UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Start The Year Right! EAT and DRINK at Lee's College Inn One Minute From Frazer Hall Remodeled and Enlarged Quick Service We Stay Open Until 12:00 Home Phone 977 WILDER BROS. Laundry Student Agents—GROFT, SMEE, and BOHANNEN. The Best of Work-Prompt Service Bell Phone 1093 The Perkins Trust Company CAPITAL $100,000.00 700 MASS. STREET One Dollar or more starts a savings account upon which we will pay interest at the rate of three per cent per annum. Bring your valuable papers along with you and get our special rates on our SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES. Perkins Trust Company PERKINS BUILDING 700 Mass. St. To Fraternities and Boarding Clubs If PRICES, QUALITY and SERVICE count call us up. We can save you money. To please your palate and give unexcelled service is our motto. Everything in fancy groceries. The best in fresh vegetables in season. No order too small or too large for us to handle. JOHN SEYMOUR J. S. ST. CLAIR JOHN SEYMOUR J. S. ST. CLAIR THE S. & S. GROCERY 101 West Henry Phones 224 A. MARKS Jeweler K. U. Emblems, 25c to $1.00 Student trade receives our especial attention, hence the finest assortment of College Jewelery to be had. Call and get acquainted. 735 Mass. The WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus $100,000 Corner Mass, and Quincy Sts. Issues its own Letters of Credit and Travellers Checks. The only way to carry your money in safety. Banking of all kinds solicited. ZOOLOGISTS RETURN WITH MUCH MATERIAL Professor Baumgartner's Trip To Puget Sound Successful in All Ways Headed by Professor Baugartner of the department of zoology a party of about twenty from the University of Kansas spent the summer at the marine experiment station at the Puget Sound, Washington. They made the trip in a special car from Kansas City and a charter car to Pacific Island from St. Paul. Stops were made in five Canadian towns to afford a study of biological subjects in the lakes and glaciers nearby. The experiment station at Friday Harbor had its most successful season this summer. Sixty one students were enrolled and more research men than ever before were at work. Twenty eight barrels of material were collected for the University of Kansas and shipped to Lawrence for use in classroom and laboratories. Star-fish, clams, and jellyfish made up a large part of the shipment. Some specimens for the museum were also secured. The trip this year was of especial interest since the biologists had the opportunity to observe the big run of salmon which occurs every four years. It seems that salmon, too, have their leap year and every four years come in out of the deep water to lay their eggs and get caught. The other three years they spend out in the ocean deep, far from the reach of the fisherman's nets. American canning factories worked night and day in an effort to put up enough salmon to run us for four years, but the tin can factories could not supply the demand for cans and thousands of fish were thrown back into the Columbia river. Most of the party spent ten weeks at the station at Friday Harbor on Puget Sound. In the Kansas party were five from the University of Missouri, six from the University of Iowa, and three from Richfield, Minnesota. Kansas University was represented by' the following; Prof. W. J. Baumgartner, wife an daughter, Prof. S. L. Whitcomb, Prof. R. D. Lindsay, Prof. A. W. Trettian and family, Rupert Peters, wife and daughter, Victor Householder, Allen Wilber, Ruth Jackson, Ruby Jackson, Irene McCullock. CHANGES IN FRAT HOUSE LOCATIONS With the beginning of the new school year three fraternities have moved into new houses. The Betas have moved from 1537 Tennessee, where they have lived for several years, to 1413 Tennessee, next to the Phi Delt屋, while the Kappa Sigs have moved from 1409 Rhode Island to 1537 Tennessee, the old Beta house. The Sig Alphs have moved from 1339 Ohio street to 1339 Tennessee and have already fully furnished and established one of the most attractive and commodious fraternity houses on the hill. Many of their old alumni are face-to-face with students attending Frank Theis, "Cub Watson, Ratson Chambers, Mike Riley, "Sandy" Hamilton and "Cunid" Haddock. All the fraternities have opened their houses and are busy entertaining alumni back for the first week of school and prospective members. If you are going to have a patty or entertainment see Wiedemann about refreshments.