UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN See Miss Ward, the Beauty Specialist and Demonstrator of Puritan-Beauty Toilet Preparations At the Innes Store This Week Plenty of Dresses for Street Wear to Show You. Dresses are more popular than ever before. The Styles are certainly smart and becoming. $7.50, $10, $12, $16.50 SERGES CREPES SATINS Kayser's Silk Hose Special The $1.50 and $1.75 grade of Kayser's Pure Thread Silk Hose, black only, double at heel and toe $1.19. Sale of Party Silks opens Friday morning: details in Thursday's Kansan. Inns, Bulline & Hackman DOZEN SENIORS TO DON WIGS Cast For Uppercase Comedy Chosen This Week Twelve characters are to be chosen to take part in the senior play at the try-out tonight and tomorrow night at 7 o'clock in Room 8, of Green Hill, seven men and five women, and all characters are prominent. The play, entitled "The Professor' Love Story," is a comedy in three STUDENT BIBLE CLASSSES AT EIGHT ROOMING HOUSES The Y. M. C. A. is giving Bible class work in eight rooming houses and is planning for more classes. A class of fifteen colored students is also organized, meeting in Myers Hall Tuesdays every Thursday. That group has been asked to give work in severa of the sorority and fraternity houses. Golf sticks, the right mind, priced made, made right, at Carrolls— Adgy. Classes are organized in roaming houses at 1346'12 Teen, 1304 Louisiana, 1328 Ohio, 1501 Rhode Island, 1536 Rhode Island, 1579 Wisconsin, and 1344 Kentucky. Student and faculty leaders are supplied by the Y. M. C. A. FOOT BALL WASHBURN vs. KANSAS Topeka, November 7 Santa Fe announced as Official Route. The Team, the Band, and the Rooters will take Santa Fe train No. 113, leaving Lawrence at 9 2) a. m. Three high-back pants, a. m. Three high-back of all comfort. For the return movement this equipment will be be No. 16, leaving Toppea 8 p.m. If you can't get away in time for train No. 113, you can take No. 5, leaving at 10:41 a.m. or No. 1 at 12:37 p.m. Train arrives at Topela 1:20 p.m. This will give you time to get out to the station. The next train wins. Topela always fight their hardest against Kansas. we are going to like lick Nebraska so we want to play "safe" now. Get in the Band Wagon W. W. Burnett Agent Phone 32 Announcements All notices for this column should be phoned to the Daily Kansan office K. U. 25, by 5 o'clock of the day before they are to be run. No charge is made for these announcements if they deal with student activities If notice is written it should be liaigned for the Announcement Column Jurisprudence Club meets Thursday night, Keltz house at 8. Subject, "Post-mortem on the Election." Linn County Club will meet Thursday afternoon at 4:30 oclock in Room 165, Fraser Hall. The faculty still has banquet will be the annual holiday banquet will be discussed. Kansas Board to Meet Dallas Kansas Board will meet to night at 7:00. Senior play tryout tonight and tomorrow night at 7:00 in Room 3 Green Hall. Daily Kansan Board meets tonight at 7:30 in the Kansan office. Chemical engineers meet tomorrow even at 7:00 in the Chemistry Building. Student Volunteers meet tonight in Myers Hall at 7:00. Botany Club meets tonight at 7:00 in Snow Hall. Quill Club meets today at 4:30 in Fraser. Band practice this evening at 7:30 in Fraser. Sachems meet tonight at 9:00 at the Student Union. Boy's Work Committee of the YM M. meets today at 4:30 in Myers Hall. Social Committee of the Y. M. meets today at 4:30 in Myers Hall. French club meets today in Fraser at 4:30. Oklahomaans' mixer tomorrow night at 7:30 in Myers Hall. LAY PLANS FOR STAGING OF ANNUAL LAW SCRIM Y. M. C. A, cabinet meets tomor- rish 5180 with Con Hoffman at 1533 O.K. Mining Journal meets today at 4:30 in Haworth Hall. Debating Council meets today at 4:30 in Room 3, Green Hall. University Debating Society meets tomorrow night in Room 110 Fraser. K. U. Debating Society meets to tomorrow night at 7:30 in Room 313 Fraser. Y. W, C. A. cabinet meets torom row evening at 7:15 at 1209 Oread. Tennis balls—2 for 75c or 3 for $1.15. They're dandies too. Carroll's —Adv. Jones Says Afair Will be Given December 4 in E A A Hall Everything for the golfer at Car roll's.