UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Notice Students O. P. Leonard's *Pantatorium* is on the job again this year. Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 501, Home 180 We Give Club Rates 341 Mass. St. Upstairs. EMMA D. BROWN Has reopened a Ladies' Tailoring and Dress-Making Shop at 929 Mass. Jackson Bldrg. Bell 274. A "Square Deal" A. G. SPALDING & CO. 1120 N. Washington Avenue City, Mo. Send for, our catalog. for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantee each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding TradeMark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. A. G. B. SPALDING & BROS.' Barber Work FREE From Pain BERT WADHAMS The College Inn Barber Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 Vermont Phones 130 PROTSCH The College Tailor The Best In KODAKS AND SUPPLIES We Do Finishing RAYMONDS DRUG STORE 831 Massachusetts. Lawrence Transfer Co Trunk Hauling Phone 15 K. U. PANTATORIUM AND DYE WORKS Student Rates: See Our Solicitors Cleaning and Loisa's Work a Specialty. JACK FULLERTON 1400 Louisiana Phones: Bell, 1400; Home, 140 FALL OPENING LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. ENTER AND MONDAY Queen City College. System and sewing taught. Dress-making in connection with school. Mrs. G. Merk Brown, 824 KY. Bell 1764. Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watch- maker and Jeweler. Diamonds and jewelry. Bell Phone 717. 717 Mass. The Fare Is Only $3.20. PROF. STEVENS SAYS THISTLE IS VALUABLE "May Make Good Fodder" McPherson Farmer Has Tried It After trying to raise everything but Russian thistles and failing, a farmer near McPherson cut his thistle crop last summer, let it dry and stacked it in the fall. It kept in good shape and he has enough fodder for all his stock this winter. Next summer he is going to confine part of his efforts to the cultivation of his thistle crop and he expects to keep his stock through another winter on the heretofore "noxious weed," as it was called by the Kansas state legislature. "If the weed is cut before the second leaves get their growth, I see no reason why it would not make an excellent 'odder'," said Prof. William C. Stevens, head of the department of botany, today. "Of course, it would have to be cut when the first leaves are green to avoid the hard bristle of the second leaves, but if it will keep in the stack for a reasonable length of time, most certainly it will prove valuable. "It has a great nutrient value, being a little less rich than alfalfa. It was brought here from Russia and grows better in a salty soil or in a partial desert. It is an abundance of the forest at Nebraska and South Dakota. If it will keep in the stack, and I am inclined to think that it will, it will eventually come to be used as winter fodder for stock in regions where it will grow." ANNOUNCEMENTS The new Hawk dramatic club will hold a meeting in Fraser hall, room 116 next Wednesday, Oct. 29. All former members of the Masque and Thespian clubs are requested to attend. Officers will be elected and plans for the year discussed. As yet the faculty committee has not passed on its request for an exclusive dramatic charter. The D. A. R. will give a party at the Fraternal Aid hall on the evening of October 31 for the benefit of the University scholarship fund. The committee has obtained the permission of the faculty to be the party, which will be open to all students. Ray Hall's orchestra will furnish the music. Get out your old masquerade suits and see that they're in good shade, if you want to attend the second annual Masque Ball. November 8 at gymnasium at the University of California. Council. Define announcements will be given next week. Speaks at Verein Speaks at Verein Prof. Alberta Corbin will speak before the Deutscher Verein club next Monday in room 313 Fraser, Her topic will be "Berlin." All members are asked to attend. the members of the faculty will give a reception in honor of all new faculty members and their wives Fri- day