UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the Universi- city of,Kangasn John M. Henry...Editor-in-Chief Raymond Clapper...Managing Editor Helen Hayes...Associate Editor William Cady...Exchange Editor BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS & MGR Chas. S. Sturvent, Advertising Mgr. REPORTORIAL STAFF Leon Harrah Ames Rogers Gilbert Clayton Joe McMullen J. M. Miller J. M. Miller Charles Sweet Don Davis Elmer Arndt Carol Nutt Andrew Brindel Louis Puckett Harry Morgan Glenn Loudon C. A. Hargrove Patterson Fred Bowers Subscription price $2.50 per year in advance; one term, $1.50. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas, Phone, Bell K. U. 25 Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the Department of Journalism. She Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduates in Kansan; to go further than merely printing the text on paper; to University hold; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be anxious; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads, in all, to help students identify the students of the University. Professor H. T. Hill ... Faculty Member Bon Josef ... Student Member John Born ... Student Member If you find a mistake in statement or impression in any of the cases, inform the secretary at the Daily Kanan office. He will instruct you as to further pro- TUESDAY MARCH 2, 1915 LOOK OUT FOR THE AGENT Within a few weeks the annual influx of special agents for book selling concerns, kitchen ware outfits, medicine companies, etc. will begin. The great majority of the students of the University will be approached with some kind of a plan" to earn easy money during the summer." A part of the propositions, likely the greater part, will be bona fide. But there will be some that are not worth the wind the agent expends in presenting them. For these the students must watch if some smooth-tongued stranger comes to your room and presents to you a plan whereby you can become virtually rich during the summer, take his proposition with a grain of salt. Don't be so skittish as to lose a good proposition but beware of the man with the dollar an hour plan. Likely your expenses for next year depends on your summer's work. Be careful what you connect with. And read the contract before signing it. GET INTO THE GAME Does your boarding club have enough members in it for a baseball nine? Get into the Hash House League and show the fellows how you did it in high school. If it has, select a man at supper this evening as your representative and send him to the meeting at the Daily Kansan office at 7:30 o'clock. The rules for the year will be discussed, provisions made for grounds, officers elected, and a schedule made out. BRING IN YOUR NAME Are you going to the Fair this summer? If so bring your name and address to the Daily Kansan office and look over the lists of other students that are going. Then go around and get acquainted with them. It will help you to have a better time when in San Francisco. THE ANSWER IS— Should the Colonial Party be made an annual affair? Should an event that brings 1500 students together socially, gives them an "out of the class room" acquaintance with their professors, and cements a good feeling between barb and frat be made an annual affair? If the snow were cleaned off the walks on the campus the students would not get their feet so wet. Add current humqr—"We're Hel on education in Kansas." Who's Who in the Mott Meetings Fred H. Rindge, Jr., international secretary of the Y. M. C. A., was graduated from Columbia University, New York, in 1908. He took his A.M. at Columbia and a diploma at the York School of Philanthropy in 1909. While at college he was an officer in twenty different organizations, a fraternity man, a Phi Beta Kappa, and valedictorian of his class. He graduated from the university in his freshman year; and for four years was one of the gymnastic and athletic instructors. At the close of his course he was awarded the "Alumni Prize," voted by faculty and students, deserving man in the senior class. At Columbia, Mr. Rindge was for several years head of the Student Christian Association, and helped organize the university's Social Service. His master's thesis was on the subscriptions of M. C. A., and Industrial Letterment." For the past six years he has been travelling through the United States and Canada as a secretary of the