UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 10c BOWERSOCK THEATRE 10c Palatital Palace of Paramount Pictures LAST DAY :: LAST DAY Wallace Eddinger in A Gentleman of Leisure TOMORROW RULE "G" A Railroad Romance Worth Seeing AURORA TODAY: Featuring "The Rainy Day." A 2-Reel Lubin Drama. Particular Cleanning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE 12 W. Ninth Lawrence Pantatorium Phones 506 You Buy This FREE A Cake of Palmolive If You Will Present This Coupon THIS COUPON will be accepted (if presented within thirty days) as full payment for one cake of Palmolive Soap when the holder purchases another cake at the regular price. cake at the regular price Only one coupon may be presented by by each family and the name and address of the party receiving soap must be signed in full to the following: HEREBY certify that I have this day purchased one cake of Palmolive Soap from James Bulline & Neckman and received one cake of Palmolive Soap Free. Innes, Bulline & Hackman FISCHER'S SHOES ARE GOOD SHOES The New Harvard "Man! Man! Look at the STYLE E o' that Shoe" Such exclamations as this are all we have heard in praise of the new "Harvard" oxford. In fact we're all enthusiastic about it. It's new, original, smart. If you don't think so, come in and try it on. Comes in black or dark mahogany brown. $5 OTTO FISCHER FOOTBALL IS POPULAR Thirty-four Thousand Games Were Staged During Past Season Football during the last season was played by 450 colleges, 6,000 secondary schools, and by 1,500 teams not connected with educational institutions but representing athletic associations large and small. Our players are three times played by 152,000 players participated in the games and practice. store people than ever before, at tended the groom. A total of 7,292,000 persons Subscribe for the Daily Kansan. COFFEFVILLE H. ANNOUNCES 200-PAGE ANNUAL THIS YEAR By George Geer Coffeyville High School—A name has been chosen for the high school annual. Hereafter it will be known as "Memoirs." Elaborate preparations are being made for its publication. It will be the largest annual ever put out by Coffeyville high school and will contain 200 pages. Skating at the Auditorium over night except Monday…Adv. Carnations for St. Patrick's day at the Flower Shop, 85% *Mass*. S-Adv. CINDER ARTISTS TO SPEND WEEK IN REST Open Competition for New Material Tomorrow or Thursday Thursday Following the Missouri-Kansas dual meet in Kansas City Friday, the Jayhawker track team will take a whole week's vacation according to a statement made this morning by Manager W. O. Hamilton. The big Convention Hall must be on the floor and Blue track strain on the fitness and the Coach thinks that they need a rest. Actual work will not be resumed until next week. Later in the season, when McCook Field is in condition for use, Coach Hamilton will issue a general invitation to the students to compete in track. By doing this, he hopes to get some new men. On either Wednesday or Thursday of this week, however, the open competition in the hurdles, the high jump, the long jump, outposted several times will be held in the Gym. Only men who are eligible for the Varsity will be allowed to compete. This means that no freshman, or men who are already on the Varsity, will thus be limited to upperclass material hitherto undiscovered. “There is better material outside than there is on the team,” said Coach Hamilton in speaking of the matter, and after those Varsity jobs.” Four loving cups, one to the winner in each event, will be awarded. The relay was the absorbing topic of conversation between classes, at the "Gym," Lee's. Billy Wadham's and every other spot there two or three times on a period of day away. Probably the personnel of the quartet which contested with the loping Tigers causes the most comment for to the uninitiated it seem as if there was nothing in mind, there was no room for choice in Coach Hamilton's mind. Sport Hash Although the Coach had three letter men anxiously striving to catch his eye there were several reasons for his selection. First and foremost, Ainworth had been clocked in 57 flat inimical wrestling, in an oak cork, which is within a second of the track record for the distance. The coach himself held the watch. Hamilton ran the men in the order they started, thinking that Rodkey and Edwards would open up a big lead which would take all the sap and backbone out of the last two Tigers, allowing the final two Jawkeyers to romp into the crown, while the rally as badly or worse than anyone around Convention Hall at that time and undoubtedly gave the matter considerable thought. From his point of view every experienced relay man there was not a mask and was often in a mild attack of tonsilitis, another had been too occupied with studies to train, merely accompanying the team to act in case of emergency, and a witness had been guilty of breaking training rules to the extent of smoking. Rodkey completed the first lap of the relay in the fast time of 51-2 which is rambling some