evening 03 October 31 from 8 to 11 in Green hall. Wives of students desiring to become members of the K. U. Dames Society please leave their names and registration to Registrar Geo. O. Foster at once. CALENDAR Saturday Football, K. U. vs. Aggies at Manhattan. Future Events Oct. 24 Student dance, Robinson gymnasium, 8-12 p. m. Oct. 25 Y.W. C-12 suspension bangle, Robinson gymnasium, 5:30-10:30-p. m. Nov. 6-7 Teachers' Convention, Topeka. Nov. 11 Violin recital, Otto Meyer. (Fraser). Nov. 14 Junior Class Dance, Robinson gymnasium, 8-12 p. m. Nov. 15 Student Council Dance, Robinson gymnasium, 8-12 p. m. Nov. 18 Piano recital, Heniot Levy. PERFUMES and TOILET ARTICLES Nov.18 Piano recital. Heniot Levy. (Fraser.) KODAKS and SUPPLIES RAYMOND'S DRUG STORE We Do Finishing SAVE THE PIECES We have added Lens Grinding Ma- chnery to our Optical department Any Lens Duplicated Glasses Plex HESTER Jeweler and Optician TELL HOME FOLKS ABOUT OUR DOIN'S Fifty Students Correspond Regularly For State Newspapers Newspapers Fifty K. U. students, of the department of journalism, will act as correspondents for the papers of every county in Kansas, supplying each paper with news regarding the students in attendance at the University, and other such items as may be of interest. Two counties have been assigned to each reporter. Students are requested to get in touch with the reporter for their county, and to render any aid possible. Following is a list of the reporters and the assigned counties: C. O. Braden, Nemeha and Cheyenne; B. Brainard, Osborne and Sedgwick; R. E. Busenbark, Clarke and Clay; W. S. Cady, Neosho and Wilson; R. I. Clapper, Linn and Wyandote; R. M. Clayton, Washington and Enith; M. Davidson, Washington and Commander Davis, Douglas; R. Ellis, Marshall and Barber; F. M. Engle, Marion and Dickinson; W. A. Fischer, Gove and Ford. J. M. Gleissner, Ottawa and Morton; A. V. Grady, Sherman and Wabauseen; M. A. Granger, Gray and Greeley; Z. Hammer, Jefferson and Trego; L. A. Harsh, Cherokee Landon Laird, Pawnee and Franklin; W. A. Lambert, Lyon and Morris; M. McKernan, Ness and Kingman; E. B. Lovejoy, Lane, Kearney; and Thomas; W. E. Melville, Lincoln and Norton; W. A. Monahan, Rainl and Elk; C. S. Musgrave, Allen and Chauntaquia; F. D. O'Brien, Rawlins and McPherson; V. G. Scriner, Cloud and Jewell; H. J. Sims, Barton and Brown; L. Smith, Stafford and Kiowa. C. S. Sturtavev, Shawnee and Edwards; C. F. Taylor, Miami and Atchison; D. Teacherhor, Republic and Wallace; M. W. Waugh, Cowley and Sumner; B. C. Watson, Logan and Phillips; H. B. Wentworth, Russell and Ellis; E. T. Wibble, Pratt and Potatamieh; H. S. Willson, Woodson and Wichta; L. A. Winor, Rush and Riley; W. E. Woolsey, Scott and Seward; B. W. Yates, Sheridan, Stanton, and Anderson. What's Doing In The High Schools TWO UNIVERSITY GRADS ON DOWNS H. S. FACULTY (By Donald Dwight Davis) Downs High School, Oct. 22—This year's enrollment of 115 students is the largest in the history of Downs high school. Of the four members of the faculty, two are University graduates. The superintendent, Dr. L. M. Spray, took a B. degree in Math. and taught a daughter, Miss Ruth Spray, who has charge of the mathematics and botany department, graduated in 1911. Miss Spray won a college fellowship in biology to Bryn Mawr, and spent two years there in post-graduate work. The senior class has decided to give a class play, preferably a musical comedy, the proceeds of which are to go toward the public. This will be the third year book published since the founding of the school. PRATT HIRES SPECIAL TRAIN FOR BIG GAME Six additional high school correspondents were placed on the staff of the Daily Kansan today: Downs, Donald Dwight Davis; Manual, Kalia City, Mo.; Wilbur Waterman; St John, Clarence Ward; Galena, Margaret Braun; Coffeyville, Dale Watson; Goodland, Mergerite Miles. Basket-ball prospects this year are exceedingly promising. The boys' team, under the direction of Capt. Lloyd Fink has been practicing for almost a month. There