"NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University EDITORIAL STAFF JOHN GLEISBNER HELEN HAYES JOHN M. HENRY Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Managing Editor Sport Editor BUSINESS STAFF J. W. DYCKEN... Business Manager CRAIG S. STUARTVANT Advertising Manager CRAIG S. STUARTVANT Advertising Manager FRANE B. H. INDENOR GLENDON ALVINE RATHOM CLAPPER CAMPION CERBERER PATTERSON LRON HARBH GILENT CLAYTON CHARLES SWETT ELENN AUMT ELENN AUMT Entered as second-class mail matter Sep- 14, 2015. Ransom under the act of March 3. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kans. Phone. Bell K. U. 25 Subscription price $2.50 per year in advance; one term, $1.50. Published in the afternoon, five times a week. Received from Kaukaa, from the press of the department. The Daily Kannon aims to picture the world in a way that makes Kenyanas go further than merely printing the news by standing up for their rights and not feast on be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be kind; to solve problems to widen her心灵, in all, to serve the best of its ability the students of the Kannon. MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1914. THIS IS "K" WEEK Perhaps the reason that few "K" men wore their sweaters on the Hill this morning was because it was too warm. This is "K" week, however, and students want the athletes to conform to Manager Hamilton's suggestions and wear their "K"s on the Hill all week. COUNTY CLUBS START The Student Council has begun the work of county club organization. Haste is imperative, for it is only a a short time until the legislature convenes. Call a meeting and do it yourself. The Council will appreciate it. Students who are interested need not wait for the Councilman in charge of their counties to see to the organization. AT LAST Another plan that will meet with unqualified endorsement is the limitation of speakers to 15 minutes' time. The chapel question is apparently settled by the University Senate. Chapel at eight o'clock will meet with favor, and students will doubtlessly turn out in greater numbers than they did when the hour came in the middle of the morning. The plan of numbering the football players so that spectators may know them is a good one. Frequently those who follow football closely cannot distinguish between the players—let alone a stranger. GET YOUR TICKETS Student tickets to the music festival will be reserved Tuesday morning at eight o'clock and while it is possible to buy tickets at any time, students will confer a favor by obtaining them before Tuesday, from those who are selling them. After the first concert it will be impossible to buy tickets for the course as economically as now. If as many people buy tickets as usually attend the regular spring festival, the success of the venture is assured. Otherwise it will fall through, and this unprecedented opportunity will not come again. Those who fail to get in on this chance will probably be kicking themselves before the winter is over. The first two concerts, by Gadzki and the Marine Band, will be worth the price of a season ticket, and will cost nearly as much. A few cents more will enable one to hear five other concerts, each one among the best of its kind. Here is the best chance you will ever have to back up a University enterprise of undoubted merit and at the same time get for yourself more real enjoyment than you could have in any other way for the same price. Get tickets today. STUDENT OPINION HAS KANSAS LOST HER PEP? To the Editor Daily Kansan: Last Friday evening we eagerly searched our copy of the Kansan to find out when our boys left for Des Moina where they were to play the basketball game of the season with Drake University. But what could we find? Not dauthed by this failure, we determined* to make a few inquiries. Only from one of the men going on the trip did we at last get the information. We went to the depot to see them off. How many of you did likewise? By the loos of things, possibly twenty-five or thirty. Out of university only those few had "pup" enough to try to give the team a good send-off. With the prospects that Kansas has this year in football, does the action of Friday night show the spirit and loyalty of us as Kansans? Who's to blame? You studies say you didn't know anything about the time the train left Lawrence. We thought, when we elected Jo Berwick in 2013, I should posed to see that such news was spread about and that the "Thundering Thousand" of old was brought on the scene at the proper time. Maybe everyone thinks that the Drake game isn't as important as the others because Drake doesn't beat us as often as he did. Then it was a Conference battle and the "Bulldog" always puts up a great fight. You all know that.