UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPRAY WINNING TEAM WITH ANCIENT EGGS Williamsburg Crowd Scatters 'Em Among Richmond Basketball Squad By Elza Crane Richmond High School, April 5—The Richmond high school basketball team closed the season at Williamsburg last night by defeating the high school team of that place by the score of 23 to 20. The game was fast and furious and when time was up the game went on in the next few minutes of play Richmond made three points which won for them the game. While the visitors were leaving town they were bombarded by a storm of eggs which were quite offensive and dangerous classes and otherwise disfiguring them. This came as a surprise for the best of feeling has always existed between the two schools and such conduct could not be understood. SAID COFFEEVILLE TO CHERRYVALLE, "YOU LOSE" By H. Dale Watson By H. Dale Watson Coffeyville High School, April 8—Coffeyville got away with a good start in the pennant race in the interurban baseball league, by winning the opening game from Cherryville, Friday, score 11 to 6. At the beginning of the seventh inning the visitors appeared to have the game masticated, gulped and half digested, but a seventh inning rally by the locals netted them seven runs and won the game. The slab work of Hancock, who pitched the last five innings for Coffeyville, was the feature. ELLSWORTH DISTRIBUTES LETTERS TO ATHLETES By Paul Hoffman Ellsworth High School, April 8—the members of the girls' and boys' basket-ball team, received their E's Friday. Those who obtained the letters were: Girls, Flares Reaume, Genevieve McLaurin, Florence Cox, Parker Makes Clothes Large Assortment of Styles to Pick From 847 Mass Neita Schmitt, Ella Dolasek, Minaie Mayer, Gladys O'Donnell. Boys, Frederick O'Donnell, Fred Cooper, Bruce Baker, Vince Wilson, Harry Bornschein, Jack O'Donnell and Clarence Huyke. The Applied Economics Club of the University of Texas, which was organized last year among the faculty and students for the purpose of applying the principles of science and economics to the solution of the industrial and financial problems of the State, is engaged this session in an investigation of the economic phase of agricultural problems. Each member of the club has been assigned to a particular problem to study. At the biweekly meetings reports are made on the progress of their work, and before the end of the year a paper will be written on each question. The agricultural questions which are being considered this year offer an excellent field for research that can be made of practical value, especially since those problems are engaging the attention of an increasing number of public men and legislators. The topics of which the club is making a study are co-operative marketing, co-operative批发 societies, the system speculation on product exchanges as affecting prices, railroad transportation in Texas as affecting agriculture, the farmers' union, farm tenure, irrigation, agricultural labor problems, co-operative production, good roads and taxation in Texas. Last year the club made a study of corporation and taxation problems of the State, and the conclusions of the members were published in an official bulletin of the university, which may be obtained on application to the extension department. The student members of the club are elected on the basis of excellent work done in university classes in economics. WANTED:---Young man to work in store on Saturdays. Of the eleven games played the girls won nine and piled up 253 points while the opponents scored 106. The boys lost five out of 19 and scored 88. The opponents scored 547. Of the 676 points scored Vince Wilson scored 306. DODGE CITY SEASON OPENS WITH VICTORY Dodge City High School, April 8—The baseball team opened its season here Friday afternoon by defeating the Kinsley nine, 8 to 3. Kinsley made no earned runs, scoring three tallies on three successive errors. The Dodge team fielded well in eight innings, and the Kinsley bats found Stubbs for few hits. The work of the local team pleased the fans, and the outlook for a championship team is good. The batteries: Kinsley, Oliphant and Timkin. Dodge City, Stubbs and Reeves. Umpires, Pontius of Carne and Moore of Kinsley. By Herbert Schall Starkweather's Shoe Co. 805 Massachusetts Bell 247 A Few High School Students The Daily Kansan's Educational Department will see that inquiries addressed to it are answered by the ones most competent to give full particulars regarding any vocation and the University courses preparatory for it. Address the IN BANKING OR FINANCE. VOCATION EDITOR are so fortunate as to have an introduction through family or friends, to a good opening University Daily Kansan Lawrence, Kansas Modern conditions favor the man who goes into such pursuits with all the preparation that the best university course can give him. The University of Kansas offers courses in banking and law that have direct value, and others that have vital though indirect bearing, on a career in these lines of business. BOARDS AUTHORIZE MANY IMPROVEMENTS $25,000 Worth of Fixing Up ToStart After Commencement Immediate repairs and improvements