—Adv. The Law Serim, the annual formal party give by the School of Law in honor of the football team, will be held at Fort Wayne, Friday Aid Hall, Friday night, December 4. Following the usual custom cabs and flowers will be taboo. The affair will be under the management of Frank L. Jones. The following committee appoints menthes have been made by the president of the senior laws, William Mor row; Decoration; Al Root, A. J. Bowron, Dean McElheney, J. R. Moffat, Wafil Beall. Refreshments; J. G. Somers, C. D. Kelley, Cale Carson. Finance, Jerry Simpson, Elmer Clark, Lawrence Miller. Senior social, Sam Degen, Guy Houston and Floyd Loveless. MUSEUM GETS RARE FOSSIL The Plenatopis Miller, believed to be the largest amphibian that ever existed, has been in the collection at Snow Hall since early this fall. It is valued at $10,000 and is the only one of its kind that has been discovered. The fossil is the property of the University of Chicago and was brought here by Herman Douthit of that institution, who is making a study of the amphibian. This amphibian is the fifth Miller, an instructor in the University of Chicago, who unearthed it in Texas. Plenatops Miller, Largest in Exist Brought to & U. Like all other species of the frog family, teeth existed in the roof of the Plematos Miller's mouth. The tead of this specimen is nearly as large as a man's head and the entire body is believed to have been at least six feet in length. One side of the fossil was broken when found but has been replaced in plaster of paris. Classes have been studying it here and will continue to use it until Mr. Douthit will return to Chicago. Teeth in Mouth WILL OFFER NEW COURSES IN ZOOLOGY DEPARTMENT Two changes will be made in the courses offered by the department of zoology next semester. A new two hour course called "Animal Biology" will be offered to students who have no previous courses in zoology This course will consist of a series of lectures on the biology of biology as illustrated in the animal kingdom and dealing with certain types of animals of general interest. The other change in the department will be 'the splitting-up of course 51 into two courses. The two new courses thus formed will a a second course in ominous distress, a a two hour course called the "Study of the Mammals." In these two courses the work 60 during a semester be largely in the Museum and in the Library. Get your tennis balls at Carroll's the Spalding kind, the best. Adv. F. M. Tidrow, Student Union barber, has decided to move his chair from the Union to a downtown stand where he will not large enough to keep him there. Union Barber Moves COURTS NOT RESTRICTED TO HOLDERS OF TICKETS Look over Grigg's window, when doen't town, but don't overlook it. Ad- "The use of the tennis courts at McCook Field are not restricted to holders of student tickets this year," the manager W. O. Hamilton this morning. Any student has the right to use the courts, but it is the policy of the management to restrict the use of the courts to holders of enterprise assets. At time non-holders using the courts should interfere with their playing. CHOOSE FRESHMAN TEAM Weidlein and McCarty Pick Eighteen Yearlings for Trips Freshman Coaches Weidlein and McCarty have picked the permanent freshman football squad for 1914. At the beginning of the season sixty-eight men turned out. Then the squad was cut to twenty-eight, and now there are eleven men in the final culling. They will be taken to Nebraska game as rewards for services rendered the Yarivity. They are: Miner, Lawellan, Reedy, Champlain, Smith, Frost, Todd, Holt, Nettleman, Gillispie, Gillispie, L. Bell, Van Winkle, Harley Fast, Fitzgerald, Peterson. UNIVERSITY HEAD TRAVELS AS TRAMP TO GET "IDEAS" By traveling as a tramp, sleeping in barns and country hotels, John Hustin Finley, president of the University of the State of New York, and State Commissioner of Education, was able to get some real information about the rural school conditions in New York. During his trip he found that the schools came to life at 9 o'clock in the morning and died at 4 o'clock in the afternoon. The teachers were mostly young from the villages you would pay was less, ranging from $9 to $12 a week. President Finley learned that very few teachers remained for more than a year in the same district, and that they were sometimes located in the most barren places. FAMOUS WAR CARTOON HANGS IN K. U. LIBRARY