UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PROF. C. E. HUBACH TO GIVE GARNETT RECITAL Prof. C. E. Hubach of the voice department of the School of Fine Arts will give a song recital at Garnett on March 5. The Garnett Review, makes the following comment on the approaching recital: "Every Kansan is proud of our splendid University and the vocal department under the management of Professor Hubach is one of its strongest features. Professor Hubach has received many requests from various points over the state to give recitals, but until this year, has not found it possible to give the necessary time." The question of class pipes for sophomores has started an agitation at Illinois. The upper classmate at Dartmouth have volunteered to tutor the students who can not afford a private tutor. WANT ADS LOST-Between the Library and 408 W. 13th Street, a fountain pen without cap. Finder please notify Bell 1808. 95*8 Squires, the photographer, has just received a new line of mouldings. Leave your framing with him today. Squires' Studio.-Adv. SAM S. SHUBERT Matteine Wednesday and Saturday "BOUGHT AND PAID FOR." McCOLLACH'S Drug Store. Initial Box Paper Quality Good—25c McCOLLACH'S Drug Store. STUDENTS' HOE HOP 1107 Mass. Work and Price always right LAWRENCE Business College Louisiana, Kansas Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. W. H. Quakenbush, Pres.; E. S. W. Heatherby, Supt. WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository W. C. M'CONNELLY, Phyldan and Steve Barrick House 0349, Hewlett-Packard, Hewlett-Packard 1346 Temp. Room PROFESSIONAL CARDS G. A. HAMMAN M. D.-D. Eye, ear, and mouth Guaranteed. Dick Building. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist Office 802 Mass Site Bell phone 605-741-3769 HARRY REDING. M. D Eye ear, nose phone 513. Phone 513. Home phone Phone. Phone 513. Home phone Phone. Phone 513. Home phone J, W, O'BRYON, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Bell. Phone 5017. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. B. J BECHTEL, M. D. D. O. 833 Mass achusectus Street. Both phones, office and phone. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D., Diseases of the stomach, surgery, and gynecology O. H. BLEIER, Residence, 1201 Olsie St. Both phones. 35. DR. H. T. JOENES, Room 12 F. A. A. Aldg, Residence 1130 Tenn. Phone 211 DR. H. L. CHAMHERS, Office ove squires Studio. Both phones. DR. BURT R. WHITE Outpatient Bldg 746 Home 257 Office, 748 Mass St. Miscellaneous hilawatha Cafe for regular meals, lunch and short orders when down town. Open after 10am. W. D. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker & Jeweler, and Jewelry, Bakehouse & Mass. CLASSIFIED Plumbers Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co. for 97 Massachusetts. Mazda lamps. 937 Mass. Phones 685. Prices reasonable, work the best. Not in town. Phone: 435-820-7644, 4939 Alcoa & Co., 816 Nims, Ma. www.alcoa.com Ladies Tailors Lawrence Sewing School. Ladies' tailoring and dressmaking. Sewing school 814 Mass. Places 650. Miss Powers; Miss C. McClaray. Queen City College. Systems and sewing. Queen City College. Systems and sewing. School, Mrs. G. Mark Brown. 834 Ky. Hell. College, Mrs. G. Mark Brown. 834 Ky. Hell. Hair Dressers Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and hair massage, shampooing, hair-grows, 'Marilyn' melo hairdresser, New York salon Bell II. 1372, Rome .51. The Salon Hair Dress Shop, 927 Mass St. 81. Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUK 913 Mass. Student's Co-op Club. $2.50 to $3.00 per week. 1340 KY. Geo, H. Givn, Stuart Seward. CHAIRS OF '73 ARE STILL IN OPERATION Fraser Hall Back-Breakers Date From University's Infancy—Good Chairs Still In 1873, when from the cradle of Mt. Orean an infant University was crowing Rock Chalk, Jayhawk, the wonderful chairs arrived. They were fine, they were! Why, they had little desks on the arms! Such nice chairs had to be kept in order, so the authorities had each chair numbered, and they were numerically arranged according to the rooms in Fraser were the same size then and each room had the same number of chairs. They are still there, those stalwart back breakers, but the students of the University of Kansas do not hold them in the esteem that their forefathers did. Even the faculty insist they have kept in order although some of the numbers still cling to the backs of those lumbago producers. "I hope to see those chairs replaced," said Chancellor Frank Strong. "They may be all right for some people but they are no good for others." He feels particularly uncomfortable and I hope that new ones will take their places." Dean Olin Templin remembered when the chairs were numbered and neatly arranged, but that was not all "My, said he. "I still have curvature of the spine from sitting in those chairs when I was a student thirty years ago. They certainly are back breakers." "But they are good chairs. Why, I think they are monuments to the cabin makers art. Here they have worked since 1873 and are as strong as a mule yet. What shall we do with them, the other schoole they made but the College is too poor to afford new chairs, and I can not use all of them in here." Here the Dean surveyed his office with a critically humorous satisfaction. His office chair belonged to Chancellor Snow. Likewise the long table at the side. A file cabinet acquired by Tenno was made when he was acting in the capacity of the first registrar of the University. "Well," said Prof. W. H. Johnson, high school visitor, "Those chairs were here when I came in 1885 and I can not see that time has softened them any. They are certainly uncomfortable, but I do not know what to do with them unless you make faculty chairs of them." Prof. L. L. Flint was the only champion of the ancients. Many of the alumni, he said, owed their success to them and their college work to those chaars. "Think what an inspiration should come from sitting in the same chairs once occupied by William Allen White, or Ex-governor Hadley. Why, a lazy student, sleeping peacefully through the class should be at once stirred to emulation by finding the initials of Senator Borah upon the chair in which he is standing would be destiny shaping to cast aside the old chairs, and would devise scholarship. Students lolling in modern effeminate luxurious chairs forget what they came here for. I am in favor of keeping the old chairs and getting some more like them for the other buildings." KANSAS CITY, KAN. HIGH HOLDS WARM ELECTION Kansas City, Kan., Feb. 20.