UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ANNOUNCEMENTS Seniors who did not get commencement invitations can get them from the committee up to the fifteenth. The committee is: Rose Dyer, Helen Alphin, Paul Serber, Floyd Devlin, Arthur Duston, and Sam Fairchild. The Mott Campaign Committee will meet tomorrow at 5 p. m. in stead of 9 o'clock the usual hour. Hawk club will hold tryouts tonight at 7, in Room 101, Fraser. Sigma Delta Chi will hold a business meeting tonight at 7 o'clock at the Pi Upsilon house. WANT ADS All those interested in forming a Bristow-for-Senior club will meet Wednesday, at 4:30 in Room 110, Fraser. FOR RENT—Two dress suits, Clark, 730 Mass. 132-3 FOUND—Watch, Thursday night. Owner call 2626 B. 1339 Ohio and identify property. LOST—A golf club called a mid-iron on the golf links Saturday. Bell phone 1926. 132*3". LOST -Silver purse, Alpha Delta Pi seal on back, lost on 3rd floor Fraser Thursday. Call B. 1835. WANTED—At once; a student to carry the K. C. Times. Must have the 9 and 10 o'clock hours vacant College. In 1214 Kentucky students 322-8. Cottages in Estes Park for rent. Call Bell 1318 or address X, Care University Daily Kansan. 129-5 Wanted—Salesmen $10 to $100 each. Big demand! Send twenty-five cents for alphabetically arranged list of names and addresses of prominent film producing companies. The Aytunez Producers' List, Box 347, Pueblo, Colorado— Profitable vacation employment for Students selling guaranteed household articles. Last season students made from $27.00 to $40.00 and Ensure your territory National Co., Bd St. Newark, N.Y.-Adv. 132-8 Colorite. 25c, colors old and new straw hats. Barber & Son, druggists.—Adv. Limeade, 5c, at Barber & Son's fountain. We use Wiedemann's ice cream and serve every drink in a clean glass.—Adv. PROTSCH The Tailor THEY ARE HERE PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. G. MCCONNELL, Physician and surgeon. Office 819 Mass. Bell 399. Office 819 Mass. Tenn. Bell 399. Bell 1023, House 936. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist in Sensitive Glass Fitting. Office 892 Mass. St. bell phone 693. HARRY EREY, M.D., D. Eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Office F.A. A. Blvd. Phones. Bell 513, Home 512. G. A HAMMAN, M.D. D. Eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Office F.A. A. Blvd. Phones. Bell 513, Home 512. G. A HAMMAN, M.D. D. Eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Office F.A. A. Blvd. Phones. Bell 513, Home 512. G. A HAMMAN, M.D. D. Eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Office F.A. A. Blvd. Phones. Bell 513, Home 512. D. W. O'BRYAN, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. J. B.RECHETH, M.D. D. O. 833 Mass. Street. Both phones, office and residence. D. R.H. J. TONES, Room 12 F. A. Bldg. Residence 935. Ireland. St. both phones. D. R.H. J. TONES, Room 12 F. A. Bldg. Residence 935. Ireland. St. both phones. D. R.H. J. TONES, Room 12 F. A. Bldg. Residence 935. Ireland. St. both phones. D. R.URT B.R. WHITE Osteopathe. Phones. Office 257. Office, 745 Mass. St. Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Diamonds and Jewelry. Bell Phone S. T. GILLISPELL, M.D. Office corner Vermont and Warren St. Residence 738 Ind. Phones 596. CLASSIFIED Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co. for gas goods and Mazda lamps. 937 Mass. Phones 885. LADIES Tailors MRS ELLISON, Dressmaking and Ladies Vermont. Phone Bell 2411 West. Queen City College. System and sewing taught. Dressmaking in connection with school. Mrs G. Mark Brown. 