McCutcheon's famous cartoon on the present European war has been framed and placed in the history reading room in Spooner Library. The cartoon is the gift of Prof. C. G. Dunlap, professor of English literature. It was originally issued in the Chicago Tribune for August 7. The title is "The Colors" and the legend reads: Gold and green are the fields in peace. Red are the fields in war. ack are the fields when the cannons cease, And white forevermore SPOONER LIBRARY OWNS NEARLY 100,000 BOOKS Scooner library has 92,193 books, according to a recent enumeration, and the librarians expect to have 100,000 volumes by the end of the school year. Many of the books and bound material is maintained by increasing the size of the card index. A few books are lost each year, and many are retired from the shelves on account of wear. Each year the library receives gifts of books, but there have been none so far this fall. The Kansas library is valued at two dollars per volume, so a rapid calculation shows it to be one of the financial institutions of the University. KANSAS ROOTERS TO GET SPECIAL COACHES TO GAME Send the Daily Kansan home Jayhawkers to go on Extra Cars on Santa Fe and Union Special accommodations for the Kansas rooters, who plan to take in the Washburn game at Topcape Saturday, have been arranged by Manager Hamilton. The three Santa Fe trainers, which pass through Kansas, are all carried special coaches. The team and band will have special cars on the train leaving here at 9:25 Saturday morning. Two additional coaches will also be placed on this train for Kansas rooters who wish to accompany the team. The last train which will bring the crowd in time for the game leaves Lawrence at 12:35. This train may not be on time, because of the changing of stations at Kansas City. The round trip fare is 1.08. There will be a special Kansas rooting section at Washburn Field. Five hundred seats have been reserved and will be on sale at the office of Manager Hamilton and at the College of Business with $1.00 and reserved seats $1.50. The Kansas band will be placed in this section. The freshmen team will all be taken to Topeka by Manager Hamilton as a reward for their endeavors during the past few weeks when they have given the Varsity stiff competitor groups to motor to the game. NEW FOSSI COLLECTION RESULT OF 30 YEARS WORK Collections that are the result of thirty years of work in excavations in and around Kansas City have been purchased by the department of geology of the University. The assortment contains about 150 oolite fossils and is the work of J. H. Bennett. Oclite limestones consist of small coraline grains about the size of fish eggs and each fossil contains thousands of them. They appear on shallow shores in warm climates. The collection that the department of geology now has is perhaps the rarest of its kind. Amusement Before sending out "Potash and Perlmutter" companies Manager Woods arranged that every principal in every company should play at the Cohan Theatre, New York City. This plan was possible since "Potash and Perlmutter" ran for nearly two years at that theatre. Not an actor was signed for tour, until he had played in New York. “Potash and Permltter” comes to the Bowersock on Friday. November 6, with a company, all of whom have played at the Cohen Theatre. *Adv.* We Save You $5.00 to $7.50 on a SUIT or Overcoat $15.00 We carry only one price goods and we have no big credit list to carry, so why shouldn't our prices be less? All our suits and overcoats sell for one price and that price M. J. Skofstad Think this over and compare our garments with those selling at $20.00 or $22.50. 829 Mass. St. ASPECIAL The 'Dansant Has been arranged for Saturday afternoon, Nov. 7,-2:30 to $3.50. At Ecke's Hall, all University Students Are Cordially Invited. Dautant will be conducted as any regular programme dine, with the addition of the assistance of Dr. H. C. Ashey, Advisor Included. Teas, 75 cents per couple. For Young Men and Men Who Stay Young Schulz THE TAILOR 913 Mass, Street Lawrence, Kan. "Meet me at Griggs.—Adv. Private telephone booths a rigg's. Both phones. -Adv. Arm Bands for the Washburn Game AT GRIGGS' scene from the Big Laughing Hit "Potash & Perlmutter" at the Bowersock, Fri., Nov. 6. Seats now selling at Round Corner Drug Co.