Industrial Department of the Y. M. C. institution where he is leading what is known as the Industrial Service movement, and has enlisted several thousand college men in many forms of volunteer industrial service for men and boys. Student and city Y. M. C. A., churches, school organizations and many other agencies help locally in this movement, and one hundred national agencies for social and industrial betterment cooperate. During the past year 3,500 students from 160 colleges and technical schools were trained in design and American working men and boys in many forms of volunteer service. They have gained fully as much as they have given. Three thousand graduates are also interested. Most of these men are engineers, because they are not just those who are to hold influential business and industrial positions. Mr. Rindge has become a "human- efficiency engineer." He has spoken o scores of colleges, met hundreds of professors in conference, and is at home with students and labor unions and with employers and employees. His magazine articles have appeared in the Word's Work (March 1914), the Survey (April 19, 1913), the Engineering Journal (November 29, 1913), Coke and Coal Operator, Mexican Mining Journal, and other periodicals. There has been a noticeable increase in the attendance at the art exhibit by the report got out in September. Morn" had a rival there. Missed by the Oread Board of Censorship L. H. G.A. This man Mott, of whom we have heard nothing but good, is, we take it, a bon mot. When we asked one of the lady instructors how she looked John Bunny, she seemed puzzled at first, but then replied: "Ah, I presume you are referring somewhat inaccurately to the author of 'Pilgrims' Progress." A feature film shown downtown recently with Marp Pickford playing the lead has been thus ably described by a student who saw it: "A pleasant, pelucid, phantasmalagogical phantasy, palpitant with primal passions, and permeated with practical philosophy, pruned of plaitudes." This column wishes to disclaim any responsibility for the daily human interest story of Pt. the intellectual scientist who don't know who his press agent is. Former Student Councils have handled discipline cases and the Council last year made the Union a credit to itself and to the school. The reason must be with the personnel of the present Council. That the Student Council has failed is no longer a question of conjecture. It is a fact, that we must admit. It has failed as a governing body absolutely. As promoters of Union it union was unspelled, inefficient. UNDERWOOD Its latest insult to the intelligence of the school and particularly the senior class, is to try to FORCE the manager of the senior play to turn over half of the proceeds of the performance to the Student Council to Holder of the Elliott Cresson Medal for Superiority of Mechanical Construction. "The Machine You Will Eventually Buy" pay the balance of the Student Union debt. Which by the way is a monument to its indolence and inefficiency Suppose the play had not have expenses, which would have been nothing improbable, would council have offered ways of means to clear the debt? No it probably would have called on the manager of the Annual Play to pay in his salary to the senior play management to clear the debt of both the play and the Student Union. The writer would not be at all surprised to see the present Council is sue an order on the management of the Annual to pay the Union debt. 912 Grand Avenue The writer is advised that the Council is laboring under the impression that the reason for its monumental failure is its constitution and by-laws. If it gives this as its reason, why of course it is wrong to allow it to be. But it it really wants to make a change for the better, the writer commends its attention to the plan at the University of Washington. Holder of all World's Records for Typewriter Speed and Accuracy. College Administrative Committee—First Monday of each month, 4:30 p.m. THE STUDENT COUNCIL AT BARNARD The Student Council at Barnard has taken upon itself a new function that of developing an interest in vocations open to women. The council feels that the press should carry on this work do not reach the whole student body. The council will not try to find positions for individuals but will try to direct and stimulate undergraduate interest and inquiry. A series of articles on the subject