UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MARCH 18, 1918. Second Set of Games In Intramural Series Will Be Played Today W. A.A. Board Defeated Twelftl District Team In Hard Game Friday The Brush League won from Kappa Phi by a score of 27-2. Marie Brown, running center for Kappa Phi, was the star of the team and scored the two points for her team. The other members of the team are unexperienced in playing the Brush League and Nolle Leibengood, guard played a fast game and had excellent support from the other members of the team. The W. A. A. Board defeated the Twelfth District in a close game by a 34-24 score in the first series of the Intramural basketball tournament Friday afternoon. Grace Olson and Katherine Orelup, forwardes for the Twelfth District, played a fast game but were unable to gain the lead over the more ex- perienced players of the W. A. A. Board. Dorothy Tucker runner center for the Twelfth District, Marcia Morin guard, intercepted the passes of the Twelfth District and prevented them from running up a larger score. Sigma Kappa lost to Gamma Phi Beta, 2-0, by forfeit and Chi Omega forfeited to Patterson Club. 2-0. The second series will be played this afternoon in Robinson Gymnasium at 4:15 with these teams contesting: Kappa Alpha Theta vs. Alpha Xi Delta, Faculty vs. Y. W. C., Brush Lengue vs Gamma Phi Beta, W. A. A. vs. Patterson Club. SPORT BEAMS Another District high school basketball championship will be decided at Horton Friday and Saturday when the teams of the First District compete. Nelson Metcalf, present director of athletics at Columbia University, has been appointed athletic director at Oberlin college. He will begin his duties in the fall. Harry McHenry, captain of the Drake track team in 1914 and also a football player of note, is the first Drake man to be killed in France. He was captain of an Iowa infantry company. The Baker University quintet easily defeated Coach Bill Hargiss' Emporia Normal team Tuesday by a score of 35-19. Baseball prospects are discouraging at the University of Michigan. Coach Lungren of the Wolverines has few veterans and only a small number of new men have turned out for practice. Northwestern University will be represented on the diamond by an informal team this year. The purple nine will probably play the camp teams and a few of the nearby colleges. Eight basketball teams will play for the Iowa state high school basketball championship at a tournament held by the University of Iowa Friday and Saturday. An invitation basketball tournament is being held at Wichita today and tomorrow and practically every team in the Arkansas Valley is entered. Thirty candidates have turned out in response to the first call for outdoor baseball practice at the University of Indiana. Michigan made a desperate effort to win at least one basketball game this season last Saturday but the final score was 34-27 with Ohio State on the long end. This is the first year Michigan has been represented on the basketball court for some time, and all the material was inexperienced. Frank Mandeville, football star last fall, has received his call to report at the aviation training school at Urbana, Ill., and will leave next week. Mandy was accepted for service some time ago. In the basketball game Tuesday evening between Faculty and Alemannia, Hazel Pratt, jumping center for the faculty, scored ten out of fifteen points for her team by tossing five field goals. The Jayhawkers have withdrawn from the basketball tournament held in Kansas City today and tomorrow. The members of the team have not been in training since the last Kansas Aggie series, and as they had already missed many days of school while on trips, they decided to withdraw from the tournament. The Ames Aggies won a big indoor track meet Saturday in which Ames, the University of Iowa, Drake and Grinnell competed. Ames won with 42 points, Grinnell was second with 25. Iowa University had 17 and Drake was last with 13. The Wichita reserves, a team of former high school stars, won the first annual Y. M. C. A. tournament staged at Wichita, Friday and Saturday. Wichita high school won the championship of its class but lost to the Reserves by a 37-36 score. The Ottawa University quintet, champions of the Kansas State Conference, will play the undefeated Kansas City Schmelzers tonight at Ottawa in a Red Cross benefit game. Joie Ray, world's champion runner, equalled the world's record in the 1000 yard race at New York Saturday, when he covered the distance in 2 minutes and 14 seconds. Johnny Overton of Yale had previously held the record. Ray ran the 1000 yard race at the K. C. A. C. meet in 2 minutes and 18 2-5 seconds. Class Visits Prison In First-Hand Study Thirty-five See State And Federal Institutions At Here Home In two prisons and out again in one day, in the workshop though, not down in the mine, through cell corridors to kitchens and back to the businessline wardsen office for lectures by both prison officers and prisoners themselves, comprises the interesting record Thursday of thirty-five students in a course on Remedial and Corrective Agencies who went to the Federal and State prisons in Leavenworth and Lansing yesterday with Professor W. B. Bodenhafer. The party arrived at the big gates of Leavenworth penitentiary at 10:30 o'clock and Professor Bodenhafer had to negotiate for admittance with a conscientious guard. Kodakhs was left behind. Then the gates swung back only to close behind the visitors. After lunch down-town, the