—Precedents for senior class elections at the Kansas City, Kans., high school were smashed at Wednesday afternoon's election when Edith Hynon vice-president for the first part of the senior year, was elected secretary, Barclay re-elected treasurer. This was the first time a student had ever held an office twice in a class organization. Willard Benton, star forward on the school basketball team, was elected president, defeating Clarence Smith, who was running for election in the presidential contest also close, Bonita McGuire winning wintry from Ethel Alvin by one vote. The class numbers 120, and will graduate in May. (By Paul Brindel) PROTSCH The Tailor THEY ARE HERE HAS KANSAS NO TIME FOR ART? ASKS PROF A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND Head of Painting Department at University Says State is Not Yet Educated Kansas is a noted paradise for many things from alfalfa to automobiles, but according to Prof. W. A. Griffith, professor of drawing and painting at the University, it is not noted for art. Professor Griffith says that art among Kansas people, as exemplified by the architecture of public buildings and private homes, is distinctly lacking. "Kansas is rich and prosperous enough to patronize art." said Professor Griffith, "but the men who have the money to spend have not the leisure to spend it. They have not been educated that way. A man does not need a special education to enjoy a ride in an automobile, for instance, but he does need an education, or an introduction at least before he is able to enjoy an etching by Whistler, or a play by Shakespeare. JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. "This is a new country and as such is undeveloped in the things that naturally are the result of leisure for reflection. Our people have been too busy making money to think about art. And our homes and churches and public buildings show it. A Kansas legislature would never design an artistic public building. That must be left to a person who is educated in things artistic. The average man isn't." "But Kansas perhaps isn't behind communities of her own age. Only in the Eastern states does public opinion tend to emphasize an artistic trend of thought. We are learning. Art is latent in the youth of Kansas and all it needs is an opportunity to show itself. "I knew of a freshman in the University, who had been reared on a western Kansas farm, and who came here utterly ignorant of art and paintings. His rhetoric instructor sent him to an annual exhibit of pictures one day and he became an ardent art student. A year after he had graduated, I met him at a Kansas City exhibit, in the act of buying a couple of fine etchings. He had learned to appreciate good pictures. "Men like him, who go out from the University or other educational centers, with a realization of what art is, and an appreciation for it, are the home of the artistic future of the state. They will work for better architectural standards in public buildings. They will strive for higher ideals on the building committees of their churches. And they will not be content own homes, but will be roof over their heads. They are the leaven in their community, whose example and teaching may help make the state, or that part of it built by man, a more beautiful place to live in. from the ordinary man's viewpoint, that is, as an intelligent admirer. "Kansas usually has the best of whatever she wants. And there's no reason why she shouldn't have the best of art." INDEPENDENCE FIRST IN SOUTHEASTERN LEAGUE (Bv H. Dale Watson) By losing to Neosha, the Coffeeville boys' team tank to second place in the Southeastern Kansas Basketball Conference. Dependence. Up until Friday the Coffeeville and Independence teams tied 'or first place. Coffeyville, Feb. 17—The Coffeyville high school basketball teams dropped a double header to Neodesha Friday night, the score of the boys' game being 38 to 37 and that of the girls' contest, 14 to 11. Y. M. Delegates to Salina Messrs. Hugh Carpenter and Chas. Morgan, students in the Coffeyville high school, have been chosen to represent the school at the high school M. Y. C. M. a convention to be held at Salina the latter part of next week. The organization here has about sixty members. Freshmen Win Interclass Series The freshman basketball team won the inter-class championship of the Coffeyville high school in a series of elimination contests Friday night. None of the first team took part in the games as the regular team played a game at Neodesha Friday night. Squires has just finished all the senior pictures for the annual. You can make an appointment and have yours taken now. Squires' Studio— Subscribe for the Daily Kansan. Our flowers are direct from the grower who knows how, and you get the best the market affords—always. 8251-2 MASS. ST. PHONE. 621 THE FLOWER SHOP We Cater to Your Tastes In our stock of goodies you can find anything you wish---kept clean and fresh---at a reasonable price. CALIFORNIA FRUIT STAND PHONE 100 FOR TAXICABS LESS GARAGE, Phone 100 The High School Student who feels an interest in such a vocation as Mechanical Engineering He is always in demand. His position is often one of large responsibility. He is well paid. should be encouraged in knowing that the growth of industry, and the modern striving after efficiency, open a broad way of opportunity to the able mechanical engineer. He is always in demand. A four-year course in mechanical engineering with the advantages of fully equipped shops and laboratories, prepares the student to enter this broad field under the best conditions. VOCATION EDITOR University Daily Kansan Lawrence, Kansas "Ask the Extension Division" Are you leaving school at the end of this term? Continue your education. Take a course by Correspondence. Courses are given in: Astronomy Botany Chemistry Economics Education Engineering English Entomology German Greek History Journalism Latin Mathematics Mineralogy and Geology Pharmacy Physics Physiology Public Speaking Romance Languages Sociology Zoology Address: Correspondence Study Dept., Extension Division, University of Kansas, Lawrence.