UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Palm Beach Suits As necessary to your summer comfort asice is to a refrigerator. Our stock is the largest and most complete in the city. All new styles are here- Many beautiful patterns. Priced from $7.50 to $15. Palm Beach Shoes Palm Beach Hats Palm Beach Hose Palm Beach Belts This is your summer comfort store. Ober's New Wash Neckwear Ready WILL ISSUE RELIGIOUS NUMBER Daily Kansas to Put Out Eight Page Paper Tomorrow Dealing With Churches and University. The Daily Kansan will put out an 8 page religious number tomorrow. The issue comes as the result of a movement by the Student Religious Federation to give more publicity to the religious life of the students. The Board offered to get out a special issue of the paper for this purpose. In all 8000 copies of the paper will be printed. A copy will be sent to every high school senior in the state, and to a majority of the ministers of Kansas, besides the regular Kansan subscribers. The issue will contain special features on the religious work of the students, write-ups of all the student organizations of the churches of Law. rence, an index of all the organizations and the addresses of the secretaries, an account of the work of the faculty in the churches of the city, statistics of the religious bodies of Lawrence, special features on the Y. M. C. A. and the Y. W. C. A., and other material that will give an idea of the student religious work of the University. A committee of the Federation, composed of Mollie Carroll, Con Hoffman, and A. J. McAllister, is on the table with the Kansan in sitting out the paper. There are eight of us-we'll want four double rooms in a modern house, student district. If you have such a place call 2647 Bell. I'd hate to be a mandolin upon a student's knee. Student For every time he played a tune he goes and pick on me. Cornell Widow. Want to combine improvement with pleasure? of the Attend the Summer Session University of Kansas 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 HAMILTON TO CHOOSE 1914 FOOTBALL COACH Athletic Board Puts Matter of Selection in Manager's Hands AWARD TWENTY-EIGHT K'S Honor's Given to 18 Track Men, Nine Baseball Players and Freshman Who Broke Record. The choosing of an assistant football coach for Kansas for next year was put in the hands of Manager W. O. Hamilton by the Athletic Board today. The Board passed a resolution of confidence in Manager Hamilton and turned over the matter to him. Hamilton will not make the announcement of his choice until next fall. Twenty-eight K's were awarded at the same meeting. Eighteen track men, nine baseball players and Rodkey, the freshman who broke a record in the half mile in an interclass meet, were honored. Following are the names of the track men: Hazen, Hilton, Perry, O'Neil, Cisena, Henderson, Elswick Davis, Edwards, Grady, Malcolmson, Poos, Campbell, Reber, Keeling, Creighton, Fiske and McKay. The baseball players are: Bishop, captain, Sommers, Sproull, DeLongy, Vander Vries, Painter, Smee, Wandel, and Chinnery. Commencement Program Monday. June 8. Regatta-Potter Lake. West Cam pus; 2.00 p. m. Swimming races, water games, canoe races, pageants and "stunts." Band Concert (for pinchers) 5:30 p.m. West Campus near Pot Lily Park Organ Recital—Charles Stanford Skilton, Helen; of Fine Barnes Fail, Hall 815 p. m. Annual Banquet of the School o. Pharmacy, Elk Grove House, 800 p. Address: 1425 W. 6th Street, Elk Grove Village, IL 61030, email: banquet@schoolofpharmacy.edu All day inspection of buildings and displays of University work. Chass' day Exercises of the Class of 1914: Address to Buildings and Farewell Songs, University Campus. 8:30 a.m. Alumni Address—John B. Cheadle, A. B., 987, LL B., 920. Professor of Law in the University of Oklahoma. Senior and Alumni Class Lunches: 12:00 pm (Picnic lunches on sale wet dorm room, Snow Hall). Band Concert—Campus, 1:00 p. m. Annual Meeting of the Alumni Association, Snow Hall, 1:30 p. m. Save 30 per cent on Latest Suits Not the old, out-of-date clothing, but the newest production of the famous tailors—Michaels, Stearns and Adler-Rochester. Cut in price just at the height of the season. You certainly can save more money than ever before when Winey & Underwood's Cash Converter Sale Begins Tomorrow Morning at 9 o'clock $20 Values $15 Suits made in the clean, sanitary factories of Michaels, Stern, carrying our guarantee and their's as to fabrics, workmanship and worth, tailored in every desirable fabric in English, semi-English and conservative models are $10.95 now are absolutely the finest suits we have ever shown at this price. They are the products of Adler-Rochester and Michaels. Stern at their very highest development in quality and styling at our $29 suit sit in this store with out reserve for **$13.95** $25 Suits The very best we