> The team wants to know that Kansas to the last man stands behind them. They feel better for it and fight better for us when we send them off with a good "Rock Chalk" and meet them with a good again as they come home, either in defeat or victory. Let's get together boys and not make the pitiful showing again of last Friday night. Two of the Faithful. Chasing the Glooms He—Miss Smith, may I call you Mabel? She - You may if you wish, but my name is Gertrude. Columbus Edester. "Herr Schmidt is so fat that he can eat enough to his counter to soil料 food." "Corporation in restraint of trade, hev?"—Ex. "They must ask a bit for rooms like these." "Yes and they are always asking for it."-Harvard Lampoon. Remember that college doesn't make foils, it develops them. Neither does it make bright men. It develops them, also—Ex. The lightning bug is a beautiful bird But hasn't any mind. He dashes through this world of ours, with his headlight on behind. Cormoran. 17- How do they make hard cider? 18- Freeze it. - Cornell Widow. "I had to kill my dog this morning." Smith—No. He might as well be vice-president of the U. S.-Club Fellow. Jones—A bridegroom doesn't amount to much at his own wedding. Link—Is your boarding manager stingy? "Well, he didn't seem any too well pleased." -Livingstone Lance. Bink—No, I guess not. It ever brook to feed the furnace —Illinois Shren "Here's where I forge ahead," aried the counterfeiter, as he put the finishing touches to the Indian head on a five dollar bill—Harvard Lapoon. "Was he mad?" She--Did you ever see the Castle Walk? He—I should say not, I have been on the wagon all through college.—Yale Record. Judge-Guilty or not guilty? Pat-How can I tell before I have heard the evidence?—Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. In Kansas 384 high schools are accredited; that is, their work is accepted at face value by the University. Julian Street, magazine writer, pays the University of Kansas high tribute in the current issue of Collier's. Street is writing a-series of articles "Abroad at Home," and his discussion of the University is in "Kansas, Where All Signs Fail." He visited the University last spring. Julian Street Writes About Kansas University Street says that his visit was an education, and that the University is amazingly complete and amazingly advanced, and has an energetic student body with a healthy thirst for knowledge. Street says he would like to see young eastern aristocrats shipped out to Kansas. We quote below from the article: "If the University of Kansas may, as I have been credibly informed, be considered a typical Western State university, then I must confess that my preconceptions regarding such institutions were as far from the facts as possible. The formal and likely to be. The University of Kansas is anything but backward. It is, upon the contrary, amazingly complete and amazingly advanced. Not only has it an excellent equipment and a live faculty, but also a remarkably energetic, eager student body, much more homogeneous and much more diverse in its nature for education than other bodies in Eastern universities, as I have observed them. ***** "Life at the university is comfortable, simple, and very cheap, the average cost, per capita, for the school year being perhaps $200, including school expenses, board, social expense, etc., nor are there great social and financial gaps between certain groups of students, as in some Eastern colleges. The university is a real democracy, in which each individual is judged according to certain standards of character and behavior. We quote below from the article: Which means, among other things, that we are getting a new sort of professors and a new sort of practical men—professors who have common sense and practical capacity, and ability to deal with the importance of fundamental knowledge and the cash value of ideals.—California Outlook. ... ... ... “Brief as my visit to the University of Kansas, I felt that there, indeed was 'gumption'. And it is easy to account for. The breed of men and women who are being raised in the Western States is a sturdier breed than is being produced in the East. They have just as much fun in their college life as any other students, but practically none of them go to college. They have no degree, even less creditable purpose of improving their social position. Kansas is still too near to first principle to be concerned with superficialities. It goes to college to work and learn and its reason for wishing to learn are, for the most part, practical. One does not feel, in the University of Kansas, the aspiration for a vaguely curved the sake of culture only “Directive” education, thoughtfulness, and practicality are Kansas qualities. Even the very young men and women of Kansas are not far removed from pioneer forefathers, and it must be remembered that the Kansas pioneer differed from some others in that he possessed a strain of that Puritan love of freedom which not only brought his forefathers into battle, but gave him overland to Kansas, as has been required to cast his vote for abolition. Naturally, then, the zeal which fired him and his ancestors is reflected in his children and his grandchildren. And that, I think, is one reason why Kansas has developed ‘cranks.’ Professors The professor is coming to his own. In his own profession, to be sure, he still gets the wages of a second-class clerk, or a first-class preacher. But they are using him for other purposes. He is giving him in money and in respect, States are putting professors at the head of legislative bureau, to write sound sense and intelligible language into their laws. They are making professors the heads or secretaries of the legislature, wrote the last Republican national platform and most of the Progressive national platform. A professor is president of the United States; several are railroad presidents and others are high officials. The few of them who have had the price have made good in diplomacy. One of them was mayor of San Francisco, after the revolution there, and some of them have been governors and senators. One of them is running for governor of Pennsylvania and a dispatch from New York announced that "following the latest仓促例事 we appointing educators and philanthropists to their boards of directors, the Santa Fe railroad has named Dr. Henry S. Pritchett as a director. Dr. Pritchett is president of the Carnegie foundation and formerly was president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology." EXCHANGE COURSE TICKETS TUESDAY at the Round Corner Drug Co., formerly Woodward's University Concert Course Want Ads LOST—A rhetoric looseleaf notebook, left in 201 Blake Friday morning. Also a Palmer's "Self Cultivation in English." Finder may keep books if he will return the themes and lecture notes to the Kansan office. LOST-A gaberdine in Fraser Hall Return to Kansan office. 25-34 Mail your want ad with 25 cents enclosed to the Daily Kansan—want ads are payable in advance. LOST—One garbeline in Fraser Hall to Kansan office FOUND—Lady's watch fob; owen can have same by calling Phone 2532, 921 Miss. $ 24.3^{a} $ LOST>A gold bar pin. Please re- turn to Kansan office, or phone 713-620-5895. SI- Silver mesh bag containing student ticket No. 760 and small amount of change Saturday afternoon before the game, possibly on 13th street or on the golf links. Finder please call Bell phone 1378W and ask for Maude Coverdale. Reward. WANTED - A girl wants room-mate. 1317 Ohio. Phone Bell 2025 Student Course Tickets on Sale LOST-Gold scarf pin, engraved with script initial "C," on campus Thursday. Flickr please leave at Kunsan office or H.Cromeman. K. U. 150 or B. 1360. LOST—Self-filling fountain pen, between Gymnasium and Library. Return to Charlotte Jaggar, 1140 Mississippi Rooms for Rent . at the University Post Office FOR RENT-Two pleasant south rooms for boys, 1301 Tenn. St. FOR RENT-Desirable rooms for Tennessee. Mrs. Buchanan, 1408 FOR GIRLS—Two furnished rooms for girls at 846 La. St. MENT- Several nine rooms, heater and lighted; with bath. These rooms are furnished with couches, posures, fine fraternity or club rooms. J. M. Steville, Stubba' Bldg; opposite the Court House. Phone, Bell 314. FOR RENT-Two rooms with porch in modern house; light housekeeping suite or single rooms. 