UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN HAIL TO THE NEW New spring suits, $15 to $35. New Norfolk suits. New light weight spring overcoats $15 to $25. New rain coats and slip-ons $5 to $25. New hats and caps $1 to $5. New shirts $1 to $3. New neckwear 50c to $2.50. New underwear and pajamas. New socks, new handkerchiefs, new gloves and all the fashion news. Parker Can make a suit that will feel and look like it was made for yo: even unto the end. 847 Massachusetts Give Us Your Business It's for our mutual benefit Post Cards and Novelties HOADLEY'S Bovard in Chapel Friday. Dr. W. S. Bovard, of New York City, who will address the Methodist Conference here on Friday evening, has been secured to speak in chapel Friday morning. Send the Daily Kansan home. SPORTING COMMENT. The Jayhawkers returned from the annual trip and won four out of five games. The team started out bad but finished strong. The team returned yesterday and most of the men are in bad shape. Charley horses, sore feet and sore noses seem to predominate. Coach Frank Cayou of Washington has been ousted. The action was taken Monday afternoon and was ratified by the athletic board immediately. The student, alumni and faculty have been clamoring for a change in athletic coaching for the past year. Coach Cayon has been the head of athletics at Washington for five years. He is an old Carlisle star and known football, baseball, and basketball thoroughly. He has been handicapped by the lack of interest at the St. Louis school. Washington has been a weak sister in conference circling Coach Cayon and received the blame. When in Lawrence recently he told the writer that there was no hope for athletics at Washington at all. Coach Cayou will be missed around the valley and he has a host of friends in every school. He is a real athlete, and he has been a leader for clean athletics. Coach Steim wanted to play the basket-ball championship off this week but Manager Hamilton would not consent. Nebraska coach made the proposition to play in Lincoln tonight and in Lawrence Friday night. This fell through. Manager Hamilton will leave for Kansas City today and will meet them. Steim and talk over the teams. There is a likelihood that the teams will not get together as the Cornhuskers want too much to be conceded them. If the games are played they will take place next week. Sophs to Smoke Soon. Tonight at seven o'clock the sophomore smoker committee will hold a meeting at 1315 Tennessee to decide on a date for a series of smokers and to make plans for them. The committee men are chairmen Leon Howe, Floyd Loveless, G. C. Harding, E. Earl Plowman, and Clarence Williamson. Discusses Philippines The El Ateneo club meets in room 314 Fraser tomorrow at 4:30. The meeting will discuss the Philippines. Dean C. H. Johnston will return to tomorrow from a trip to Philadelphia and other eastern cities. the high degree of efficiency which the students must maintain keeps many students out of athletics and keeps many athletes away from the school. The annual Phi Beta Kappa banquet in honor of the 25 newly elected members will be held tonight in the parlor of the Presbyterian church. SWIMMERS PLANNING INTER-CLASS MEET Students Have Good Records in Watery Sport—May Meet Aggies At the regular meeting of Dr. Naismith's swimming class last week plans for an inter-class swimming contest were discussed. In the swimming class are representatives of nearly every class of students in the University. Consequently the rivalry between classes has kept the standard of the swimmers far above the average. Loren E. Brown, a junior engineer, now holds the record for the fifty foot race at 8 and 1-5 seconds. The hundred yard - dash record is held by Charles Eldridge, a freshman in the College at 77 seconds. Victor Householder, a sophomore makes a 100 yard dash last week. The plunge record was made last week by James Daniels, a senior engineer, at 48 feet. Brown, the president of the organization, and Robertson, secretary, are arranging for the contest. Conditionally be announced at an early date. Dr. Naismith has received a letter from Manhattan saying that the Aggies are organizing a swimming team which will soon be in shape to enter a contest with another school. In such case the two schools will probably arrange for a match later on. Missouri has no swimming pool in which to train swimmers for a meet. Co-ed Debaters to Meet. The women's debating league will meet in room 116 Fraser at 4:30 o'clock Thursday afternoon. Business meeting. Spotts at Hays. Ralph Spotts spoke Monday before the Teachers' Association at Hays. He is now working in the interest of the Extension department in the northwestern part of the state. WE TUNE PIANOS Saturday will be the annual Mother's Day of Pi Beta Phi. Bell Brothers Music Co. Send the Daily Kansan home. R. D. KRUM, Mgr. A Piano Is a Valuable Asset 925-927 Mass. St. Our piano factory, one of the largest in the country, equipped with the latest and most scientific machinery, assures us the best pianos in the world. And as to price, that is the lowest