are presented in different lines of work, will be published by the council. A bureau of information will be established within the council. On a conspicuous bulletin board will be posted newspaper clipping notes and notice relating to the curriculum of competent men and women may be secured from time to time to address the college on the general aspect of the question. Some system of vocational guidance by qualified advisors may be developed with the assistance of the relevant personnel sometimes in the future a required course in possible vocations may be instituted—Smith College Weekly. Please report any errors in this list to K. U. 32. Reformer. Where They Meet Chancellor's open office hours -Fe- faculty, Tuesday, 3 to 4 p. m. Boytany Club — First and third Wednesdays of each month, 7:00 p.m. ; 7:30 p.m. Chemical Engineering Society—Aller- gate Wednesdays, 7:30 p.m., m. Chem- istry, 645 W. 16th St. College Faculty - Third Thursday o each month at 30 p. m.; lectur in progress. Snow Hall. Cerulee. Francis. Wednesday, 4:20 p. Engineering School Faculty--Las- t Tuesday of each month, 4:30 p.m. in the Library. Athletic Board—On call. Band—Every Wednesday evening. Deutsche Verein-Mondays, 4:30 m. Fraser 313, School Faculty - Las Outstanding Club - Every Tuesday afternoon, at 3:30 p. m.; room 205. English Journal Club—Once a month. Economical Journal Club—Every Tuesday. Embatological Journal Club—Tuesday. **Geology** Club-Second room; room 105, fourth month, 4:30 p.m. ; room 206, Haworth, month, 7:30 a.m. and Wednesday The Machine That Broke all Records in Mechanical History for Rapid Growth in Output. Museum Balutana Faculties name—Meet on call. Club—Second and fourth Graduate School Graduate School Faculty—Second 季度 of each month. Used by all World's Champions and Successful Speed Operators. Girl's Glee Club - Mondays and Wednesdays, 5 p. m.; North College. wednesday's 1:35 p.m. windsor's 4:00 worth. "first Glee Club" - Mondays and Wed *first Glee Club* Greek Symposium—First Thursday in each month 7:30 p. m.; at the homes of the presidents Home Economics Club—Last Wednesday of each month, 4:30 p.m.; room 218. Jurisprudence Club—Every third Wednesday evening, at 8. Kansas City Section of the American Chemical Society—Once a month, on Saturdays, alternating between Kansas City and KC, students begin at 4 p.m. Kansas City, Missouri Mandolin Club—Wednesdays, 7:30 p. Friday, 7:50 p. K. U. Branch of the American Insti- tute of Education, for training on Monday night, at 7:30; room 102. Mathematical Club—Second and Third Floor, Room 103. Administrati- b. m.; Room 103. Administration Men's Student Council—Every Tuesday, Sept. 5, 11 a.m. Student Union. Mining Journal—Meets first and third Wednesdays, each month. 1:30 p.m. room 203, Haworth Hall. Orchestra: Tuesday, t. 7:30 p. m.; Fra- rase: Tuesday, t. 8:15 p. m. Pharmaceutical Society—Once a week on call; lecture room, Chemistry Quill Club—Every other Tuesday 7:30 o'clock, Fraser. fourth Tuesday, each month. 8 p student. Volunteer Meeting - Wednes- day. Student Volunteering University Senate—First Tuesday of each month. 4:30 p. m.; room 116. University Post Office—Every day exe- cent Sunday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Engineering Society—First and second month. 4:30 p.m. m: 207 Marvin Hall days, 7:30 p. m.; room 110. Fraser University, Debatting Society—Monday, 7:30 p. m. Women's Student Government Association-Thursday. 430 p. m.; f.M. Y. M. C. A.-Iregular meeting, Sundays, 4:30 p. m.; Mersh Hall, For- Y. M. C. A. B. Board of Directors--Second Thursday, each month, 7:30 p.m. www.a.c.b.edu Y. W. C. A. "At Home" - Second, third and fourth Sundays, 4 to 6 p.m. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Y. W. C. A. Second Cabinet—Tuesdays, 7 n. m. 1209 Oedw. Y. W. C. A. Advisory Board—Secol month, m/th. 3/10, p.m. m. 1247 Lajuana Louisiana Second Semester—Opena Monday, Feb- bursday, 1430 p.m. Meeting For days, 1430 p.m. Meeting For Chemical Club--Second and fourth fourth. Chemistry Building, J. B. Whelan, Chemistry Building, J. B. Whelan, ruary 5, 1915. Easter Receives—Friday and. Monday. El Atenco—Second and fourth Thurs. of each month, 439 p. m.; Prat. of each month, 439 p. m.; Prat. Chancellor and Mrs. Strong—At home afternoon, and Friday, Thursdays of each No. 1, N.Y. Next Summer Session—Opens Thurs. Aug. 25, 1915 Next Commencement—Wednesday June 9, 