UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN APRIL 8,1018. Coach Bond Driving Men Hard To Prepare For Conference Games Two Weeks Left Before Opening Game With Ames on McCook Field With only two weeks remaining before the opening series of the Missouri Valley Conference baseball season on McCook Field with the Ames Aggies, Coach Jay Bond is driving his men hard this afternoon and the Jayhawkers will cut loose within the next ten days so as to be trained in their best forays among the Ames invasion. The candidates have taken over during the last two weeks of outdoor practice and have confined their real work to three short practice games with Coach Dutch Wedell's freshmen. The Jayhawker pitching staff will probably get its real test this week. Thus far Coach Bond has prohibited the pitchers from throwing curve balls and the men have been working to get control of the ball. But from now on, the pitching candidates will start putting something on the contests against the yearling hitters. Coach Fullill has a bunch of good players among the thirty-th rowers who are out for the freshman team, and these men should furnish the Varsity hurriers plenty of practice before the Ames series. Both the infield and the outfield of the Varsity are uncertain quantities as yet, and no player, with the possible exception of Wardie Weltmert, veteran outfielder, has a place cined. Bert Smith, hard hitting outfielder from last year's freshman outfit, has been showing up well in the outfield and looks good for a place in the center garden. Bill Caler, southpaw Bird in the outfield when he has not occupied the mound, and as Cairn is an excellent fielder and good hitter, he will probably used both in the outfield and in the box. Oyster, Krumback, Tarant, and Wilhelmmy have been playing good ball in the outfield and each man has a chance for a regular berth on the team. Coach Bond has used several combinations in an effort to find a smoothly working infield and Lonborg at third is the only player who has been used at one position with any degree of regularity. hCerry has been putting up a good game at the short stop position, but Stem Foster, who played that position in the last games of the season last year against Missouri, is out for an infield position and will probably be given a trial at short this week. Johnson has played steady ball at second, and Uhlraub has also been used at second and at first. Willems and Machamer are the other candidates for the first base position. Keeler has played both short and third in the practice games. SPORT BEAMS Frank Loomis and Joie Ray broke three central A. A. U. records in the Great Lakes Track Meet at Chicago last Saturday. Loomis shattered the records in the high and low hurdles and Ray broke the record in the mile run. The surprise of the meet was he running of Campbell, an 18-year-old high school athlete who beat Ray in the half mile in the fast time of 1 minute 57 2-5 seconds. The Annual Missouri State high school track meet will be in Columbit May 4. Yale, Harvard, Cornell, Princeton, Dartmouth, and Williams, composing the Intercollegiate athletic association, will resume tennis as a major sport this spring. The annual Missouri Valley track meet will be May 25 at Columbia in front of at Ames, as had been previously planned. The Iowa Aggie students will be released for farm work after April 19 although they will be eligible to compete in the meet, even though they are not in school. The University of Pennsylvania nine defeated Swarthmore College Saturday, 1-0, in an exciting 14-inning game. Boston College defeated the Army team on the same day, 6-2. Send the Daily Kansan Home. Personnel Selected For Glee Club's Trip Nine Concerts to be Given at Camp Funston—To Sing Here in May The Men's Gleen Club has completed final plans for the Funston trip, April 12, 13, and 14. Twenty-two members, the accompanist, and director will go. Professor Joseph Farrell chose the men last week as they were attending the club, and attendance at retreaters determining who should go. Several new numbers have been worked up since the last concert, and these will be sung with the older numbers in the 45-minute concerts to be given at the camp. Two concerts will be given Friday, three Saturday and four Sunday. The concerts on Sunday will be semi-sacred and will probably be similar to the concert given at Haskell School. The club will probably sing for Kansas City, at Kansas High School, April 19 or 26, for a concert number. The home concert to be given in about a month will close a successful season. The men who will take the trip are M. L. Peek, Louis Morgan, Marvin Harms and R. W. Emerson, first tenors; J. H. Smith, Howard Painter, Deane Malel, Harold Black, and Don C. Good, second tenors; John R. Wahlstadt, Harold Hall, Herman Friesen, Clifford Tenny, Herron Flack, and George McNeil montire barton; Seldon Butcher, Arthur Aach, John Winkler, Charles Nettles, Bernard Wirt, Hartzell Ray, Raymond Darby and Tyson Anderson, basses; Marecellus Law, accompaint, and Professor Joseph, A. Farrell, director. Catalogues for 1918-19 May be Out This Month Proofs from the office of the state printer for the annual general catalogue of the University are coming in rapidly for correction, and the catalogues may be ready for distribution some time this month, according to George O. Foster, registrar. The time in which they will be ready depends on the amount of other work the state printer has in hand, as all the material from the University has been sent in. The general catalogue will be printed in one volume this year as last. Miss Rose Morgan of the department of English is editor of this year's catalogue and Prof. D. L. Patterson is chairman of the catalogue committee. Gives Concert At Haskell The K. U. Men's Glee Club gave a sacred concert at the Haskell Chapel, Sunday. Prof. Joseph Farrell directed the club. Eight number were given among them a duet by Harold Hall and Raymond Darby, a solo by Herman Friesen, a violin number by Professor Farrell. The Ames-Missouri