UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT The tickets for the Missouri-Kansas Football Game will be ready for distribution on or about November 4th. Persons desiring to make reservations before that time may do so by written application only. Applicants should state clearly what kind of seats, box or bleacher, they want; whether on the Missouri or the Kansas side; rooter's section or alumni section. Students and faculty may make reservations by mail for tickets wanted and need not enclose cash. But tickets so reserved must be called for and paid for within two days after tickets are ready for distribution. If not taken within the two days the tickets will be put back on sale. Applications from others than students must be accompanied by the cash and 12 cents should be included for the registering of the tickets to be returned. Applications unaccompanied by sufficient cash and applications made verbally will not be considered. Price of seats, Bleachers $2, Box Seats $2.50. As the number of box seats, in case box seats are ordered after all are sold, the best bleacher seats remaining will be substituted and the difference remitted. No General admission tickets will be sold. The following arrangements are made by agreement of managers, in regard to Student Enterprise Tickets, and these are the same as prevailed at Columbia last year. Student Tickets are good for admission to the game but not for reserved seat. Sufficient seats will be open for those that do not want reserved seats. Student Ticket Coupon Number 5 will be credited at $1 each toward the purchase of box or bleacher reserved seats. The demand for Tickets will tax the capacity of McCook Field and you are urged to make reservations as early as possible. Mail all applications and make all remittances payable to W. O. Hamilton, Robinson Gymnasium, Lawrence, Kansas. Application blanks may be had at office, at check stand and Smith's News Depot. WYANDOTTE COUNTY CLUB IS ORGANIZED The Wyandotte county club met last night at Myers hall to formulate plans for the activities for the winter. Russell Bodman, president, appointed a committee on a constitution for the club. The following are the members of the committee, Lewis Keplering, Ralph Prush, and Kenneth Bishop. The club will meet regularly every Wednesday at Myers hall at 7:30 p. m. All Wyandotte county students who are not members of this club are urged to come to the next meeting and join the club. In the University of Kansas 63.3 per cent of the students are church members, and 89 per cent have religious preferences and are church attendants. a special lot of late arrivals with all the newest quirks just the weight for these days. A fancy pattern in blue at $17 that looks as rich as a New York policeman's bank account. A cheerful gray mixture at $20 that will brighten up the street. For $25 here's a rough and ready frieze polished up by a silk lining. Some norfolks with new arrangement of pleats and belts. Everything for men's and boy's wear. Shoes too. A GREAT BIG BEAR THREATENS VARSITY Hospital List Makes Saturday's Struggle a Hard One for Kansas Coach Mosse and assistant coach Frank will leave here tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock with twenty-five Jayhawkers to tangle with Drake on Saturday. Kansas will start the first conference game of the season in a crippled condition which gives the contest a serious aspect equalled only by the Nebraska game. Captain Brownlee is nursing a bruised hand and probably will not get in the game for more than a few minutes. Quarter back Magill watched the scrimage with the freshmen yesterday afternoon. His arm was bound to his side, and his shoulder is so badly bruised that the coaches have no hope of using him Saturday. Parker probably will direct the team. Wilson of last year's squad appeared yesterday for the first time and will work out for quarterback. With the exception of Captain Brownlee at end the line is in good condition for the game. Bramwell won who won his K at guard last year has been trying out at end for the past week and may take Brownlee's place at Drake. He is one of the biggest men in the line and his remarkable speed for his size makes him a valuable man at the wing especially when the Jayhawkers meet Steimle's heavy Cornhuskers, and an earlier date the Manhattan Farmers on McCook field. Several of the strongest of the freshmen squad were not in the line-up last night, and as a result the Varsity ran the ends at will and the tyros presented only a weak defense. The Drake game appears like a dark cloud, and in order to win the Mosse-Frank machine will have to open up everything it has in the line of trick plays and fake formations. The Iowa school held Kansas to a score of 11 to 3 on McCook field last year, and Mosse's men can expect a stiffer opposition in the enemy's country. FRASER HALL Fraser Hall was born in 1872 and has never had an opportunity to lead the simple life. Were it not for a short vacation in the summer it would be still older for its age, but not much. Its extreme length is 246 feet, which becomes extremer to those with eight o'clock classes. The lower floor is used as a rendezvous for politicians and telephone booths. A seismograph was recently installed to record class elections and Japanese earthquakes. The terranean is the second in both intensity and duration. The hurricane deck, so-called from the gyrations of the energetic anemometer, is surmounted by ventilators of the naval type, which show which way the wind is not blowing and give the whole structure a marine, even ultramarine, appearance. Fraser Hall's chief bid for fame, however, is its chairs. They were used originally by the Spaniards during the Inquestion, but were later abandoned by the tender-hearted Dons for the more humane wheel and thumbscrews. Inmates of Fraser become partially acclimated to the chairs in the course of time and in their Senior year acquire a notch between their eighth and ninth vertabrae, which hooks over the chair backs very conveniently. Well-arranged callouses are necessary adjuncts to the notch. Chairs can no longer fulfill their original function, because of senile debility, are placed in the Greek Museum as an example of the alphabetical energy of the forefathers if the bootblack. The chapel which lies amishads, was formerly emptied by interior stairways. Two additional modes of escape have since been added. These take the place of the conventional ivy on the west side of the building. One thousand of the students at the University of Kansas are self-supporting. Send the Daily Kansan Home. A BUNCH OF STARS THESE K. U. COACHES (Continued from page 1.) ball. He was coached in the sport by Dr. Williams, Shelvin, Lewis, Marshall, Harris and several others. Coach Frank is the only Minnesota athlete who ever won three "M's" in one year. He is a good coach in baseball, track, basket-ball and football. Prof. And Coach Too. Leon B. McCarty, who helps Moses and Frank, came here as an English instructor but when the call came for the gridiron he could not stay out of his togs and went out to help coach. He played halfback and center on the Ohio State team in 1908 and '09 and was coached by Al Herrenstein, the mentor who worked at Haskell in 1904. Professor McCarty received his early training in Columbus, Ohio East high school. Here he played tackle and back field. Jay Bond, who hustles the tyros around each afternoon, is a true Kansas product. He played in the K. U. backfield in 1907, '08, '09, and was one of the star performers. He coached the freshmen last year and turned out much good material which the Varsity is using this year. Regents to Let Contracts Regents to Let Contracts At the meeting of the Board of Regents next week contracts for the heating, lighting, and plumbing of the buildings at the state fish hatcheries will be let. Send the Daily Kansan Home. TO THE WOMEN Of the University- We are pleased to announce that our stock of Fall Fashion Publications is more complete this year than ever. You will always find what you want here. We are ready for yearly subscriptions to magazines for 1913. We guarantee every subscription order. Smith's News Depot CARROLL'S Phones 608 Phones 608 - - - 709 Mass Your magazine orders are handled properly here for we understand the business. Citizens State Bank CAPITAL STOCK $25,000.00 SURPLUS 2,500.00 3 per cent on payings accounts. 824 MASS. STREET Keep Your Valuable Papers in Our Vault Fire and life insurance policies are too valuable to have layed not fault. Since policies are too restrictive, we do not allow fire to and fire thieves. Your other valuable papers need protection, too. We have a dedicated lock boxes, for small rental per year.