UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN In a word our subject today is OVERCOATS. In a word our subject today is OVERCOATS. This is the Overcoat store. This is Overcoat time to prepare for anything in the line of weather. All the desirable citizens in the overcoat class are here. We know the intimate history of each. They will stand any trial without impeachment. But all overcoats have their price—ours average from $10 to $35. Style Plus $17. Rain Coats $2.75 to $20. Shoes and Rubbers-Largest stock in town. Bowersock Theatre Mon. Nov. 3rd Billy "Single" Clifford presents "himself" in "BELIEVE ME" A merry musical Stampede bubbling over with mirth and melody An excellent cast of dainty divinities who sing, dance and delight the eye. Beautifully costumed, Properly presented PRICES Parquet $1.00 1st 3 Rows Bal .75 Next 5 rows .50 All 2nd Bal .25 Remember That the Tailor SCHULZ makes overcoats as well as suits. It will be a pleasure to show you our line Foreign and Domestic Woolens 913 Mass. Under Other Goal Posts Friday's game with the Oklahoma Sooners will be the only one of the season to be played on any other day except Saturday. The Washburn Ichabads ran into a bunch of tartars Saturday, when they journeyed down to Stillwater, Okla., and went down into defeat because the Farmers had a line whose average weight exceeded 200 pounds. The announcement given out at Nebraska headquarters that Purdy, the star captain and halfback, was out of the game with a strained ankle caused not a little wonder among football circles here. Some students question if anybody was fast enough to catch up with the Nebraska speeder and strain his ankle, and the rest believe the man was almost invulnerable and not susceptible to injury. The Iowa Hawkeyes defeated the Northwestern Collegeians of Evanson, Ill., Saturday by the score of 70 to 6. This was the biggest upset in football dope in Illinois, though the Iowa City Collegeians were picked to win, their overwhelming score surprised everybody. The Topeka Capital states that Blondy Trobert, the Washburn kicker, missed a 50 yard drop kick Saturday at Stillwater by two feet, the wind swerving the ball aside as it neared the goal posts. Shepard and Weidlin had better look to their hurdle booster in the valley if this athlete is missing them from the middle of the field by only a yard. Washington and Jefferson, a small and comparatively unknown eleven held the Yale Buildings to a 0 to 10 tie score Saturday. The supporters of the Blue and White are now completely dishearted over the miserable showing of their 1913 eleven, and the fact that Harvard is wiping up the whole country adjacent, does little to lessen their grief. The Oklahoma Sooners are practicing daily for their biggest game of the year, the contest with the Jayhawkers Friday. All is set is Norman for the prize contest, and the university town will not be able to hold the students if the Sooners win. They are not exactly confident over their prospects for Friday, but the fact that they have taken the last two annual Kansas-Oklahoma games cheers them greatly. Football coaches who saw the Tiger-Ames Aggie game at Ames last Saturday seem to be of the unanimous opinion that the Missourians are strong on the offense but very weak on the defense. This fact is more than plaintly indicted by the computer scores of their opponents at Ames. They scored 20 points against Oklahoma, 21 against Ames. Oklahoma made 17 points against the Tigers, Ames 13. Coach Brewer is greatly worried over the showing of his proteges on their defense, as he figures that they will not let them play than one and the Tigers will have to hold the line every minute of the time to keep the Jayhawkers away from their goal. Harvard has enrolled a freshman who is the son of an African chieftain. His name is Pleyons Gabe Wolo. He has been in school for 16 years and has earned sufficient money in New York City to pay his way through school. The Bourbon County club initiated eight new members at the regular meeting Friday night. Fred Campbell spent the week end visiting in Leavenworth and Kansas City. SOME PIPES AT GRIGGS Read your own KANSAN. It is conceded that we carry the largest and most varied stock of pipes of any store in Kansas. If there is anything in pipes you want, this is the place to get it. Prices are all right, too. SEE OUR WINDOW! GRIGGS 827 Mass. "The Store of Quality" "Where your pipe dreams come true." If a team is close pressed and finally takes the ball away from its opponents on the one or two yard line, the natural thing to do is to punt the ball as far out of danger as possible. ANNOUNCES LINEUP FOR SOONER GAME In striking contrast to this method of preventing a team from scoring would be the sure, safe method of throwing the ball out of bounds 30 or 40 yards down the field. Ever since it has been done, the passer would get more distance to his throw than a kicker, for the simple reason that the ball is thrown in a spiral fashion, thus allowing the ball to bore through the air and with a definite direction. The defensive team has no chance of catching the ball at the goal, and there is no chance of the catcher running the ball any distance. The rule which states that when a forward pass is thrown out of bounds before striking the ground in the field of play the ball shall go to the opponents at the point where it crossed the sideline,is one which has not been taken advantage of enough. There are many players in a squad who can catch an opponent with the accuracy of a baseball. If a coach is fortunate enough to have such a player this man should be carried along for his specialty. Coach Mosse Will Start Bishop At Left End Friday As the rule this season permits the kicker to boot the oval from any position, the old on-side kick is sick to come back into its own