1915. Good Government Club-Thursday, 8 p.m. a fraternity house, chosen by ser 314. Glee Club—Tuesday and Thursday K. U. Debating Society—Thursdays, 8 p. m. Frasier, 132. Y. W. G. A. Cabinet-Thursday's, 7:15 p. m. 1209 Oread. Glee Club—Tuesday Fraser Hall. Good Government Club—Thursday, 8 THANKS KANSAS FOR RED CROSS RELIEN K. U. Branch of the American Society Mechanical Engineers - Every Thursday 'HANKS KANSAS MEN The faculty and students of the University of Kansas contributed 840 up to the present time to the red Cross for relief work in the p. m. Fraser, 313. Y. M. C. A. Cabinet—Thursday, 5:30 Prof. W. A. Whitaker, chairman of the university Red Cross committee, received a letter recently from S. P. Lorris, acting national director of the Red Cross thanking the students and faculty for their liberal gift to his work. Sanitary Cafe, a good place to eat; get a meal ticket—Adv. SHUBERT Malinness WATES AND WAYS OF SOLVENT "Potash & Perlmutter" NIGHTS AND SAT. MAT. 5AT to $2.00 WED MAT. 25T to $1.50. NEFT "PEG OF MY HEART" 5TUDENTS' SHOE SHOP R. O. FURGERT, Prop. 1107 Mass. St. Satisfaction Guaranteed Lawrence, Kansas. LAWRENCE Largest and best equipped business college Kansas. School occupies 2 floors at TYPE or shortened by machine. Write for sample of Stenotype notes and a catalog. PROTSCH "The Tailor" SPRING SUITING A. G. ALRICH PRINTING Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Rubber Stamps', Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. 744 Mass. Street. A Good Place To Eat At Anderson's Old Stand Johnson & Tuttle, Proprietors 715 Massachusetts Street. Box Stationery All Grades—All Prices McColloch's DrugStore Want Ads FOR RENT—Roomr and board for young men. Electric lights, furnace; modern house. Bell 1144. 89-6* WANTED - Work. Students wish work to help defray expenses. Not particular about kind of work. Bell 942W. FOR SALE—A nearly new Remington typewriter—a bargain—address Marthine ruthie, barr, 342 Indiana. Phone贝儿, room 202 Minneapolis. phone K. U, 139. 89-8* FOR RENT—Large front room 15x18 second floor, south and west ex- posure, at 1134 Ohio. Furnished or used. Several bedrooms. labs within a block. 97-3* WANTED -4 or 5 boarders at 1135 Ohio street. 100-3 Cold, sparkling soda, in clean glasses at Barber's drug Store.-Adv. LOST—A pair of nose glasses between the Museum and the Pi Phi house. Return to Registrar's office Safety razors blades and stoppers at Barber's Drug Store—Adv. MRS. MORGAN up to date dress making and ladies' tailoring. Also party dresses. Prices very reasonable, 1321 Tenn. Phone 1116W. 98-6* C. W. STEEPER Cleaning, Pressing and Remodeling Club 10 years up to date men and women 10 years up to date Satisfaction Guaranteed. A. H Pest, K. J. Willemso Aga. B. 1434 Wilma 924. WATKINS NATIONAL BANK WATKINS' Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depository FRANK KOCH 'THE TAILOR' Full Line of Spring Suitings STUDENT HEADQUARTERS J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Spe- cimenist 802 Mass. St. Hell Phone 958. Professional Cards HARRY REDING. M, D. Eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Office, F. A, A. Bldg. Phones. Bell 513. Home 512. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Disease of Residence. Ohio State. Residence. Ohio State. Both. J. R. BECHTEL M. D. D. O. $23 Bathroom. Both phones, office and residence. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS, Office over Squire's Studio. Both phones. A. J. ANDERSON, M. D., Office 715 Vt. St. Phones 124. Classified Jewelers EID. W. PARSONS. Engraver. Watch- ewelry. Bell Phone 711, 717, 717Mass evidently. Bell Phone 711, 717, 717Mass Music Studios CORA REYNOLDS will receive special papils in offices. Studio Room in right corner. Plumbers PHONE KENNEDY PLUMING CO. Voice Phones. 6854 Mada lamps. 7953 Voice Phones. 6854 Mada lamps. Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK, 913 Mass. Millinery WANTED—Ladies to call at Mr. Mc. Brennan for a meeting to inspect our new line of家具. **851** **321-674-0099** Shoe Shop FORNEY SHOE SHOP, 1017 Mass. St. Granted a mistake. All work guaranteed. Insurance FIRE INSURANCE, LOANS, and ab- bac. Bank Bail Building. Bail 155. Home 2892. FRANK E. BANGK, Ins., and abstracts of Title. Room 2, F. A. A. Building Ladies' Tailoring MBS, EMMA, BROWN-SCHULZ-HE- making and Ladies. Tailoring. Re- making and Ladies. Tailoring. Send the Daily Kansan home. A