carry and equal to city stores $30 garments, shown in a beautiful variety of the newest patterns, in the styles upon which men have set their approval—in fact, the equal in every way of taffer made $35 garments, go in at their only. $17.95 Take Home Some New Luggage A New Hat For You A new suit ease, or a bag can be purchased here at a saving. If you need luggage, buy now. Every hat—felt, straw, or cloth is underpriced. Sample quotations, $2 Tailored hats $1.35, a lot of $2 Felts $1.45, $2.50 Felt Hats $1.95. Any $3 Felts now $2.45. and Free Tickets to the Grand With Every Dollar of Your Purchase See Large Green Circulars for Other Prices Baseball Game, Alumni vs. University Seniors, McCook Field, 3:30 p. m. Track Events and Frolic Features. Senior Class Farce. Senior Class Faces Band Concert Campus, 7:45 Illumination. Reception by Chancellor and Mrs. Strong, Green Hall, 8:30 p. m. (All alumni, former students, and friends of the University are invited to this reception. No individual invitations are issued.) Reception of Law Alumni by Mrs. Green at their home, 1200 n. W. Alumni Prom., Robinson Gymnasium, 9:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 16 Commencement Exercises—Auditorium, Robinson Gymnasium, 10:00 a.m. Address, Charles Reynolds Brown, A. M., S.T.B. Dean of the Divinity School, Yale University. Conferring of Degrees Conferring to begegnet University Dinner, first floor (Robinson) Gymnasium, 1:00 p. m. (Admission by ticket.) K. U. NEWS This Summer Free Read the Special Offer of the Daily Kansan on page 3 1. 00 VALLEY CHAMPS VS. AGGIES AND ST. MARYS K. U. Team Will Play Three More Games, Two at Manhattan The Kansas baseball team, champions of the Missouri Valley, will get tomorrow to Manhattan, where they will play the Aggies Wednesday and Thursday. The Kansans will pay St. Marys, at St. Marys, Friday. This will be the last game of the season. The two Aggie games will have no effect upon the championship standing, as the Oread team already has the flag. Coach McCarty is anxious to take both games from the farm; the other team has defeated a defeat from a Conference team. The farmers were easily defeated on McCook Field last month in two games. Bishop and Smee will be the twirlers in the Aggie games and Loveless probably will pitch against the Catholics Friday. ALPHA TAUS WIN FIRST GAME IN LEAGUE FINALS Defeat Sigma Chis by Score of 7 to 5 for Pan-Hellenic Championship. The Alpha Tau defeated the Sigma Chis in the first game of the final series of the Pan Hellenic League, a score of 7 to 5 yester- afternoon. The A. T. O.'s, won by long hits when he meant runs and although their fielding was ragged in spots they tightened up and held Sig- fate well two twinnings. A costly error together with three hits, one a triple, gave the Alpha Taus four runs in the third inning and they added two more on clean hits in the fifth. Their last out of double and two sacrifice hits. Two errors, a base on balls, a triple and a single gave the Sigma Ch three runs in the fifth and they won on one successive singles in the seventh. Features of the game were a sensational catch by Sautter, a shoestring catch by Teacher and the match of Meadows who got two triples. This series is for the championship of the league and consists of three games, the winner of two of them receiving the cup. The second game Patient—Well, doctor, how much is this operation going to cost me?" Doctor—Oh, I'll give you cut rates." Columbia Jester. "My plate is damp." "That's the soup, old cockerel!" columbia Jester. I shot an arrow into the air It fell to the earth, I know not where Until the man on whom I fell information — Cornell Widow. The following is the score: of the three has not been scheduled as yet but will be played some time this week. Alpha Tau Omega AE.R.I.E. PO.A.LE. Van der Vries, 3b 4 2 1 1 3 1 1 King, cf 5 1 1 0 0 0 Meadows, p 5 1 2 1 3 1 Bishop, 1st 4 0 2 8 0 0 Steuwe, if 3 0 0 1 0 0 Dodderidge, 2nd 4 0 1 1 1 3 Padgett, 2s 4 1 1 1 0 3 Wingart, rf 4 1 1 0 0 0 Ise, e 4 1 0 14 0 Total 37 7 9 26 7 7 Smith out, hit by battled ball. Sigma Chi AE.R.IB.PO.A.E. Cowgrill, 1st 5 1 2 11 0 Coolidge, ss 5 0 1 5 0 1 Wilson, p. 5 0 1 2 0 3 Beal, if 4 0 1 0 0 0 Teachen, cf. 4 0 0 3 0 0 Sautter, 2nd 3 1 0 1 4 0 Kingsbury, 3rd 4 1 0 0 1 0 Herman, rf. 4 0 0 0 0 0 Smith, c. 4 1 1 7 2 0 Total 38 5 7 27 10 2 Summary: Stolen bases —Wilson, Cowgill, Bishop. Three-base hits —Meadows 2, Bishop, Cowgill. Two-base hits —King, Padgett. Struck out—By Mendous 14, by Wilson on bases off 1ff balls, off Wilson 3. Hit by pitched ball —Cowgill. Double play —Sautter to Cowgill. By innings: RHE Alpha Chis 0 0 4 0 2 1 0 0 7 9 7 Sigma Chis 0 0 0 3 0 2 0 5 7 9 Why Kansan Advertising Brings Results Every Freshman Sophomore Junior Senior Professor Reads it five times a week STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY