KANSAS-AGGIE GAME TO BE PLAYED FRIDAY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Heavy Rains Have Made Diamond Unfit for Scheduled Game Today SECOND GAME SATURDAY Custer and Bloomer Will do the Twirling for the Jayhawkers The baseball game between Kansas and the Kansas Aggies which was scheduled for 4 o'clock this afternoon, was called off because of the condition of the field. The heavy rains made the diamond into a sea of mud. The present plan is to have the first game of the series tomorrow afternoon at 4 o'clock. The second game will probably be played Saturday at the same hour. Coach Clark does not approve of double headers as the seven short innings game often proves a disadvantage to one team or the other. Custer and Bloomer will do the twirling for the Jayhawk squail The port side pitcher will probably start the game tomorrow. The rest of the line-up will be practically the same as it has been throughout with the exception that Farrell may be replaced by Staplin due to the fact that he can still attack his opponent an attack of appendicitis and may not be in condition to play. In case this change is made, Lonberg will play first base when Bloomer is in the box The Agies have strengthened their team considerably since Kansas met them in the series at Manhattan. Karns and Cunningham are the mainstays of the pitching staff, and all the other players have been develop- mentable ability according to all reports and the games should be close. The Kawasan baseball season will end June 3 at Lincoln, when the Jayhawkers and Cornhuskers will meet in the second game of a series. The first game of the two will be played here on June 2. LANDIS IN ST. LOUIS TODAY Baseball Ruler Will Open Cardinal. Private Game St. Louis, Mo., May 25 (United Press.)—Former Judge K. M. Llandis, supreme ruler of baseball, was today St. Louis' informal guest. He will pitch the first ball of the Cardinal-Pirate baseball game, which will serve as the windup of the "Papa Club Field Day" at Sportsman's Park. The "Papa Club" is a society backed by one hundred prominent citizen citizens whose aim is to expand and maintain playgrounds and recreation parks for St. Louis children and provide special instructors at community playground centers. The name is derived from the first letters of the words, "Park and Playground Association." Judge Landis will be the honor guest at a banquet of the Ohio scliey here this evening. All profits from today's game above actual expenses will be turned over t the club. TEN CENT FINE IS VERDICT Honolulu Judge "Gets Around Upholding of Absurd Law Honolulu, May 24. (United Press—It costs 10 cents in a court fine walk the streets of Honolulu in bathing suit. Judge Lightfoot declared the law lauded, the city prosecutor agree with him. But as the law must be amended, costs remitted, was decided upon for the men with handsome figures and the women with scrapy forms, who parade to the beach in one-piece suit soans overcook, bathrobes, kimonos It looks far worse to see a man removing his trousers in the presence of Sunday crowds at the beach than it does to see him walk a few blocks in his bathing suit." declared the judge. F. J. Kelley, dean of Administration is scheduled for five High School Commencement addresses this week Following are the schools Dean Kelley will address: Monday, Solomon; Tuesday, Simpson; Wednesday, Kingan; Thursday, Altoona; and Friday, Flint waltha. William Kendall to Enter College When Thirteen Mangum, Okla, May 25 (United Press) — a college freshman at thirteenth—that is the record of William Kendall, Jr., of this city. William will graduate from the high school here, back, and enter college in September. Kansas weather-Fair tonigrt and probably Fridoy. Somewhat warmer Friday. When William was three and a half years of age he was able to read well, and he entered the public schools at an orchard when he was just past four Although he has read considerably and knows familiarly Scott, Dickens, and Stevenon, he is not at all a book worm. William expects to enter the newspaper work when he graduates from college. GYM CONTEST NOT DECIDED Nine Engineers and Fourteen Men of the College Compete The competitive gym contest between the Engineers and the College ended Tuesday night in a somewhat odd manner. Dr James Nakshmi, who was in charge of the contest, said he would know whom pronounce the winner. "Some of the men took all of the tests that were offered and some only two or three tests. Taking five of the tests, they won all of the events, the Engineers win over the College 636-598. Taking five best men that competed, regardless whether or not they competed in all the tests, the College wins 970-930." There were four tests that were given to each man. The tests were on the parallel bars, in tumbling, on horse, and high bar. Each stunt was graded as t₃ the difficulty in perform- ing on each of the possible 244 points in the entire fest, L. H. Brown, college was the main point having 154 points. W. T. Wyatt, engineer placed second. Brown made the possible 61 points on the parallel bars, and I. Archer, college, made the possible 60 points on the high bar. Brown was high at first but improved. Wyatt was high point man in tumbling. A total of fourteen men competed for the college, making a total score of 1163 points and nine men competed for the engineers, nine men competed a total of 94 points. Pay your Stadium pledge. Pay your Stadium pledge. OSAGE CITY OLD HOME OF ANCIENT AMPHIBIAN Tracks Found in Stone Slabs Prove That Lumnopus Vagus Was Native Kansan Osage City, a town of about three thousand, is soon to be on the maps as the original home and old stamping ground of the ancient amphibian. Last Saturday H. T. Martin, assistant curator of paleontology, together with Don Hehler, graduate in chemistry, and Robert Cophall, e2, went to Osage City to investigate footprints previously discovered there. They found three feet long and twenty inches wide containing about thirty tracks. Recently Hetter's mother noticed, on several slabs composing the sidewalk of her home, small imprints of what appeared to be tracks made by an animal. A piece of this slab was discovered in a corner Martin pronounced to be actual footprints of the Limpus vagus, a small animal which may have resembled the modern mud puppy, and which is estimated to have lived more than seventy-five million years ago. No fossils were found in the coal measure period, are in existence. The tracks are therefore very valuable, according to Martin, and give some of the few evidences to the first vertebrate animals. Not since 1873, when the late Pr. B. F. Mudge, of Manhattan, discovered in the same locality similar evidence has any further knowledge of the anoplophran been added to facts known, seven slabs containing foot prints, which later described in the American Journal of Science in 1804 by O. C. Marsh, then head of the U. S. Geological Survey. The slabs were taken to Yale, then to New Haven, and are now at Amherst. The trucks indicated an amount of about six inches, with four toes on the front feet and five on the back. Saturday Martin and the students covered several city locks in their inspection of more than a hundred buildings lie in the sidewalks of Orange. I imagine the people we thought were looking for a lost nickel," said Mr. Martin, speaking of their quest "Twenty-five years ago," he said, "everyone had his sidewalk made from the slabs which were taken from a building that was located north of the town. Now they have cement walls and many are taking up the slabs as the Hettlers did, and placing them in the back yards. Sometimes they are overturned, and the opposite side had free to the weather. The slabs were also layers of the slabs to crack and this gives the opportunity for possible prints hidden within to be disclosed." No more tracks were found, with the exception of the ones located in the Herlot lit. These, however, will equal value those discovered nearly fifty years ago, Mr. Martin believes. Thirty five men students are needed to serve the Senior Breakfast at the University Commons Saturday Morning, June 3. Students remaining over for Summer School who can assist are requested to report to Miss Anna Barnum at the Commons office as soon as possible. Wiedemann's Tea Room Service The Dining Service Supreme Summer Suits Genuine Palm Beach tailored in the best possible way. $15.00 Gabardine the finest for summer wear. $22.50 $17.50 and $22.50 Straw hats $2.00 to $5.00 English cassimere and zephyr weight worsted SkofStadS ELLING SYSTEM RALPH W. 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