UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FORNEY Repairs Shoes 1017 Mass. Try Him Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 Vermont Phones 130 Lawrence Transfer Co. Trunk Hauling Phone 15 City Cafe 906 Mass. Best 'neal in the city for 25c Special chicken dinner twice a week STRICTLY HOME COOKING LINN THE CLEANER AND DYER Student Rates Special ticket, 20 suits for $5.00 Punch Ticket, 10 Presses $1.50. Ladies' work especially solicited 1027 Mass. Home 1107. Bell 1109 The Park Grocery 1500 Massachusetts GOOD GOODS Honest Weights Both Phones, 40 To the Students We carry as side lines: Kodaks and supplies, writing paper, and toilet articles. We do Kodak finishing. RAYMONDS DRUG STORE 821 Mass Hess Bros. MEAT MARKET for the very best fresh and cured meats at the right prices. 941 MASS. Both Phones 14. The University The University Meat Market has just been remodeled and solicits the club and fraternity trade Quality and prices guaranteed 1023 Mass. Phones 991 PROMPT DELIVERY A. A. BIGLOW Grocery Special Rates to Fraternities and Clubs The Best of Goods 1103 Mass. Phones 562 FALL OPENING LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence Kansas ENTER AND MONDAY FOR FALL MILLINERY See MISSES WARE AND CHARLTON Susseccors to Misses L. and E. Engle 833 Mass. Eldridge House Stable W. E. MOAK, Prop. Taxicabs, Hacks, Livery Baggage Haul Both Phones 148 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 841 Mass. St. Upstairs. HAS THE NEW MULTIPLEX Hammond Typewriter Been Demonstrated to You? We wish to inform our many users in Lawrence that your Mr. J. A. Keeler, 39 Mass. Street, will represent THE HAMMOND TYPEWRITER COMPANY in your city. This wonderful (MULTIPLEX WRITER), with complete line of supplies can be had at Mr. Keeler's Store. We would be pleased to have you call and examine this Machine. "Time and skill cost money." That's why these suits are Twenty Dollars The same time and skill are not spent on lower priced garments, but much of it goes into our clothing for men leads today. They give the slim effect that all apparel are striving to produce. Apparel they look more expensive than they are. Here's one in black with a white collar. Here's one in black with a white line, one of the newest patterns—it might just hit your fancy. More New Hats Tomorrow. HOYT VINDICATED The brutal humor of this description can not be appreciated without seeing the little dwelling that Homer Ioyt calls home. place. "Oh, you'll recognize it all difference." He nods. "Dave, I can' depice with a tile roof, at the corner When the visitors approached the desk, she looked down to the gate. "I'm so glad to see you," she said. "Won't you come here? It seems good to have friends all." Mrs. Hoyt, graduate of Northwestern University, '80, told her story. She was wealthy once, then came misfortunes. Mr. Hoyt's death, Hoover said, will have unfortunate investments—and mother and son came from Chicago to Kansas City. Mrs. Hoyt's story follows: "Eleven years ago, when Homer was eight years old, we came out here. The doctors advised me to come to the country where he was in delicate health, could grow strong. "I secured 48 feet of ground here where we made out home. We raised iolets, forced their growth early in he spring and sold them in the city. "We tried to raise chickens and our attempt was a great success—for our neighbors. We cared for the chickens in the daytime, and neighbors looked after them at night when they had been taken we quit trying. "In spite of unfavorable conditions we have managed to get along; he has a truck garden and raised some fruit. I learned a lot." A little money, I tutored pupils in the grades and high school who came here or help. Homer learned what taught him. An unusually bright child and read everything he could get hold of. I promised them a new book every month and did best I could to my promise. "When Homer was eleven years old he took the entrance examination and was accepted by the Argentine high school, where he studied two years. His last two years at high school were spent at Kansas City, Kansas proper." One of the teachers, Miss Dougherty, took especial interest in the boy, and obtained clothes from her brother and his friends. Through her recommendation, prominent business and professional men of the town continued to furnish Hoyt during his high school and college course. It is about five miles from the Hoyt home to the Kansas City high school, an accessible way beineign through Madison and indeed through Argentine, Armourdale, and Armstrong. Homer Hoyt walked to school and asked his teacher, Misty Hoyte, who came to school and told the teachers that if Homer was to keep up his studies he simply must have clothes. The high school teacher agreed and furnished the clothes. "Homer finished high school when he was fourteen," Mrs. Hoyt continued. "The next fall he enrolled at the University. That left me here alone and the neighbors caused me no trouble when Homer was a freshman detectives came out here and arrested me on no charge whatever. I was placed in a cell and held for investigation. Homer, at adulthood, refused me the use of a telephone or any communication with friends. No one but the police knew of my plight, and I was kept imprisoned for a week until at last I wrote a note asking the finder to notify me. The friend threw the barbed window and someone—I never did learn who—found the note and notified the friend who obtained my release. During my ab- First Soccer Practice Promising LAST YEAR'S SOCCER TEAM AT UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. The first practice of the Varsity soccer team was held yesterday afternoon on the south field and more than a dozen men reported the intense opening day's workout. Taking into