oxygen and nitrogen in the tube are flying bither and thither all the time, and sooner or later one of them will shoot down the connecting tube and into the chimney. Here it is caught in the mercury molecule and so forth until then it is swept along with them. When delicate rats show that all the air molecules have left the tube, it is sealed off with a blowing flame. Frieda Gottlieb, C24, is teaching in the junior high school at Tonkrawn, Ohla, this year. Vogue Beauty Shop Mrs. Nellie Beal 911 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. St. Phone 346 Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 Every woman in the University should be at the Freshmen Frolic Saturday night, at 7:30 o'clock in Robinson gymnasium, especially the freshmen and their big Sisters. This party is an annual affair, and this year there are to be special features. Hope Selig, chairman of the freshman group of the Y. W. C. A., is in charge of the party. We Give the best pressing and delivery service to be had Insist on Suits pressed while you wait Phone 442 Bronce Jackson, LL. B. 22, is practicing law at Lyons, Kansas. KIRBY CLEANERS and Dyers 1109 Mass. Insist on WIEDEMANN'S PURE ICE CREAMS For this week we offer: Grape-Pineapple Vanilla Brownbread Strawberry Chocolate Brick or Bulk Ices— Mrs. Reed, head cataloger at sence. She will return some time in Spooner Library, is on a leave of ab- October or November. Lime Pineapple Special Sunday Brick— Grape-Pineapple Vanilla Lowest prices to Fraternities, Sororities and Clubs. Phone 182 Join the Ober Party to West Point October 7th The Beast $10 For sport, study or street wear the Beast is equally adaptable — Sturdy Gallun Norwegian veal refined by Polo Saddle and Cordovan tip, full toe and broad flat heel; Correctly Fitted Footwear 1st Floor rules us and price is second consideration Young Men's Conservative and Sport Models Quality First Always with two pair trousers $30.00 $35.00 with one pair trousers $22.50 $27.50 It Pays to Investigate SkofStadS ELLING SYSTEM LAWRENCE, KANS. Douglas County Fair Off to the Races at the Two Big Programs Left-Friday and Saturday, Sept. 22-23. Wednesday's racing card postponed until Saturday. Woodland Park Agricultural Exhibits—Features between Races