UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Get a Copy of the 1914 JAYHAWKER on Sale at ROWLAND'S. UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE. CARROLL'S. KEELER'S. GRIGG'S. WOLF'S or 1537 TENNESSEE PRICE $2.75 LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. Occupies two entire doors. Lawrence National Bank Building. Graduates all parts of the U. R. Write for catalogue. WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository R. E. Protsch TAILOR SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. DUNKIRK Front 2% In. Back 1% In. A New Barker Warranted Linen PECKHAM'S PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M. C. ONNELL, Physician and Surgeon. R. E. K. C. ONNELL, Physician and Surgeon, Residence, 1349 Tunnell St. Bell 1203, Home A. G.HAMMAN M. D. EYER, ear and throat surgeon. Guaranteed. Dick Building. Bankruptcy. Lawrence Garanteed Dick Building DR. H W. HAYNE, DENL. Lawrence DR. H W. HAYNE, DENL. HARRY READING. M D. E. Eye, ear, naso and throat. Adele B. Beauregard, 813. Ballie I, 613. Home 512. J. P. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist Felix BROCK, Optometrist of 802 Mass Hospital phones 999-351-7777 J. W O'BRYON. Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. J. R. BEGITEL, M. D. D. O. 833 Mass acuachetta Street. Both phones, office and bank. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Dianeas of Chelsea High School will be Bldg. Residence, 1919 Ohio High School DR. H. T. JONES. Room 12 F. A. B. Aibd DR. H. T. CHAMMERS. Room 12 F. A. B. Aibd DR. H. T. CHAMMERS. Room 12 F. A. B. Aibd DR. H. T. CHAMMERS. Room 12 F. A. B. Aibd DR. BURT R. WHITE, Take Home a Memorial of the Closing School Year Osteopath, Phones, Bell 928, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass St. S. T. GILLISPEE, M. D. Office corner Vermont and arsen 851 Residence 728 Ind CLASSIFIED W. W. Parsona, Engrave, Watchmaker and Eldweller, Diamonds, and Jewelry, Bell Phone Sunny. Plumbing Co. for gas goods and Lamda lamps. 937 Mass. 658. Phone 658. Plumbers MELLISON MELLISON Pressemaking and Ladies' Talorina, Georgus a godmother. 1032 Talorina, Georgus a godmother. 1032 Ladies' Tailors Hair Dressers Hardrising, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair goods, hair appointment, hair appointments, hair appointment, hair Ball 1373. Home 514. The Hair Dressing Shop 997. Mass. St. Barber Shops Go to www.hairshop.com J' C HOUCK 025-674-8550 F. B. McCOLLOCH Druggist The Quick Service Store 847 Mass. St. Sam S. Shubert MAT. WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY Mrs. Flake in "Mrs. Bumpstead-Leigh" WANT DEBATERS FROM K. U Many Write to Professor Hill Asking that Orators Show Talent at Various Places. Various Places Debaters from the University of Kansas are in demand at various places. Prof. H. T. Hill, of the Department of Public Speaking, has received a telegram from the University of Texas asking that K. U. inaugurate an annual triangular debating schedule with themselves and the University of Oklahoma. Owing to the distance of the University of Texas from Lawrence, it is very doubtful whether this proposal will be accepted. The Public Speaking Department has also received a marked copy of I HAVE EIGHT ROOMS TO RENT in the STUBBS BUILDING. Notice: This Price Will NOT Be Lowered and City Property to Exchange for Farm Lands. J. M. NEVILLE, Stubbs Bldg. 384 Bell. ... Three-year course leading to degree of graduate education. The system may be completed in two and one-fourth calendar years. Admission is by law being counted toward college degree. The Summer Quarter offers special opportunities to students, teachers, and practicers. The University of Chicago LAW SCHOOL First term 1914, June 15—July 22 Second term July 23—August 28 Courses open in all Departments of the University during Spring semester. Department. Address Dean of Law School, The University of Chicago. the Leavenworth new Era containing an article, under the head "A Challenge," which says, "Two inmates of the United States Penitentiary, Leavenworth, Kansas, challenge any two debaters in Kansas or Missouri, the meeting to be held in the prison chapel on a Sunday afternoon in June. Members of any college debating team, members of any school board, or faculty, preferred. If accepted, name the subject and side prisoners shall take. The prison is made public with by the prisons who believe they cannot only 'make good,' but the event will prove of value to all concerned. Nobody barred. Address the Editor, U. S. P. Box 7, Leavenworth, Kansas." This challenge will not be accepted by a University team, but it may be that two individual debaters will take it up for the practice to be gained. So far as known none of the K. U. debaters have made plans to go. Among the questions already submitted by the University of Oklahoma for next year's debate is one on the abandonment of the Monroe Doctrine by the United States, and one on the subject of the adoption of minimum wage legislation by the several states. "Poor girl, what was she put in for?" -Nebraska Awgwan. "Yes, my daughter is coming out next week." TYPEWRITING 1041 Vt. St. We make thesis writing a specialty No job too big or too small. J. D. R. Miller. 