UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tomorrow Morning at 8 o'clock, the opening hour of The Big Shoe Sale-Fischer's Surplus Stock White Serge Trousers— In plain white and stripe effects, in both English and semi-English models. Plain White Oxford "OLUS" Shirt suits, one piece shirt a n d drawer combined. Just the shirt for the "Hop." Johnson & Carl For spring parties, Reynolds Bros ice cream. Phone Bell 645—Adv. Get your tickets now for The Fortune Hunter, Friday May 8th, at Lee's College Inn. Reserve seats on sale at Woodward's Monday morning May 4th. First come, first served.—Adv. Best post cards obtainable. City views, 5e per dozen up, at Hoadley's.-Adv Best post cards obtainable. City views, 5c per dozen up, at Hoadley's.-Adv. Open air concert, Friday night, 7:30; camp, University band. "Christ's Challenge to Heroism" Pressbyterian Church Sunday evening. —Adv. COME EARLY For good aerated distilled water call MeNish. Bell 198—Adv. Open air concert. Friday night, 7:30, camp. University band. For good aerated distilled water call McNish. Bell 198 - Adv. HIGH SCHOOL MEET TO HAVE 150 MEN Saturday's Contest Will Embrace Representatives of Forty Teams The high school track man, 150 strong, will be in Lawrence Saturday for the 12th annual inter-scholastic track and field games on McCook field in the afternoon. Many athletes are expected tomorrow to attend the Kansas-Nebraska meet. Soon there will be games they will be given badges which will admit them to the Nebraska meet and the big meet Saturday. Several entries have been recorded and Manager Hamilton expects almost forty schools to send representative. The very part of Kansas is represented. The athletic management has everything ready for the visitors. The medals and cups are at hand, programs are ready and the officials chosen for the meet. The first gun will be fired at 13:00 o'clock and the rack men will run their races without delay. Student ticket holders will be admitted for 25 cents while general admission is 50 cents. TOURNEY STARTS TOMORROW Tennis Contest Will Begin With Ten High Schools Entered—Give Gold Medals The preliminaries for the 11th annual interscholastic tennis tournament will start tomorrow morning and raquet wielders from ten high schools will contest for championship on McCourk courts. The events will include singles and doubles. The finals will be played before the Kansas-Nebraska meet tomorrow afternoon. All tennis entries will be tagged with a souvenir button. The winners will receive gold medals while their opponents-up will get a silver trophy. The following teams are in the meet: Kansas City, Kans. Topeka, Eskridge, Baldwin, Winchester, Man- hattan, Westport, Central and Lawrence. MANY ENGINEERS AT EXPURGATED DANCE Attendance at Next Tuesday's Hop Will Be Good, Says Oscar Dingman "Tickets for Engineers' Day are going fast," said Oscar A. Dingman, president of the Engineers, this morning. "Everything looks promising for the best Engineers' Day ever." The parade, as usual, will be the chief attraction of the morning. Floats are being designed by the various societies and classes. The afternoon will be given over to athletics and volleyball; the ball will be played between the several departments of the School of Engineering. Haley's four-piece orchestra will furnish the music at the dance to be held in the Gymnasium in the evening. The decorations put up for the Sophomore Hop will be left in place. Three Prominent Editors Who Will Come to K. U. Soon Charles H. Grassy, publisher of the Baltimore Sum, who will speak in Robinson gymnasium May 12, at 8 o'clock. Oswald Garrison Villard, editorial writer and president of the New York Evening Post, who will speak May 11, in the gymnasium. Henry King, editor of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, who will speak in Robinson gymnasium on Monday of Newspaper Week. BETAS DEFEAT PHI DELTS Made 17 Hits and Won From Their Neighbors 18 to 9 Seventeen hits, several of which went for extra bases, gave the Betas a 18 to 9 victory over the Phi Delts on freshman field, yesterday afternoon. The game was a swatfied sprinkled with errors. Heizer led the batters with a homer, two-baggers and a single. The score: R. H. E. Phi Delts 104 010 12x— 9 10 4 Betas 251 119 09x— 18 17 4 Batteries: Lyman, Berger and Blair; Chase and Strothers. Umpires Mitchell and Sommers. Will Not Play in Lawrence The Emporia state league baseball team, which had planned to make Lawrence its training quarters and play a series of practice games with the Varsity, has changed its route and taken a barmostorm to the southern Kansas and Missouri. The Emporions will not play in Lawrences. Send the Daily Kansan home. INOLUS the outside shirt and underdrawwear are one garment. There are no clothes to wear in there; there are nothing to tie in in seat, that the dancers "stay put" to say nothing of the comfort and economy of saving a garment. ISU is compartment, open all the way down—closed cloak, closed back. ISU is comfortable. For golf, turf and field wear, we request a special attended dress 027.89 with appropriate headband or necklace for tall or small men. All shirt fabrics, shorts, drapes including skirt-$1.95 to $10.00. Ask your dealer for OLUS. Book on request. PHILIPS-JONES COMPANY, Makers Dept. N. 1198 Broadway, N. Y. OLUS The largest stock in the city JOHNSON & CARL [The Only Fire Proof Construction] BOWERSOCK THEATRE May 4th to May 7th. Matinee 2:30; Night 8:15 The Renowned White Slave Picture Drama One Mile of Films "TRAFFIC IN SOULS" 600 Scenes 700 People Founded on the John D. Rockefeller Vice Investigation and the Reports of District Attorney Whitman of New York City, Shown to 30,000 People the first week at Weber's Theatre, Broadway, New York Price 25c All Seats Reserved. Seats on Sale at Woodward's, Saturday, 8 a.m. NEBRASKA-KANSAS TRACK MEET McCook Field, Friday, May 1, 3:30. Tickets 50c. Student Tickets Admit Twelfth Annual Interscholastic Track Meet McCOOK FIELD, SATURDAY, MAY 2nd 40 Schools. 3 Classes. Tickets 50 cents. Student Ticket Holders 25 cents