940 Ind. Bell 1823. FOR RENT—One large furnished room for ladies or gentlemen. 838 La, St. Board in next block. 23-5 FOR RENT--2 nicely furnished front rooms, $1.25 per week each, private entrance, close in, no room. Inquire 737 Conn. Bell 2333W, "Bell" Single Seats for U. S. Marine Band and Gadski on Sale Wednesday FOR ENTIT -F south room for rent. 217 Tennessee, front room. $3 and $2 COAL! Student Headquarters for fruits, candies, and cigars 900 Miss. Windmill Grocery: Both Phones 413 Arley M. Smith BOTH PHONES 435—746 VERMONT WOOD! Residence, 1349 Tenn. St. Bell 1023, Home 639. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist Scientific Glass Fitting. Office 802 Mass. St. Bell phone 695. HARRY REDING, M. D. Eye, ear, nose, throat. Glasses fitted. Office F. A. Bldg. Phones, Bell 513, Home 512. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, ear and throat specialist. Glasses fitted. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Bldg. DR. H. WAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BRAYN, Dentist. Over Wil- son's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. G. W. JONES, A. M. St. D. O. 833 Massachusetts Street. Both phones office and residence. G. W. JONES, A. M. St. D. Diseases of the stomach, surgery and gynecology. Suite 1, F. A. A. Bldg. Resilience, 1201 Ohio St. Both phones. 39. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12, F. A. A. A. Bldg. Residence 1130 Tenn. Phones 211. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squire'S Studio. Both phones. S. T. GILLISPIS, M. D. Office cor- roration and warmer. St. Residence 729 Hall. Building. KARLP E. BARNES, M. D. phone 832. 206-7 Perkins Building. A. J. ANDERSON, M. D., Office 715 St. Phones 124. PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M. CORNELL, Physician and Surgeon. Office, 819 Mass. St. Bell 399, Home 3942. Residence, 1346 Tenn. St. Bell 1023. Home 639. CLASSIFIED Ladies Tailor. Ms. Emmie Brown- Schulz, Dressmaking and Ladies Tailor- ing. Suits and coats remodeled. Phone Bell 914. 913. Mass. St. Next. Anderson's Bakeware. MRS ELISLION, Dressmaking and LadieT. Tailoring, Evening gowns a speciality, 1032 Vermont. Phone Bell 2411 West. DRESSMAKING, Tailored skirts: Echel A. Duff, 1204 R. I. Hardware drs. M. Brockelsby-Wilson, Kierster college of ladies tailoring and dress- saking. Over 909 Mass. St. Bell 109. STOVES, KITCHEN WARE, Cutlery. Satisfaction guaranteed. Prices reasonable. A. A. Green. 639 Mass. "A Place to Eat of Peculiar Excellence" CITY CAFE 906 Mass. St. MEALS AND SHORT ORDERS We want to see the student. Our meals are the "best ever." Watkins National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus & profits $100,000 The Student Depository Meat Market Groceries ARE YOU SATISFIED with your grocer and butcher? If not try Hunter Bros. Both Phones 21. S. H. McCURDY, Grocers and Feed. 1031 Mass. Both Phones 212. WILLIAM L A COSS, Fancy and Staple Groceries, Bell 618. 1301 Ky. Meat Market WEST ENEAT MARKET. Both Phones 314. Plumbers Jewelers ED. W. PARSONS: Watchmaker and Jeweler, Diamonds and Jewelry, Bell Phone 717. 717 Mass OLSON BROS., Plumbers. Electric and Gas Goods. PHONE KENNEDY PLUMBING CO, for gas goods and Mazda lamps. 937 Mass. Phones 658. Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUK 914 Mass. GO WHERE you get the Best. Bob Stewart's Barber Shoes .838 Mass. St. Cafes For a good clean place to eat, where you don't get "gyped" go to the MARKET CAFE, Room 1, Perkins Building. Millinerv WANTED - Ladies to call at Mrs. McCormick's up-to-date, millinery parlorers to inspect our new line of hats. 881 Mss St. Shoe Shop Florists FORNEY SHOE SHOP. 1017, Mass. You make a mistake. All work garrigues. A. WHITCOMB & SON, Florist plants, cut flowers, floral designs, etc., 844 Tennessee St. Phones Bell 275, Home 580. Insurance FIRE INSURANCE, LOANS and abstracts. E. J. Hikley, People's Bank Building. Bell 155; Home 2202. FRANK E. BANKS, Ins., and abstracts of Title. Room 3, F. A. A. Building. Upholstering UPHOLSTERING and repairing Mattresses and cushions. J. W. Hoeus. 906 Vt. Fuel GRRIFIN COAL CO., All kinds of Fuel.