to the amount of approximately $25,000 to be made after commencement were authorized at the joint meeting of the temporary Board of Regents and the Board of Administration last Friday. The foundations of Snow hall are to be exposed and re-constructed. A tunnel extension is to be made from the main heating plant to Blake, Fraser, and Snow halls and the Medical building. The steam mains to these buildings: are now carried in conduits, with the result that there is a considerable loss of heat, and great expense whenever repairs are necessary because of the difficulty of getting at the pipes. During the summer all steam mains and returns will be encased in a covering designed to do away with waste of heat, and a brick floor will be laid in the main tunnel from a point near the repair shop to Marvin hall. The completion of the underground conduit system, which is one of the largest improvements authorized, will be begun immediately. The conduit system on the entire west half of the campus was installed several years ago, and when the present improvement is completed no overhead wires on the campus. Other improvements will be made to the electric light and power lines to put them in first-class condition. The grounds immediately adjacent to Marvin hall and between that building and the mechanical laboratory and power plant will be graded in accordance with the original intention when these buildings were located. There will be a slight slope from Marvin hall south, so that all water falling on this area will drain in that direction. W. S. Hasty was named as superintendent of construction at the Administration building until July 1; Ralph Yeoman was appointed secretary of the employment bureau, and Professor Dains is given a leave of absence during quiz week. "UMPS" OUIGLEY NOW The Regents recognized the Skull and K society, an organization of senior men, and the Torch club, a society of senior women, as permanent University class organizations, in accordance with the existing rules. Coach Quigley left the St. Marys team Saturday afternoon and resigned his position as coach. He is going to umpire in the International League this summer and will leave for New York to take up his duties April 15th. St. Mary's Coach Resigns To Work In International The Oberlin faculty is giving especial attention to closer supervision of general scholarship throughout the entire institution. It is considering awarding special honors at Commencement in connection with the degree of Bachelor of Arts to students whose general average is above a certain mark, to be later determined. Final honors in any department will also be given to those whose original and advanced work in that department, terminated by a thesis, is of sufficiently high standard to deserve recognition. Both of these honors, as well as the Phi Beta Kappa, may be taken at the same time. Miss Bertha M. Shuye was granted a teacher's certificate in music; degrees of Bachelor of Science were granted to Emile E. Grignard and Earl L. Wright; E. A. Roundtree was appointed student assistant in the laboratory of the state School of Mines; George A. Poole was appointed technical assistant in the department of medicine; W. A. Cullison was made assistant in the food laboratory. It is not definitely known whether Quigley will return to St. Mary's next fall to take up his football duties. That is a question he would not answer while in Lawrence Saturday. League Quigley is looked upon by many scouts as a comer in the indicator line. IF YOUR BACK IS STIFF DON'T GO TO JAPAN "If you can't make a graceful bow, don't go to Japan," Rev. Frank told the students in Dean Johnston's class in Secondary Education, Friday morning. "Etiquette forms an important part of the Japanese student's education." In his account of Secondary Education in Japan Smith praised the system of education, which is a national one, with a Cabinet Minister at the head. He described the girl's high school where the girls are educated for their future life—object, matrimony. "There are no old maids in Japan," said Smith. "The girls are educated chiefly in household matters, such as sewing and cooking, especially the latter. They study morals, history and their own language, and are drilled in matters of etiquette, bowing and the tea-ceremony." rev. Smith Tells Interesting Facts of Japanese Etiquette and Customs The boys' high school according to Smith, is military in character. The boys wear uniforms, and a bugle gives the signal for classes. They have to work, these Japanese boys. There are classes in morals, ethics, history, sciences, mathematics, foreign languages, sometimes French or German, but always the own language, both the spoken, and the written, contains only six thousand Chinese characters to learn. "The Japanese are trying hard to improve in their singing." Mr. Smith said. "Japanese singing has been described as sounding like a tom-cat with a cold bad training to sing bass, but that is an exaggeration." Müller-Keller, Douglas and Morse chocolates at Reynolds' Bros—Advis Maple nut ice cream, at Wiedemann's.