and be used a great deal. The play will be all the more valuable because the ball is free property when it comes whereas in the old days the oval had to be touched by an opponent before one of the kicking side could recover it. The following men, according to the plans of Coach Mose this morning, will line up against the Sooners when the opening whistle blows at the beginning of the first quarter Friday; Bishop, l. e; Weidlein, e. l, t: James, l. g; Keeling, c; Tudor, r; g; Burton, t; Strothers, r; e; Sommers, m; L. h; Martin, r; h; Sueewe, f. The Jayhawker football team held light practice yesterday, the work consisting mainly of tackling the dummy, signal practice, punting, and running interference behind the kicks. No scrimmage was held, and it is doubtful whether the weather will permit it today. At the close of practice Mosse and Frank gave long talks to the players, pointing out the good and weak spots in the Kansas game Saturday. Both coaches were well pleased with the general work of the eleven, but the work of the quarterback was three weak spots in the team's play, and these are what they want soldered up before the Oklahoma game next Friday. With the playing of the opening games of the 1913 football season, close followers of the game, especially those who played under the old rules, are watching with interest the manner in which the players take advantage of the rules, some of which permit foxy plays to "pull off" the unexpected if certain plays are used at the proper time. Mosse will take eighteen men on the trip. Coach Mosse, Coach Frank, Manager of the Daily Kansan, besides the team, will be in the special car. TRICK PLAY EASY UNDER 1913 RULES Salina Daily Union Lists the Plays Possible This Year Although these plays should come in for a lot of consideration by coaches and players, there are other point which are of invaluable assistance to a team if the players carry out instructions. The point regarding a player stopping from bounds or firing at cross the side when he is cornered is a most important one. When a team in possession of the ball is crowded within two yards from the side line the offensive eleven is in a "hole" and its chances of gaining ground mighty slim. A movement has been started to raise a fund of $300,000 for Southwestern University, $100,000 of which is to beleased, and the remainder to endow the original Methodist institution of higher education in Texas. The Michigan Daily, the student paper of the University of Michigan, has 3872 subscribers. KANSAS STILL LEADS IN CONFERENCE RACE Saturday's Results Leave Mosse-Frank Team Strongest Title Contenders A big shake-up in the standing of the Missouri Valley Conference teams in their race for the title followed Saturday's games, but the Jayhawkers were in no way affected by the change. The local eleven kept its lead and now only a defeat by Nebraska or Missouri can prevent Coach Mosee's proteges from bringing home the bacon to the Jayhawk roosters. Oklahoma and Fashburn would merely make them ever-victorious, they would not in any way change the valley rating. Missouri, Nebraska, and Kansas are the only teams still left in the race with a clean slate. Nebraska and Kansas are both ever-victorious so far. Missouri dropped a game to Illinois State. Ames was in the race until Saturday, but the Tigers put them out in a 21 to 13 game. Drake did not play Saturday, the Kansas Aggies lost to K. U., Nebraska narrowly defeated Haskell and Washington played the West-minster Bluejays, a non-conference team. In the event that no team comes through the season with an undefeated team, comparative scores will have to be used by the judges to determine the winner. This is not considered probable, but if Nebraska last year Nebraska, cleans up on the rest. Nebraska has two Conference games yet to play, Ames and Kansas; Missouri one, Kansas; and Kansas two, Nebraska and Missouri. The result of these games will decide the winner. G. W. L. Pet. Kansas 3 3 0 1,000 Nebraska 2 2 0 1,000 Missouri 1 1 0 1,000 Ames 2 1 1 .500 Drake 1 0 1 .000 K. S. A. C. 2 0 2 .000 Washington 2 0 2 .000 There are 747 men in the Yale freshman class, 391 in the academic and 556 in the scientific school. Of the preparatory students Haven high school ranks first with 81 and Andover second with 70. Three thousand students of the University of Iowa were photographed in one flash of a swirling camera on a bank. The face in the picture is recognizable. Your Gloves, Lady should be the guaranteed kind—a heavy cape made-up "Mannish." We have them in Black,Tan,Grey White, and Chamois. Read your own KANSAN. The price is $1.50 and we give a new pair free if they rip— Johnson and Carl SPECIAL For this week only. 10 per cent reduction on any $2, $2.50 or $3 Jersey in our store, and you know what we have in Jerseys. CARROLL'S SMITH'S NEWS DEPOT Phone 608 709 Mass. St. Professor Hardy of Ottawa University has an alarm clock in his classroom for the sleepy ones. Just as the "night before" student is fairly started on his way to forty winks the clock calls him back to attention. The faculty council at Oberlin College has limited the number of students that may enter the College of Arts and Science to one thousand. Dartmouth College has instituted a fraternity reform by which fraternity men will not be allowed to work for members until after February 21. This they claim will give the freshmen opportunity to look over the fraternities and the fraternities more time to select freshmen. Salaries received by young women graduates of the home economics course of the University of Wisconsin range from $750 to $1,000 for the first year's work up to $1,500 for the third year of employment. Forty-three freshmen out of 1500 attended the first class meeting at the University of Illinois. UNFAMILIAR SCENES NO. 4 ENGINEER'S SUMMER CAMP