consideration the coldness of the day, and the fact that it was the first practice for any of the Varsity men this season, Zim-Martin and squad brought much more strenuous practice than was expected. Most of the two hours was spent in "Homer has done no wrong. Why must we be persecuted?" The first intercollegiate football game of the 1913 season was played at Carlisle, Pa., when the Carlisle Indians got away to a flying start by overwhelming the Albright College eleven 25 to 0. Under Rival Goal Posts The Ames Aggies opened their fall season of football practice Monday. More than 100 candidates checked out suits the first day, and there are now enough athletes working with them to make nine formidable elevens. The Collegians play their opening game with Grinnell September 27. "Threats were made at the time to get both me and my son tucked away behind the bars. The next day Homer was arrested by the charge of abusive pregnancy but we have found that no warrants for his arrest was ever issued. Joy effervesces at Missouri University over the return to Coach Brewer's fold of Zimmerman, the star tackle of last year's freshman Tigers. He can have a regular position on the Orange and Black squad this fall, and Coach Schulte states that, although he has never seen Bill Weidlin, the aggressive Kansas tackle, in action, in the Big Ten, as he is called in Columbia, to hold his own with any tackl n the Missouri Valley. and all my tax receipts, valuable papers, and a gold watch, were missing. We have never found them. "We had an old horse, which has since died, and a wagon in which to take Homer clothes and things. On the way back I bought eggs and chickens from the farmers, and took them to Argentine where I sold them to a boarding house keeper. When I arrived until she owed me about sixty dollars, and then I attempted to collect the bill. After numerous vain attempts to get payment, we decided to bring suit, and last August I met the director of Miller and Miller brought garrison proceedings against her. She denied all knowledge of the bill and the suit ended in a malicious attack upon our attorney for the defense and a defective dribbling the ball down the tenn, breaking up interference, and shoot- ing goals. After practice Zim took his men for a two lap trip around the field and a racing finish sent the athletes up to the gymnasium, only too ready for their shower and rub down. Kansas prospects for an all-star season are excellent, best and there seems no doubt that with the excellent material which Zimmerman and Hargiss have left from last year, and with a husky squad of new men, principally sophores, anxious to secure a regular position on the team that hawkers and booters have fallen that will make both Nebraska and the Tigers hustle for the victories of which they seem to be so confident. "The basket of old clothes which he had was taken from him and is still in the linen bag, 'silk lined, tailor made trousers' is listed. That was part of the clothing furnished him by friends in the city whose names Miss Dougherty Zimmerman, Poos, Brown, Bay-singer, Marks, Nigg, and Jones, were among the men who turned out for the first day's practice yesterday. The Kansas Aggies are in despair over their chances for a good football team this fall because less than half of the players practice. The loss of Holmes, Stahl, and Captain Prather, together with the death of Simms, their snappy quarter, as sadly impractical, the chances of Coachown's proteges for a successful season. Golf Club to Meet FOR RENT - Nice room for two boys in modern house, coal furnace, bath and electric lights, 1317 Ohio, Bell 2237. The annual meeting of the Oread 301f club for the election of officers, consideration of the advisability of increasing the membership fee and annual dues, and the adoption of a constitution will be held Friday, Sept. 28th, at eight p. m. at the home of Mr. J. Gordon Gibb, 1011 Indiana. Help Boost the And THERMOMETER Subscribe for the Daily Kansan $2.50 Join the "Don't Worry" Club whenever you get a stain or mark upon your clothing. It is not such a terrible disaster; in fact, we can very easily have a stain that had never met with the accident. We are expert Cleaners and Pressors and it does not take long to take the stain out of a coat or other garment. We are expert in delivering orders cheerfully. Lawrence Pantatorium Phones 506 11 years at 12 West Warren Try our $1.50 a month plan. It's a snap. College Inn Barber Shop At the Foot of the Hill on Adams A Real Shop With Barbers and Service We Invite Your Inspection Satisfaction Guaranteed or Whiskers Refunded Bert Wadhams AT Eat Your Meals Anderson's Old Stand 715 Massachusetts Street WHEN CALLING for a good brand of 5 Cent Cigars smoke Robert Hudson Pierson's Success Pierson's Hand Made At all First Class Dealers. At all First Class Dealers. AMUSEMENTS Sale of Seats For "Mrs. Wiggas." "Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch" will be the attraction at the Bowersock theater, Wednesday, Sept. 24. The quaint, motherly Mrs. Wiggs will again dispense philosophy and optimism among the rest of the Cabbage Patchers. The character of Mrs. Wiggs is inviting in both its humorous possibilities and its heart interest. The play will be presented here under the management of the United Play Co. The seat sale opens Tuesday at Woodward & Co.-Adv. Fairfax Hotel AND Dining Room The largest, coolest, most comfortable Dining Room in Lawrence. No waiting for a chance to get a table. The best coffee made in the best way with real cream. Pure whole milk. Creamery butter. Distilled water. We are selling commutation tickets. Five Dollars and fifty cents worth of the best eating in town for Five Dollars. UPSTAIRS OVER 708-710 MASS. OSCAR E. LEARNARD, Mgr.