-Adv. Order areated distilled water from McNish. Contains nothing but water. —Adv. EXCHANGE: Will the party who exchanged blue chinchilli caps with me please call Goldman, 2513 Bell. Safety razors, blades, stoppers, lather brushes and shaving materials at Barber's Drug Store. Dull blades resharpened.—Adv. WANTED—To trade a brand new high grade piano. Will take room rent in private home or rooming house, or board at No.1 club as part payment. A. D. King, 1128 Ohio. Bell 1974. STUDENT HELP To persons wishing student help, and students wanting work, the Dally Kansan will give three insertions of twenty words each in this column free: WANTED - I am a student on the hill and wish to work out of school. I can give at least three hours every afternoon and all day Saturday. Steady work preferred. Call Bell 1218 or 943 La. G. H. Moore. WANTED: Two students for dish washing at boarding clubs. See Ralph Yeoman at Myers Hall. HARRY REDING, M. D. M., Eye, ear, nose, and throat. Glasses fitted. Office, F. A. A. Bldg. Phones, Bell 513, Home 512. PROFESSIONAL CARDS G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, ear, and throat specialist. Glasses fitted. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Building. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BRYON, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. J. R. BECHETL, M. D., D. O. 833 Massachusetts Street. Both phones, office and residence. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D., Diseases of the stomach, surgery and gynaecology. Suite I. P. A. A. A. Residence, 1202 Ohio St. Both phones, 35. The largest and most costly passenger stainer on inland water of the world—FOR DAILY SERVICE WITH FARE, $2.50 Actual dimensions: Length, 500 feet; Breath, 98 feet, 6 inches. Steel cone-shaped walls and roofs. Two levels of 300-stater rooms and 24 pair-level accommodations: 1500-passenger inlevels to The Cleveland & Buffalo Transit Co. ... Cleveland, Ohio Season Open May 1st, Closes Dec. 1st Send the Daily Kansan Home For 50 Cents LOST—Diamond stick pin Friday night in Gymnasium. Reward. Return to Kansan office. BOWER & CO., Bob Stewart's Barber Shop, 838 Massachusetts street SCHULZ FOR RENT CHEAP—Fine 20 acre farm, house and barn, half mile from University, for instructors or students. K. U. Bell 105 B., 12 to 1. 5-3. Solz Royal Blue Shoe Store 820 Mass. Street. LOOK NEW LOCATION—O. P. Leonard, tailor. Moved to 841 Mass. St. Remember the place. SCHULZ, the TAILOR—911 MASS. For Rent—Two modern ten and fourteen room houses. O, K. location. Splendid home for a fraternity or sorority. For particulars see or phone Frank Gee. Either phone. Also have some bargains in good homes for sale.-Adv. LOST- Small pocket "K" book, contain notes and memos of value to loser, before Easter. Will finder please call Bell 2061, and receive reward? BASEMENT OLD MEDIC BLDG We will send the DAILY KANSAN to your home or to your Lawrence address from now till June 1, 1913, for 50 cents. :: :: Subscribe now and miss no more copies FOR CUTLERY, silverware, cooking utensils, sporting goods, safety razors, padlocks, etc., see Chas. J. Achning. Phone 676, 822 Mass Stop And Think. THE GARDNER Dairy, Sanitary milk and cream. E. T. Gardner, prop., phone 848.5. Plumbers. Classified Advertising Little stories of personal wants that produce results at a minimum expenditure. Try them Stop And Think. We depend entirely on student trade. Why take your shoes down town? We make new shoes out of old ones. Bring in your shoes and be convinced. 1400 Louisiana street. Don't forget the place. Cafes. Good meals and efficient service at moderate prices, K. U. Cafe, 1009 Mass. "We make a specialty of best coffee in town." Call Kennedy Plumbing Co., for gas and electrical supplies. 937 Mass. Phones 658. S. S. FORNEY S. S. FORNEY First-class shoe repairing. 1017 LOST—A self-filling fountain pen without the cap. Finder please call 1679 Bell or leave at 1329 Vermont and receive reward. LOST—Watch fob, with gold football ball charm. (Fairmount, 1911) engraved on it, also name. Call W. R. Brown, 803 Bell or Home phone. Reward. FOR SALE—Modern 8 room house in University district. Enquire of Frank Gee, Bell 945. A STEWARD for a club for the Summer Session is wanted at 1346% Tennessee street. DETECTIVES WANTED—Young men to operate in own locality, secret service work; experience unnecessary. Enclose stamp for particulars. Universal Detective Agency, 304 Colcord building, Oklahoma City, Okla. For Kodak finishing of the better sort, Lawrence Studio, 734 Mass. St. We sell Eastman films. S. H. Curdy, staple and fancy groceries. Lowest prices to clubs and students, 1021 Mass. Both phones, 212. Groceries Liveries. Francisco & Co., for trunk hauling, auto and hack service. Phonas 139. 808-812-814 Vt. Street. K. U. Pantatorium and Dye Works— 1400 La. Phones 1400. Celaning and ladies' work a specialty. O'Brien & Co., Hardware, cutlery, stover and tinware. Sheet metal workers. Pumps and pump repairing. Van's cistern filters. Phones 664. 621 Mass. St. Gilham's Sanitary Bakery, 412 W. Warren St. Nothing but the best. Come in and see the shop. Meat Markets. See Hess Brothers for the very best fresh and cured meats at the right prices. 941 Mass. Both phones 14.