sociological investigators journeyed eight miles south to Lansing and there gained entrance to the state penitentiary without the preliminaries which was made necessary at Leavenworth. Row after row of cells was passed, cells which under modern conditions have light, air, and scrupulous cleanliness. Prisoners were found busy in their workshops where labor was made both a profit and necessary occupation for men in confinement. At night prisoners had opportunity to eat with the prisoners at noon, for the party of visitors was too large. Warden Codding and two trustees conducted the party about the institution. Souvenirs of the trip were found in the shape of leather scraps from the shoe shop and strings of flux from the twine factory. No one other was disposed to access the invitation to descend into the coal mine. The real experience of the day came in the registry office where each visitor left the regulation thumb print, Here's the Best Reference Book Published 847 Mass. CONKLIN PENS are sold at McColloch's Drug Store 847 Mass THE WORLD ALMANAC for 1918-full of modern statistics—availuable aid to the student! Price, 30c a copy. CARDER'S NEWS STAND The Red Front Store—827 Mass. St. although nobody was "mugged." Mrs. Codding, wife of the warden, gave an informal talk to the young women and the warden gave the whole group a lecture in his office on the system of correction used at Lansing. When he finished, Fred Burns, a trusty, told the story of his experience as dope friend, expert pickpocket, and model prisoner. Those making the trip were: Oapal Day, Grace Gibson, Marion Griffith, Lucille Hovey, Julia Kennedy, Elizabeth Plank, Jessie Renkma, Emmy May Rummell, Hazel Ernst, Mary Brownlee, Dorothy Flint, Gladys Robinson, Alice Davis, Ada Levi, Frances Adams, Maude Bryan, Lucy Allen, Carl Blake, Young, Hoffman, Swanson, Burt, Wolgemuth, and Professor W. B. Dodenhafer and Dean F. W. Blackmar. "Labor" will be the subject of a talk by Prof. C. A. Dykstra of the department of history at the regular meeting of the Woman's Forum Thursday afternoon at 3:00 o'clock in Room 110 Fraser Hall. Enrollment in the University makes every woman a member of the forum and as a member each woman is especially invited to attend these meetings, says Lucille Nowlin chairman of the forum. The class in First Aid, under the instruction of Dr. A. W. Clark will meet at 7:30 o'clock on Wednesday night in Westminster Hall. Chocolate, strawberry and vanilla ice cream every day at Wiedemann's. —Adv. Woman's Forum To Hear Prof. Dykstra on Labor Take your old fountain pen to Barber & Son, Druggists, and receive $1 credit on an Ink-Tite self-filling pen. It's guaranteed.—Adv. 90-55 Last year's straw hat can be dyed any color you wish with Colorite—Evans Drug Store.—Adv. Which will you pay? Twenty-five cents for drinking water or twenty-five dollars in doctor bills? 25c or $25 Mount Hope Natural Spring Water Phone 2670 A DAILY LET? ER HOME—The Daily Kanan. "He Can't Hurt It' It's a Woodstock A war saver is a life saver! Buy War-Savings Stamps! for having more "best" features in one machine than any other Typewriter made. *Strictly Standard*, which means 42 key, single shift, and not 28 key. It's faster, but Count the keys—The Latest is None Too Late for the UP-TO-DATE-Invest wisely—Select carefully—and don't make the mistake of using an old typewriter. The WOODSTOCK meets every demand, suits every purpose, the greatest service for the least money—almost invariably preferred by the best operators. Try the Best and Save the Most! Try a WOODSTOCK and you will use no other—to Use is to Choose. We're INVESTIGATE BY All Means—We're INVESTIGATE BY All Means —We're at your service. Let us show you how easy it is to try one, or own one. Call 3463 - call up, call in, or write MORRISON & BLIESNER Eldridge Corner Phone 164 PROTCH Don't wait--do it now! Buy War- Savings Stamps! The College Tailor SPRING SUITS LANDER THE JEWELER Makes Watches Run Right 917 MASS. ST. Taxi 12 'PHONE 'One-Twe" They're the Kind of Clothes a College Man Wants The New Spring Suits We Show They're the kind of clothes that put the "Punch" in your appearance. "Peppery,""Clean Cut""Full of Life"Clothes From "Society Brand" the feature model is the Military made of new Fabric called the Glenrocks—famous for it's double service wearing qualities—You'll like this one. Priced at $35.00. Insist on Quality when buying clothes—Buy clothes that have a Reputation to maintain, they are the kind of Clothes we sell. Never was it more important that you get the most for the money you spend. Under the present conditions, Quality Clothes cannot be sold at so-called low prices. Why? Because it is estimated that it takes 13 times as much wool for the Soldier as it does for the civilian—wool is worth 75c per pound now, when before the war the price was 20c per pound, all costs of production have almost doubled. Your Easter Suit is Here at $20, $25 to $40 VARSITY TODAY AND TUESDAY PARAMOUNT PICTURES BOWERSOCK THE HANDSOME WALLACE REID AND THE BEAUTIFUL KATHLYN WILLIAMS IN "The Thing We Love" NOTICE—This picture would go over big without a popular star, but with "Wallie" Reid and Kathyn Williams it is without a doubt one of the best this season. —De Wattville. THE UNIQUE Sessue Kayakawa IN "The Secret Game" Do you remember "The Great," "The Jaguar's Claws," "The Bottle Imp," or "Hashimura Togo?" Well, "The Secret Game" is even more interesting and vivid—if you really want to see a set of real reeles, don't miss it. De Watteville.