849 Ky. Bell 1744. Hair Dressers Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-fools. "Marilyn" cell phones call Bell 1572. Home 51. The Select Hair Dressing Shop. 297 Mass. St. Barber Shops Go where they all go. V.K. JOHN 913 Mass. Student's Co-op Club. $2.50 to $3.00 per year 1340 Ky. Geo. H.Vansel Stewart. Around Mount Oread Walter A. Butler, who was graduated last year from the University and who has a position in the N. W. State Bank of Commerce in Kansas listed as registered "Tub" successfully resisted the temptation to decamp with any of the bank funds since the only "bullion" he handles is cancelled checks. Arthur Erieson must be mighty hard to please for she wrote to Washington, D. C., to get his date for the Soph Hop. Allie Carroll offered a prize of a twenty-five dollar silver set to the person guessing the nearest time it would take a top-shaped flask filled with water to empty drop by drop. The exact time was 331 hours, 25 minutes, and 55 seconds and H. R. Wade, a junior engineer, was third nearest, guessing within an hour of the exact time. King Adams, janitor of Fraser Hall, while mopping the sophomore poster off the walk last week, was asked if he approved of such doings. "Why, boys, there ain't nothing wrong in such things," he said. Why, ten years on, they should cover words with the awfulest cwords on 'em. What's the use of the students sitting 'round with their rhands folded?" Upon the wall of the office in Fraser occupied by Prof. C. H. Talbott, of the extension department, there hangs a framed copy of the lines from the "Invitus" by William Ernest Henley; It matters not how strait the gate How charged with punishment the I am the master of my fate, I am the captain of my soul. "I saw those words framed on the wall of the office of a United States Senator with whom I am acquainted and they struck me so forcibly that I looked them up," says Professor Talbot. BURLINGAME HIGHS HOLD FIRST INSTR-CLASS MEET (By Marshall Harkness) Burlingame, April 14—The junior-sophomore class track team took the inter-class track meet, the first of the season Friday afternoon on the local training track. The school uses this as a tryout for the school track team which will compete April 18 for the county cup. A wet track kept the contestants from smashing any former records but the meet on the whole was a success. Junior Laws! Damages and domestic relations—Prices right--second hand and new books. F. D. R. Miller, 1041 Vt. St.-Adv. THE DAILY KANSAN The Crowd Reads ORIGIN OF NATURAL GAS YET A MYSTERY If you want a crowd at your Play Dance Mixer Prof. Haworth of K.U. Discusses Genesis of Kansas Petroleum Products Advertise it in the Daily Kansan The origin of Kansas gas and oil though having been discussed for forty years is no nearer a definite solution than at first, according to Professor Erasmus Haworth, state Geologist, who is at the head of the department of economic geology at the University of Kansas. Professor Haworth, in form of these vast petroleum stores, thinks Professor Haworth be of great benefit in locating new pools. Kansan Ads Pay Two theories as to the origin of oil and gas are accepted by different bodies of scientists. They are the chemical and organic theories. Upholders of the organic theory believe that oil and gas were generated from great vegetable and animal deposits, in the same manner that coal was formed. The other theorists think that oil and gas was and is being formed in the interior of the earth by the decomposition of water acting on hot metals. The organic matter produced in the sea, and buried in the sands of its bottom is said to be more than sufficient to account for all the oil and gas ever prospected. Other experiments in higher chemistry show that the hydrocarbons petroleum and gas and oil have the same relation in regard to their refraction of light. This is taken to indicate their common origin. The organic theory is well known in connection with the origin of coal beds. The assumption is that the accumulated vegetable matter of luxuriant prehistoric swamps buried under water and mud, gradually was changed into coal, gas or oil. Decomposition of vegetable matter in the mud of stagnant pools causes gas to arise in bubbles. In the winter this gas collects beneath the ice, and will burn if lighted. It is called marsh gas, and is of practically the same composition as methane of natural gas. Gas found in shallow wells in glacial drift, whence no exhalations from the earth's interior could have penetrated, is advanced as supporting the organic theory. Modern research, according to Professor Haworth, seems to indicate that the organic theory is the correct one, but scientists do not, as formerly, hold that the formation of the hydrocarbons