2511 B A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. Make Your Summer Vacation One of Profit as well as Pleasure The Frantz Premier Company wants a few live, aggressive, college men to act as IF you want to pay all or part of next year's college expenses write at once for our exclusive proposition. Factory Representatives The work is interesting and pleasant—the remuneration attractive and the opportunity as large as the man's ability. Whether you work at home or in some other city of your choice, is practically up to you. Write today for full particulars about our college men's proposition; giving age, home and address, and class will help greatly. Act promptly so we can give you the territory you desire. K. U. NEWS This Summer Free The Frantz Premier Company Dept. M., Whitney Power Block, Cleveland, Ohio Read the Special Offer of the Daily Kansan on page 2 COULD SWEEP OFF ALL EARTH'S PEOPLE Refrigerator in Bacteriology Laboratory Is Potential Death Dealer It is a very prosaic looking refrigerator as it stands in the laboratory of the bacteriology department. Should one look inside he would see a number of equally prosaic looking glass tubes; but if he should learn about the refrigerator and its contents the prosaic feature would be forgotten. In this refrigerator are enough bacteria of death and disease which if sufficiently cultivated could infect every person now living in this world. The refrigerator is filled with wire baskets full of carefully sealed and labeled tubes in which the bacteria are aerobically poisoned, diptheria, typhoid, dysentery and many other diseases feared by man. By careful and patient work these bacteria have been collected by the men of the department and have been placed in cultures that they might live and multiply on other of their kind were used and applied to the advance of science. The great number of the germs and their dangerous character make the work of handling them one of extreme caution. Every precaution known to the study of bacteriology is based on careful laboratory workers are allowed to handle the glass tubes in which they are imprisoned. Although the science of bacteriology is one of the youngest the advancement has indeed been great when these dreaded breeders of death that have been so feared in th past can be placed under the hand of man and understood so that their deadly power is turned to their destruction. In that one refrigerator are germs whose ancestry have killed more people than have been destroyed in all wars. These germs, the germ, under favorable conditions, may reproduce enough of its kind to cause death. Yet these germs, millions in number and increasing every day, are being used to make vaccines and serums that will materially lessen their evil power in the future. University of Kansas EXAMINATION SCHEDULE. Second Semester 1913-14 Classes at 11:00, Monday morning, June 1. Classes at 1:30, Monday afternoon, June 1. Classas at 10:00, Tuesday morning. June 2. Classes at 9:00, Wednesday morning, June 3. Classes at 8:00, Thursday morning June 4. Classes at 3:30. Thursday afternoon, June 4. Classes at 2:30, Friday morning, June 5. Three hour classes (and one hour classes meeting on Monday, Wednesday, or Friday) will be examined for the morning; and from 1:30 to 3:30 if scheduled above for the afternoon. Two hour classes (and one hour classes meeting on Tuesday or Thursday) will be examined from 10:20 to 12:00 if scheduled above for the morning; and from 3:50 to 5:30 if scheduled for the afternoon. Four and five hour classes will be examined from 8:00 to 11:00 if scheduled before the morning; from 1:30 to 4:30 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 correspondring to the lecture hour, when such an hour exists, at the discretion of the head of the department concerned. Classes meeting on Saturdays and not other days in the week will be examined on Saturday morning, June 6, from 9:00 to 10:30 for one and two hour courses; from 9:00 to 11:00 for three hour courses. Adv. Swimming Caps, new goods, 25c to $1.00 at Barber's Drug Store-of the University of Kansas Wothe—Can't lend me the loan of a needle and thread? D'Ouicaire--What for, friend? Wothe--For my room eat.—The Wheater --of the University of Kansas It is thousands of years old and the giant trees, now harder than flint, and more beautiful in color than the most variegated rainbow. There are five separate deposits of this silicified wood along the line of the Santa Fe in Arizona. A short drive from Adamana Station takes you to the First and Second forests. You can stop off on the way to or from California. Nobody knows just what caused the Petrified Forest, but there it lies, a record in jasper and agate of the wonder work of Mother Nature. Authentic Aztec ruins and hieroglyphics also may be visited on the trip to the stone trees. Ask the Santa Fe man for a copy of Petrified Forest booklet. W. W. BURNETT, Lawrence, Kansas --of the University of Kansas Want to combine improvement with pleasure? Attend the Summer Session Begins Thursday, June 11. First term (six weeks) ends July 22. Second term (three weeks) ends August 12. Credits may be earned in the Graduate School, College, School of Engineering, School of Law, School of Fine Arts, and School of Education. Also entrance credits may be earned in several departments. There will be sixty-two members of the Summer Session faculty in twenty-seven departments, and they will offer one hundred and twenty-nine courses in: Astronomy, Botany, Chemistry, Drawing and Design, Economics, Education English, Entomology, French, Geology, German, History and Political Science, Home Economics, Journalism, Latin, Law, Mathematics, Music, Philosophy and Psychology, Physical Education, Physics, Physiology, Public Speaking, Shop Work, Sociology, Spanish, Zoology. No spot in Kansas has better climatic conditions in summer than Mt. Oread, and no university in America has better opportunities for efficient summer work. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION APPLY TO Dean of the Summer Session University of Kansas, Lawrence