dual trac meet will be at Columbia Saturday. Both schools have good track teamss but Missouri should win the meet by a close margin. PLAY BALL! CONKLIN PENS are sold at McColloch's Drug Store 847 Mass. Base ball outfittings and athletic supplies for every sport. The Athletic Stage of Lawnage TEACHERS WANTED—War conditions cause many good positions to be open. We must be prepared to fill them. Write for our blank and booklet. Central Educational Bureau, W. J. Hawkins, Mgr. Metropolitan Bldg., St. Louis, Mo. KENNEDY & ERNST 896 MARR ST. Diamonds, Watches, Silverware, Cut Glass ED. W. PARSONS Jeweler—725 Mass. St. Jewelry of the Better Sort Enlistments Weaken Kansas Track Team Three Good Men Taken Welty to Aviation, Shreve to Naval Training and Coffey Goes to Funston Hope for a winning track team this season received a blow Saturday when two of the regular track men were called into active military service. Donald Welty, star hurdler and vaulter, was called to Berkeley, Cal., where he will receive training and John D. Warner, meteriler, and relay man, was called to the Great Lakes Naval Training Station. This leaves the K. U. track team without a hurdler, as Harold Hobart, the other man out for the stick events, has not appeared for outdoor practice. Welted placed second in the high hurdles at the Missouri-Kansas indoor meet this wiier, and is also a good vaulter. This leaves Roscoe Howard to handle the pole vault. Welty was also a broad jumper. The loss of Shreve makes a gap in the relay team and leaves Lobaugh and Alphal Rodkey to handle the quarter mile. The departure of Shreve and Welty makes three track men who have left school to go into service within the last two weeks. Rival Caffey, a half miler, who was running next to Murphy in the half mile was called to Camp Funston about two hours. This leaves 10 miles in this event. He goes 10 O. Hamilton hopes to fill the places left vacant from the large sound that is trying out. The spring interclass meet, April 12, will give a line on the prospects for the coming outdoor season. The Missouri Valley meet will be held at Columbin, May 25. Gets Lieutenant's Commission Webster W. Holloway, who is a graduate of the University of Kansas, was commissioned a first lieutenant in the United States army last week. He will be in Provost Marshal General Crowder's department and will be sent to France soon. Mr. Holloway was assistant district attorney in the office of Fred Robertson, United States district attorney for Kansas, until his enlistment recently. Mr. Holloway was in Lawrence Sunday visiting friends. He is a member of the Sigma Nu fraternity. Chocolate caramels, coconut tops Cleveland's choice and marshmallows—none like Wiedemann's—Adv Capital $100,000 No amount is too small to LEND TO YOUR COUNTRY. Buy War-Savings Stamps! Meet your appetite at our table The Anderson Cafe 715 Mass. CARTER'S 1025 Mass. St. Typewriter Supplies, Stationery University Supplies Agent for CORONA typewriter Engineers To Celebrate Day of H. S. Track Meet When in Kansas City Stop at the Hostelry of "Good Service" — HOTEL SAVOY WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Their Purpose Is To Create Interest In Engineering Courses Among Prospective Students 9th & Central Sts. ROOMY ROOMS Excellent Cafe and Grill —Popular Prices— Make the "Savoy" Your Headquarter! In order to interest high school students in the engineering courses, Engineers' Day will be set for the same day as the invitation track meet, and the engineers will keep open house throughout the day, if plans suggested at a mass meeting this morning are adopted. In the meantime the engineers have appointed an committee to flag to honor the 400 to 500 students and graduates who have entered the national service. Surplus $100,000 The meeting was held at 10 o'clock this morning, and was addressed by Prof. G. C. Shaad, dean of the School of Engineering. "It seems appropriate at this time," said Professor Shaad, "to think of buying a service flag for the School of Engineering." A committee to determine the cost of a flag was named as follows: Architects, R. Brown; Electricals, H. J. Gish; Civil Engineers, George DeVoe; Chemicals, Fay Walters; Miners, Page Wagner. This committee is to report by the last of next week. Announcement was made of an early entertainment by the Triangle of Engineering societies. Professor Shaad also made a plea that the engineers aid in the Liberty Bond drive. Carefull Attention Given to All Business You can't SPEND your money and SAVE IT too! Buy War-Savings Stamps! Mrs. Wm. H. Schulz Hemstitching and Picoting—10c yd. Remedeling of every description Between Kress' and Woolworth's 917 Mass. St. ir Them While You Wait Work Password Quickly and Safely THE BLUE RIBBON SHOE SHOP F. P. HORMUTH PROPRIETOR You Never Hear of Bargains in Gold Bullion— NEITHER do you find all wool suits made of unfadable fabrics selling for fifteen or seventeen dollars. It can't be done, that's all! country should adopt one definite policy, and that policy to buy only clothes of a nationally known brand. Clothes buyers in this time of wool scarcity and war strain upon the manufacturers of the KIRSCHBAUM, SAMPECK and STRATFORD Line suits conform to the highest standard of quality—both in material and workmanship. They are made conscientiously by manufacturers who have a reputation of long building to maintain. They can not afford to deviate from the paths of honest merchandising. Spring models in the above brands—snappy in style,obby in appearance,but conservatively reasonable in price———— $20 and up! Just as convenient when it comes to the easiness that an electric iron glides over the daintiest waist, or skirt or pair of trousers. The electric irons that we sell are real "trouble smoothers" be progressive and iron electrically. A Labor Reducer An Electric Iron Ready for use in a couple of minutes-no matter if the gas is low;for electricity is always obedient to the snap of aswitch. Kansas Electric Utilities Co. 719 Mass. 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