UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SCIENTISTS MEET IN TOPEKA FRIDAY Many K. U. Professors on Program of Kansas Academy of Science The Kansas Academy of Science will meet in Memorial Hall in Topela Friday and Saturday. The program consists of three parts; the first, desks to physics and chemistry; the second, the third, to papers of general interest. The University is well represented on the program, for papers will be read by Dean Lucius E. Sayre and Prof. L. D. Havenhill, of the School of Pharmacy, Dr. E. H. S. Bailey of the department of chemistry, W. S. Long of the food analysis laboratories, Prof. Elizabeth C. Sprague of the department of home economics, Prof. B. M. Allen of the department of medicine, Sandwail of the School of Medicine, Prof. A. C. Terrill of the department of mining engineering, Prof. C. C. Williams of the department of railway engineering, and Prof. J. E. Todd of the department of geology. Other papers on the program will be given by professors in Kansas State Agricultural College, Emporia Normal, and Washburn College, and by members of the State Board of Health The president of the Academy is L. D. Havenhill, vice-president, Prof. L. D. Havenhill. SEASON FOR QUIZZES OPENS JANUARY 22 Classes meeting at 10:30 will be examined Monday a. m., January 22. Classes meeting at 4:30 will be examined Monday p. m., January 22. Classes meeting at 9:30 will be examined Tuesday a. m., January 23. Classes meeting at 3:30 will be examined Tuesday p. m., January 23. Classes meeting at 11:30 will be examined Wednesday am, January 24. Classes meeting at 1:30 will be examined Wednesday p. m., January 24. Classes meeting at 8:30 will be examined Thursday a. m., January 25. Classes meeting at 2:30 will be examined Thursday p. m., January 25. Exclusively Saturday classes will be examined Friday a. m., Jan. 26. Three hour classes (and one hour classes meeting on Monday, Wednesday or Friday) will be examined from 8:30 to 10:30, if scheduled above for the holdout period of 3:30 if Two hour classes (and one hour classes meeting on Tuesday or Thursday) will be examined from 10:50 to 12:30, if scheduled above for the morning; from 3:50 to 5:30 if scheduled above for the afternoon. Four and five hour classes will be examined from 8:30 to 11:30, if scheduled above for the morning; from 11:30 to 12:30, if scheduled above for the afternoon. Laboratory classes will be examined at the time corresponding in the schedule above to the first laboratory period or at the time corresponding to the last laboratory hour exerts) at the discretion of the head of the department concerned. Classes meeting on Saturdays and not on other days in the week will be examined as scheduled above on Friday a. m. from 8:30 to 10 for one and two hour courses; from 8:30 to 10:30 for three hour courses. Students wishing to take entrance examinations should apply to E. F. Stimpson, Room 202, Blake Hall, on or before Friday, January 19, so that a time schedule may be arranged. Hard in your name, street address and telephone number if you have one. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ASKS FACULTY TO DINNER A special invitation is extended to all members of the faculty to attend a luncheon at the Chamber of Commerce tomorrow noon at twelve-thirty o'clock in the afternoon of a meeting of the Chamber of Commerce this noon at which the Lawrence organization worked out this plan of development of organization through bringing together the members of the faculty of design and business men of the city or betterment of the community. J. Will Kelly, secretary of the Topeka Chamber of Commerce, will speak to the guests. The Topeka organization has recently outed out a campaign by which they doubled the strength of their organization. Make Pinette at Fowler A Barber pipette-holder is being made in Fowler Shops for the Massachusetts Agriculture College at Amhurst, MN. The lab has a dedicated instrument used in connection with the microscope to isolate bacteria. A Popular Place These Days BY THE WAY Pockets Pockets, pockets everywhere, and not a dress without. Of course, in the old times when women were always followed by gay cavaliers, pockets were not a necessity. With the advent of the dorine box dangling from the finger, women became more independent of the masculine pocket. And now that the war has been so disastrous women have become very willing to take their places in the busy world. Needing a place to keep change, kerchiefs, powder puffs, etc., woman's appeal to Dame Fashion resulted in present styles of pockets. They are any style, shape and size; some are fastened on by buttons, some stitched on, and some dangle from the back. Evening gowns are commodious sort is the one made by gathering the skirt up into a pouch. Evening gowns look well with large pockets because there is then a place to hide arms bared by sleeveless Chicken pockets are the latest Theta Sigma Phi Initiates The annual initiation of Theta Sigma Phi, honorary journalistic sorority, will be at the Alpha Chi Omega house, 1541 Kentucky street, Saturday. Initiation for seven pledges will be held at eight o'clock; at ninety-thirty a four-course banquet will be served. Among those who will give toasts will be Margaret Hill McCarter, Hannah Mitchell, and Mildred Eppard. Miss Effie Graham of Topeka will give the toast, "Too Late to Classify". Other speakers on the program include Helen Patterson, Estella Foster, Hallie Clark, and Jessie Lessick Messick The Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity was at home to the Alpha Xi Delta sorority last night from seven until eight o'clock. The Alpha Chi Omegas will tooight and the Alpha Delta Phi Tha fraternity from seven until eight o'clock. Pi Kappas at Home Y. W. Met Yesterday Y. W. Mett Yesterday Mrs. Vivian Hoofd Warthen, c'16, spoke to Mr. A. W. Hancock on "What Are You Doing Here," at the regular meeting of the Y. W. in Myers Hall yesterday. She gave a detainee account of the work done by her and McKinley Warren, c'16, among the Kansas Indian Reservations