are two last year's men on the team. The girls' team has five old players back at work, and they are growing steadily better under the coaching of Miss EHL Ault. MORE CORRESPONDENTS ON DAILY KANSAN STAFF Pratt, Oct. 22—Pratt high school has chartered a special train to take the rooters to Kingman Friday for the game. The special will leave (Bv Jerome Chapman) Copyright 1913 The House of Commons They're not simply smaller sizes of other models, but distinctly different in every detail---and the prices are just right. We are making an especially strong appeal to younger men with a mighty attractive selection of strictly young men's clothes from PHONE The House of Kuppenheimer $18, $20, $22^{50} Come in at any time and make a critical personal inspection. Your final selection is inevitable. J. HOUSE & SON 729 MASS STREET A little farther up the street, a little less to pay 100 FOR TAXICABS RLESS GARAGE, Phone 100. No store in town shows such a diversified variety. No store offers them to you at such moderate prices. Since the inception of our grocery service of over 15 years, we still solicit your business on the basis of quality. reliability, service and satisfaction. We now offer you: 20 lb. cane granulated sugar $1. 23 lb. beet granulated sugar $1. New figs New dates Fresh oysters Blue label cream cheese Pimento cheese Dale nut butter 58 Dunmire 58 Pratt at 12:30 and returning will managet at 6:00. The train costs $17.50 ST. JOHN'S BEATS BEND BREAT 22-6 (By Clarence Ward) Russell Defeats Hays. Russell, Oct. 22—The Russel high school football team defeated Hays St. John, Oct. 21.—The St. John high school football eleven defeated the Great Bend high school football eleven at Great Bend, Saturday, Oct. 19. John made good use of the forward pass and won the game very easily. CLAIMANTS OF SOUTHWEST KANSA PENNANT DEFEATED Marion, Oct. 24—The football team of the Marion high school defeated the Hutchinson high school players in a hard-fought game in mud on the local gridiron last Friday with a score of 34 to 19. The Hutchinson team has been defeated only once in the last three years and has laid claims to the championship of southwestern Kansas. high school in a hard fought contest on the Normal grounds at Hays Friday, 13 to 0. Steinert of of Russel and a game, star game, with touchdowns. Social Notes The Sigma Nu fraternity entertained the Kappa Kappa Gamma freshmen with a dinner at the chapter house, Wednesday night. The Acacia fraternity pledged F. G. Joss of Wakaruna last night. The Acacia fraternity will entertain with a whist party at the chapter house, Friday Oct. 31. Paul M. Spencer, of New York City, grand chaplain of Sigma Nu, spent Wednesday with the local chapter. The Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity will give a dance at Ecke's hall on Nov. 8. Our peach ice cream is flavored with the fruit. Wiedemann's—Adv Student Specials for Saturday at the Innes Store KID GLOVES 2 clasp stitched backs in tan shades, $1.25 value at. . . . . WHITE LAMB SKIN GLOVES in 16 button length in $3.00 value at . . . . . FANCY SILK RIBBONS in ... girdle沙 and hair widths in ... The high shade combinations worth up to 65c a yard at... 25c SILK HOSIERY, Ladies' pure silk, all shades. Extra weight hose, silk tops and foot, double lisle toes and heel; Guaranteed for satisfactory service, 65c value, pair ... 50c DIXIE FRILLS for suit, coat or waist. White or ecru at ...50c MEN'S SILK HOSE. The same weight and quality as above, 250 mm x 165 mm x 80 cm, 250 SHIRT WAISTS of Eden flan- nel. French collars and cuffs. Hair line stripes on Gray, 125 value. .98c NEW SERGE DRESSES in navy, Copenhagen, and brown. Contrasting collars, cuffs of silk. $6.50 value at ...$5.00 ANGORA SWEATER COATS, Red or gray, $7.50 value at. $6.50 James Bulline A Hackman LAWRENCE KANG Dancing We have gymnasium suits in all sizes Mrs. J. L. Newhouse's Dancing School Saturday morning at 9 o'clock, Ecke's Hall. Private lessons by appointment. Bell 938 Aggie Special Leaves at 9:20.