—Adv. SATISFACTION Cigars, tobacco, and candies at Barber's Drug Store, 909 Mass. St. When calling for a good brand of 5c Cigars Smoke PIERSON'S HAND MADE PIERSON'S SUCCESS At all first class dealers. ROBERT HUDSON always given to customers at this store F. B. M'COLLOCH, Druggist NEW PLAN IN GYM WORK THIS SEMESTER Football in Classes and All the Coaches Will "Teach" The Board of Administration, acting on the advice of Chancellor Strong and Dr. Naimish, has revised the course in freshman and sophomore gymnasium and has formed a combination of courses in this subject which not only offers more than one activity to the hard-working freshman, but also helps the Athletic Board to try out new men in every branch of athletics much more fully than was possible before. Gymnasium will be made a requirement for both freshmen and sophomores as ever, but instead of the one course that every one had to take before this year, students may pick five different courses, of which five different courses, as follows: football, soccer, track, gymnasium and the militia. The classes in football, open to both freshmen and sophomores, will be under Jay Bond, coach of the freshman squad last year. Soccer will be taught by Head Coach Mosse in the morning and Dr. Naismith in the afternoon. Track athletes will be guided by Coach Hamilton, and possibly Coach Hargiss or Frank. Gymnasium work will be conducted by Coach Hargiss and will consist of the regular routine work such as the freshmen have taken every year. Parallel bars, tumbling, flying rings, drilling and horizontal bar work will make up the greater part of the work. The militia will consist of entering the Kansas National Guard and taking regular company drill. There is an opening for fifty men in this squad. Commandant Jones and Lieutenant Fairchild are hoping to fill up their quota of forty men with 16, with the troops will uphold the standard which the Kansas National Guard has already established at the University. When the football, track, and soccer seasons close, these courses will be succeeded by instruction in basket-ketball, swimming, and indoor track which in turn will give way to outdoor tennis, courts and baseball in the spring. The gymnasium instruction as planned this year will doubtless be much more interesting and attractive to the underclassmen than ever before, and Conches Hamilton, Hargiss, Mosse, Frank and Naismith plan to develop a crowd of athletes through this instruction that will forever give Kansas its place in the collegiate athletics and at the same time not only twist but completely sever the Tiger's tail in several places. TAKES FIRST VACATION IN TRITEEN YEARS The report that he had sold his home was denied this morning by E. E. Brown, who today lays down the mantle of secretary and purchasing agent at the University. It was another house, not his home. Remarking that he hadn't had a real vacation for about 13 years, Mr. Brown says he intends to take a short vacation for a while now and look around a while before getting into some new business. Just what he expects to take in he does not vet know. Fobs For Baseball Men Handsome silk watch fobs with gold baseball ornaments are being to members of last spring's championship baseball team by Manager Hamilton. The balls bear the inscription, "Missouri Valley Champions 1912." Miss Elizabeth Nowell, who resigned her position as instructor in the department of domestic science to take up a similar position in the high school at Columbia, Mo., has reconsidered the change and has returned to resume her old position in the department. Jayhawk Committee to Meet A meeting of the committee which holds the fate of the Jayhawk will be held some time this week, according to Alfred Waddel, editor-in-chief of this year's annual, "Bob" Davis, Paul Ross, Alfred Waddel are at present the only members of the committee on hand. LAWRENCE PANTATORIUM 11 years at 11 West Warren. ATTENTION It's Cash to You to Come Down Town to the UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE 803 MASS.ST. For Your Text Books and Supplies, We Guarantee to Save You From 5 to 20 Per Cent on Your Purchases University Book Store J. G. Gibb - - - 803 Mass. St. REMEMBER THAT SCHULTZ makes students' clothes. 911 Mass. Street PEOPLES STATE BANK Welcomes the students. Welcomes the students. Capital $50,000 Surplus and undivided profits. $25,000 Drop in and see us. KOCH, Tailor Full line of FALL SUITINGS This Schedule is published for the benefit of the Students. Notice will be given of changes, if any are made. Lawrence Railway & Light Co. CAR SCHEDULE Afternoon Schedule, Main Line to Park Cars leave Haskell, hr., 12. 24. 36. 48 minutes past the hour. Cars leave Henry and Massachusetts for Santa Fe, 3. 15. 27. 39. and 51 minutes past the hour. Cars, leave Henry and Massachusetts for South Massachusetts, 9. 21. 33. 45 and 57 minutes past the hour. To K. U. Cars leave Henry and Massachusetts for K. U. via Mississippi, hour, and 30 minutes past the hour. Cars leave Henry and Massachusetts for K. U. via Tennessee, 20, 30 and 50 minutes past the hour Cars leave Henry and Massachusetts for Indiana St. hour and 20 minutes past the hour. hour and 5 past pass. Cars leave U. via Tennessee St.. 5. and 35 min- utes past the hour. Cars leave K. U. via Mississippi Street. 15, 45, minutes, past the hour. Visit Haskell Historic Site Take a ride out to Woodland Park. Razors, safety razors, strops, mugs, and all shaving accessories at Barber & Soul's Drug Store.—Adv. LAWRENCE PANTATORIUM 11 years at 11 West Warren.