this summer. Miss Helen Jones, instructor in the department of German, will speak University Women's tea The University Women's Association will entertain with a tea, Thursday afternoon, January 25, at the home of Mrs. E. W. Murray, 1603 Louisiana street. University Women's Tea Visitors Helen Jenkins, fa'16, of Tulsa, Oklahoma, has been a guest at the Omega house. Miss Jenkins is an in-house teacher at Oakwood college, St. Charles, Missouri. Adriance Jailite of Council Grove is a guest at the Kappa house. New Pledges Kappa Sigma announces the pledging of Wilbur Jones, '118, of Wichita, and Horace Rich, c'20, of Coldwater. Chi Omega announces the pledging of Leah Stewart, c'18, of DeSoto, Missouri. Lillian Smith, Charline Smith, c'19, and Mr. R. M. Rush will leave January 17 for Japan, China, Korea, and the Philippines. They sail January 25 from Vancouver, B. C., on the Empress of Russia. Water Order Aerated Distilled Water from McNish. Phones 198. **tt** "Sheaffers' s" Non-leakable fountain pens, none better. Buy them at Wolf's Book Store..Adv. 72-5 C. E. Orelup, M. D. Specialist—Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. 90 percent of all headaches are due to eye strain, cured by glaucoma. Glaucoma is well documented. Bell phone 1700, Dick Building. Successor to Dr. Hammond—Adv. Have you ever wondered why the cost of Life insurance in all old line countries is so high? 50 People - Superb Talent The Fine Arts Dept. of the University of Kansas presents January 15. Bowersock Theatre "The Chimes of Normandy" Costumes Direct from Tams, N. Y. PRICES: 50c, 75c' and $1 Tree Tanglefoot Does It Save the Elm Trees from Canker Worms Now is the time to put the band on Elm trees—Phone 194 and we will send a man to put them on. Evans Drug Store 819 Mass. St. MRS. HENLEY GIVES SCIENCE LANTERN SLIDES TO K. U. A set of 150 colored lantern slides has been given to the University by Mrs. A. Henley of Lawrence. The slides show typical scenery in the Rocky Mountains in Ireland, Scotland, France, Germany, and Holland and will be used by instructors to illustrate their work. Should Destroy Old Trees Prof. W. C. Stevens, of the department of botany says he did not recommend the destruction of all soft maples and elms in Lawrence in his discussion last Sunday night at Plymouth Center, as was erroneously reported in the Daily Kansan. What he did with these trees is the majority of these trees had already outlived their cycle of growth and were beginning to die. He suggested, therefore, that they be cut down and hard maples and red oaks—trees much better suited for the purpose anyway—be planted in their place. Y, M, C, A, Conference Meets In Colorado Park in June That K. U. will be represented this year by a special train of delegates to the Estes Park conference, to the University Y. M. G. C. A. leaders. ALL ABOARD FOR ESTES "We had the largest delegation," last year," said Hugo Wedell, secretary of the association. "This year we are planning on fifty men as a minimum. We are working on a plan which will give us a representative from every ethnicity, every race, every nationality, from all organizations on the hill. We will have a special train, not a special car, from K. U. The conference will be held this year about the middle of June and students who wish to go may get information about the trip by asking any of the followingmen: Edward W. Rock, Rookward, August Selig, Donald Woodward, E. F. Price, Lester Evans, L.A. Walworth, W. D. Steinhaur, J. Carter, J. B. Hill, Homer Herriott, Clarence Garrill, Clarendon Having-in-Loving, Robert Stauew, Ray Stauew, Robert Wolgemuth, Leland Smith, Clyde C Kaufman, Chauce Vorhees, Theodore Reid, Lloyd Snock, Hugo Wedell. Woody Hit the Pill Walter Wood, who won two K's in each of his three years of athletic eligibility in the University, and received his degrees in pharmacy last spring, continues to cop athlete home games at the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, which credits Woody with the highest batting average in the Interstate Trolley League. His average for the season of 1914 was 48.0, the game-money allotted by the Alton (Illinois) Blues—his home town team. Send the Daily Kansan home. Today VARSITY Today CARLYLE BLACKWELL IN On Dangerous Ground Thursday: Hazel Dawn and Owen Moore in "Under Cover." FOLLOWED ORDERS "N EVER state as a fact anything you are not certain about," the great editor warned the new reporter, "or you will get us into libel suits. In such cases use the words 'alleged,' 'claimed,' 'reputed,' rumored,' and so on." And then this paragraph appeared in the society notes of the paper: "It is rumored that a card party was given yesterday by a number of reputed ladies. Mrs. Smith, gossip says, was hostess. It is alleged that the guests, with the exception of Mrs. Bellinger, who says she hails from Leavitt's Junction, were all from here. Mrs. Smith claims to be the wife of Archibald Smith, the so-called 'Honest Man,' trading on Key street." -St. Louis Star. FOLLOWING ORDERS is a solemn statute of DAILY KANSAN discipline; only, of course, with more discrimination than the above reporter used. It is strict instructions that produce accurate news accounts; hence the Kansan's reputation for authenticity. SPECIAL RATE DAILY KANSAN from now until June- $2 Phone K. U. "Double-Six" or mail your subscription, but don't delay! CONKLIN PENS are sold at McCulloch's Drug Store 847 Mass. Remember SCHULZ makes clothes You can find him at 917 Mass. St. Peoples State Bank Capital and Surplus $88,000.00 "EVERY BANKING SERVICE" WILSON'S The Popular Drug Store Toilet Articles Good Things to Eat and Drink PROTCH The Tailor ON SALE AT PECKHAM'S Think Ahead! These are the days when care of your figure will count as the years go by. For your figure the corset is responsible. will take care of your figure today tomorrow and in the days to come you will retain your youthful lines. Take the necessary time for a careful fitting. $3 and up INNES, BULLENE & HACKMAN your dates with the official Jayhawker photographer now Squires Studio