for the indoor boards. Naturally the relay going is faster than an open race for there is no fighting for the pole, but even at that, it is doubtful if many men could have bettered that time. Rodney was firinghy a clean pair of heels to foot a cowboy, who according to the Star, has equalled the world's intercage record for the double furling. Its too bad that he wasn't wearing a bracelet from behind, it looks as though he would have been good for a seven or eight yards gain. The scene at the Gymnasium is a busy one in the afternoons for Coach McCarty is working out some thirty baseball aspirants in an attempt to locate a pitcher for this year's squad. The team is put through a stiff practice each afternoon and then goes to outdoor practice as soon as the weather permits. McCarty is considerably perturbed because he can not locat a good pitcher—let alone a good sub pitcher. He needs to be well versed. Smee's scholastic difficulties does not seem likely to be raised unless some unknown, who can elude the axe of Pat Murray, appears on the scene; he may not know the face of the Jayhawk nine feels about it. "I do not seem to be able to locate a first class pitcher to build a team around. This afternoon I had a dozen would-be pitchers out but none of them show any signs of relation to the player Johnson or Christy Mathewson. "Batting practice has begun but the important, thing now is to find a pitcher. Surely somewhere in the school a pitcher of ability is lying dormant who can relieve the situation for us." "Football practice will have to start Thursday," said Coach Jay Bond today, after searching a cloud of smoke several minutes to find the answer to the often repeated question. Bond is very anxious about the air but the weather man is still hanging out in his leading role of "The Jinx." Just at present it is the melting of frozen soil which makes McCook accessible. The footing is unfirm and playing on the sod in its present condition would do the trick. However, next Thursday seems the likely date for the inception of the pre-season gambs. The indoor track season is over and if the present weather conditions continue, the men will soon be outdoors working for the big meets soon appropriate to take place at Des Moines Relay Carnival is scheduled to take place and Kansas will surely be represented. The four mite team seems to be the strong combination in college and it would be nice for them to attend at the Pennsylvania relay in case it comes through at the Iowa games. Send the Daily Kansan home. THEATRE VARSITY CHILDS AND HELLER EXPERT MUSICIANS Today Only-Vitagraph presents CISSY FITZGERALD and WALLIE (CUTIE) VAN; and entire Comedy Company in "The Winksome Widow" Four Reel Musical Comedy Production TOMORROW and THURSDAY "Tillie's Punctured Romance" Marie Dressler, Mabel Normand and Charles Chaplin, the three funniest Comedians in the Film World; ninety minutes of laughter; five laughs to the minute. It begins with a titter and ends with a war. Tomorrow and Thursday. ANTI-FRATERNITY LAW FIGHT Kappa Sigma Carries Question of Constitutionality to Supreme Court From Philadelphia North-American... Washington—the constitutionality of the Mississippi Anti-Fraternity law was urged in their fledged town last week. And there are many moments of the University of Mississippi. A case in which J. P. Waugh, a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity, seeks to enjoin the officials of the University of Mississippi from enforcing the law excluding from the University those affiliated with Greek letter societies, will be argued orally before the court in a few weeks. The attorneys argued that a state has a right to govern its own institutions, and hence it was within the power of the Mississippi legislature to condemn fraternities as conducive to friction in college management and to forbid their existence at a state college. Try some of those large grape ruits for five cents, largest ever, at lunmires—Adv. Carnations for St. Patrick's day at the Flower Shop, 825 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. St.— Adv. The Auditorium is available for special skating parties...Adv. Nothing quite so good for sand- wiches as Pimento Cheese or Olive Salad.—At Dummies.—Adv. A View for Your "K" Book Fraser Hall was erected in 1872. The original cost was $140,500 and later additions cost $42,975. It can tains sixty rooms including the chapel hall with a seating capacity of 1,200. Fraser Hall contains the executive offices of the University, Chancellor's office, offices of dean of College, high school visitor, alumni secretary, and offices and recitation rooms for the departments of English; French, German, Greek, Latin, Spanish, and Italian languages. The School of Education, department of home economics, and classical museum, women's rest room, department of weights and measures, extension division, and the seismograph also share the cramped quarters of the building. It was named after General John Fraser, first active chancellor of the University. B