has ended. In the sands of the oceans' bottom today, and in the ooze in the great fresh water lakes, organic matter, animal and vegetable, is accumulating. By the process of decay, these forms, must be broken up into natural gas and petroleum, for the benefit of the earth-dwellers a million years hence. Scholarships for Women KING Applications for the scholarships open to women students for 1914-15 should be made to the committee before April 15. The scholarships offered are: The Marcella Howland Memorial Scholarship $87.50. Open to young women and senior classes of the College. The Eliza Matheson Innes Memorial Scholarship, $100. Open to women students of the College above the freshman year, or to women students of the Graduate School. The Daughters of the American Revolution Scholarship, $100. Open to women students of the College above the freshman year and to women students of the Graduate School. The Association of Collegiate Alumnae Scholarship, $50.00. Open to women of the junior and senior years of the College. The Caroline Mumford Winston memorial scholarship of $35 is open to women students of the College of classes above the freshman. The Buchen Memorial Scholarship maintained by the alumnae of the Pi Beta Phi sorority is a loan scholarship of $200. It is open to women students of the College. Committee: E. Galloo. Ida H. Hyde. Hannah Oliver Testing Township Wells The department of state water analysis will make examinations of water from wells in Wakarua township. Wednesday with the sociological survey which is being carried out by the Rural Sociology class. Chocolate, strawberry, vanilla, caramel nut, peach, banana nut cream and orange ice. Reynolds Bros. Bell 645; Home 358.—Adv. Brown bread ice cream at Wiedemark. FRONT 3% IN. BACK 2 IN. Wm. Barnett MARTINS TROY N.Y. 2 for 25c 1/4 SIZES at All the principal cities and places of interest in Europe will be visited in Europe will be visited by the party Allys, care of Daily Kansas—Adv. CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. Typewriting Done By Alvin L. Babb 1334 Ohio St. Bell 'Phone 1574 W GOOD PLACE TO EAT A ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. Sam S. Shubert MAT. WED. and SAT. PEG O' MY HEART Next: PASSING SHOW OF 1913 Initial Box Paper McCOLLOCH'S Drug Store. Bert Wadham THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up some money too, on graduating from the Law school. Encourage your students to work hard and you'll secure a good position. Free Employment Bureau at your service. Free College Education and best Business College. No Vacations. BUSINESS COLLEGE Lawrence, Kansas. Three months in Europe for $600 is what the foreign travel ad in this issue of the paper offers.—Adv. NEW VAUDEVILLE THEATRE TONIGHT MATINEES WED. and SAT. The Accidental Sheriff Dubinsky Bros. Present America's Johnsky Bros. Present America's Foremost Stock Organization THE FRANKLIN STOCK CO., including that dandy pair, Miss Sylvia Summers and Mr. Alfred Pierce, in a magnificent production of the latest comedy success A Mere Veneer for a Union Suit A Laughing Contest in Four Acts 3 Big Vaudeville Specialties Prices 10 and 20 Cents Did you ever see a Union suit that was Coal Cut, with actual closed crotch and a closed back? Well, here's one, and the only one— PAT. JAN. 5TH 1909 COAT CUT UNION SUITS OLUS Union Suits open all the way down — have no flaps, no bunching and only one thickness of material anywhere—no opening in back, fit perfectly from shoulder to crutch—all fabrics, including knitted. Price from $1.00 to $1.00. At your dealer. Important Booklet on request. OLUS one-piece PAJAMAS for lounging, resting and comfortable sleep. Made on the same principle as OLUS Union Suits. No strings to tighten or come loose. $1.50 to $8.50. Or OLUS Wheel Distribution. OLUS. 948 BARRARD CIRCLE. Appt N. 948 BARRARD CIRCLE. 348 Broadway, New York Mr. Baseball Fan Are you interested in the Varsity team,the fraternity leagues,and the inter-club league? If you are,you will want to get all the dope of the games. Mail fifty cents to the University Daily Kansan and have it delivered the rest of the school year, until June 5.