possible, from the fact that we are manufacturers and no one can sell a piano as cheap as the maker. Beauty in pianos as in human beings is often only skin deep. Our business has grown to its enormous magnitude because it has never sown a seed that brought back a harvest of any dissatisfaction. You don't buy it to last a month or a year but for a lifetime. Every dollar you invest in a piano should buy a full dollar's worth of Piano Quality. Don't be deceived by a handsomely finished case. Lawrence's Only One-Price Piano House Our Spring line of Pianos is here—one hundred beautiful pianos to make your selections from. Visit our Vitrota patrols and see the latest VICTROLAS and GRAFANOLAS $20 up to $200, terms to suit the buyer Pianos $125 and up FACTORY MUNCIE, IND. Old Stars Who Wore the Crimson and Blue CAPT. BEN. P. YOUNG, '08 Now Superintendent of City Schools, Kingman, Kansas. DREAMS OF H. BALL COURTS In A. D. 1950 Dr. Naimshim May Realize a Vision. If Dr. Naismith had a "million," probably the first thing he would do would be to appropriate enough money to install ten new handball courts in the rear of the gym. Dr. Naismith has figured that the large brick palisades which form the rear foundation of the gym can be used as boards for some new handball courts. This means that the only expense incurred would be in grading the court and building side walls. At present there is but one handball court in the gym where only four men can play the game at a time. With the ten other courts forty-four men could be accommodated with space to play and the game could be made one of our chief sports. Registrar Foster, Dean Johnson, and Dr. Bungartner and many others in the faculty are very proficient in the game and may often be seen "working out" in the little hand-ball room on the second floor of the gym. TEETORS, CLAY MAN, TO GELOGIZE ALSO Paul Teetors, who recently arrived from Pittsburg, Pa., to assume his new duties in the clay testing laboratories, will do extensive experimental work for the geological survey. This work includes testing clays now in use for manufacturing as well as new deposits, and work on all kinds of brick and pottery material. He is also interested in making commercial wares from certain clays on hand. Teetors comes highly recommended by the Clay Product section of the U. S. Bureau of Standards at Pittsburgh. University buys Photos. The University has bought twenty of the best photographs of campus views, a thousand of buildings, taken by L. Wilhelm, the Jayhawker photographer. These pictures will be displayed in the Exposition and will be kept as permanent records at the University. University Buys Photos. HOW IT'S GROWN. The first class in journalism graduated from an American university was the class of 1902 of the University of Oregon composed of two students, E. M. Blythe and Charles Redmond. Since that time the rapid development of the course has been remarkable. It is now taught in twenty-nine colleges and has an enrollment well up in the hundreds. Wisconsin has a hundred students in the course. According to Mr. Blythe the first class received instruction in ethics and ideals of journalism and also studied various subjects from texts. Phi Kappa Psi will give a dan e at Ecke's hall Friday night Call Lawrence Transfer Co., phone 15, for family moving or baggage hauling—Adv. 3-6. Men's Head Gear— Stetson Hats Caps Scratch Hats The Newest of the New 50c to $3.50 Ladies' Head Gear- Panamas from America's Greatest Importers Prices $7.50 up Visitors Welcome Johnson & Carl Wednesday, March 5 at 8:00 o'clock Girls' Glee Club Fraser Hall General Admission 50c, with Student Ticket 25c Good Program "What am I GOING TO BE?" Is a question that haunts many a High School Student He would like the all-round development that is the end of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; but he must, while acquiring this, be working towards some chosen vocation. The University of Kansas offers many opportunities to such students through business courses in the College and professional work in the associated Schools. If he must begin at once his professional or business training, the University offers avenues of approach to practical life as varied as they are attractive. Some of the vocations for which special Schools or courses are maintained are: Teaching Medicine Sanitary engineering Food analysis Reporting Health officer's work Mechanical engineerin Law Accounting Banking Railroading Chemical engineering Drug inspection Ad writing Organist's position Insurance Mining engineering Physicist Taxidermy Nursing Printing Horticulture Publishing Pianist's work Collections Civil engineering Drug chemistry Physical training Ad soliciting U. S. Survey work Vocalist's position Magazine writing Economic entomology Painting Hydraulic engineering Pharmacy Athletic management Editing Housekeeping Elocution Municipal engineering Electrical engineering 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 Vocation Editor Vocation Editor University Daily Kansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS