UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME X. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, MONDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 14, 1912. NUMBER 20. GIANTS 5 - RED SOX 2 BRAZILIAN MINISTER COMES TOMORROW Dr. Lima Will Lecture Before University Professors and Students at 4:30 SOMETHING DOING UNDER THE BIG TOP COMES DIRECT FROM STANFORD SIDE SHOWS ARE FEATURED Noted Diplomat Making Study of Prominent American Universities For Benefit of Brazilians. Dr. Oliveira Lima, Brazilian minister to Belgium, will lecture on "The Independence of Latin America and its Evolution in the 19th Century," tomorrow afternoon at 4:30 in Fraser hall. The general public as well as the students of the University are invited Dr. Lima is making a tour of the United States, and is speaking at the leading universities. He comes here directly from Leland Stanford Junior University where he has been lecturing for three weeks. In a hurried trip over the United States in his return to Belgium, he will have only time to give one lecture at the University. His chief interest in the trip will be to obtain an intimate and acclimatized experience with the purpose of presenting this view in book form to the people of Brazil. Dr. Lima is an excellent type of the South American diplomat and statesman. Dr. Lima has been brought here under the auspices of the General Committee of University lectures as a lecturer in the department and at the University from time to time. Unparalleled Feats Dazzle and Amazed Crowds at W. S.G.A. Entertainment K. U. POWER HOUSE TO USE WASHED COAL Engineers Believe That $5,000 Can be Saved For The State by This System. W. H. Johnson, University high school visitor, inspected schools last week at Marysville, Frankfort and Onaga. By the use of washed coal at the various state institutions the state of Kansas may effect an annual saving from $40,000, according to Prof. C. F. Walker. Tests made over a period of six months last year in the engineering power house showed that washed coal possessed a potential energy greater by $12\frac{1}{2}$ per cent than coal that had not been treated. Professor Walker, however, does not believe that these tests were of sufficient duration to prove the fact conclusively, and with the engineering power house will be run all next week on washed coal. The test was to have been conducted this week, but a breakdown in the engine necessitated a postponement. No Meeting of Y. W. C. A. The state of Kansas used over 27,000 tons of coal at the various institutions during eight months of last year, and of this amount the University used a trifle over a fifth. Figures based on this fact show that had this coal been washed at the mine over $5,000 would have been saved. No Meeting of Y. W. C. A. There will be no regular meeting of the Y. W. C. A. this week on account of Dr. Churchill King's talk Wednesday. Meeting will be held next week as usual. "The installation of a washer at the Lansing penitentiary mines would cost about $25,000," said Professor Walker, "but it would pay for itself to a few years time, and if the plan is put into operation it would be by this method. The coal is washed in the mine, then it is mined. The foreign matter, being heavier, remains, while the coal is washed away." Fiji Dancers, Diving Girls And Blu Beard's Wives All Star For Pleasure of University girls. From the opening concert by the Striped Family Band to the last performance at the moving picture show, the evening's daytoday was an unqualified success. Amaritynitha Smith, Frances Black, Bernice Schultz, Kate Daum, Irma Spangler, Nelle Buchanan, Elizabeth Downes, members of the band. Ringmaster Hazel Clarke introduced Yum Yum the Juggler (Bess Boell) who astonished and charmed the crowd by her dexterity. Florence Gettys as the Modern Samson performed amazing feats of strength, capping the climax by lifting Pearl the Fat Girl (Lucy Barger). The clowns, Mary Stanwaity, Ethel Ulrich, and Agnes Gengel had a hand in everything and kept the crowd laughing. Mutt and Jeff (Florence Fuqua and Helen Woolsey) also lent their invaluable assistance to every performance, besides putting on many impuntu stunts. The Fiji Dancers did a ballet dance that surpassed anything shown at the Kirmess last spring. In civilized life they are known as Emily Berger, Mildred Cole, Vanetta Hosford, Agnes Smith and Beulah Davis. Titi, the Tight Rope Walker, (Genevieve Huffman), closed the first part of the big show with some graceful balancing feats. Wild West Show Featured. Wild West Show Featured. The second part of the performance comprised the Wild West Show, which opened with a war-dance by the following Indians: Chief Florence Black, Clare Morton, Moria Knobland, Cori Lesis, Ruth Rule and Annabelle Coventry, who showed a family of squatters seated around a camp fire, cleaning their trusty air-rifles and sharpening their bowie knives. While they were thus peacefully engaged, the savages came sneaking through the brush and fell upon them with ferocious war-whoops. The squatter's parts were phyed by Inez Svivin, Vivian Strahm, Mary Jane Simpson, Naomi Simpson, Luella Cory, Berta Smith, Elsa Zutaven, Elizabeth Campbell, Edna Bigelow, Barbara Olinger, Helen Short, Frances Powell, Mary Helen Keith, and Gladys Henley. After this there was a rush for the refreshment stands, where Winona McCoskie dispensed really truly red lemonade, and Edith Case and Trine Latta handed out popcorn and peanuts. Then the cries of the "spipperis" called the crowd to the side shows, which they found quite up to the advance noticees. Ruth Lambert, Lena Tripp and Mamie McFarlin, as gypsy fortune-tellers, were kept busy all evening and were forced to turn away hundreds of applicants. Irma and Kate were the Guest Twins, Grace Taylor as the Tallest Woman in the World, and Irene McCullough as the Chocolate-Vanilla Lady. drew large crowds. Following the Wild West Show comes the feature of the evening, Annette Kellerman, the Living Venus better known as Elizabeth Fleeson, in her famous high diving act. To the accompaniment of soft music by the band, Miss Kellerman dove from a height of 150 feet into a tank containing twelve inches of water, coming up smiling and unhurt. The picture-show was crowded at every performance. The films were posed for by Ruth Lillis, Esther Wili- Red Lemo Too. IT COST A FRESHMAN JUST TWO-BITS TO VOTE Here's an election story that puts all that stuff about chapel tickets and checking your trunk to Fraser Hall a mile in the shade. Moreover, this is not the fragile invention of a Cub reporter's nose for news; it's every bit true. Friday morning, over in Fraser Hall, there were pretty rabid. Any victorious "Junior Representative", any disgruntled "Square Dealer", will tell you that. It was an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, and the devil take the bindmost. A timid new instructor, fresh from academic work in the east, was taken for a vote as she entered the east door of Fraser and forcibly hauled into the malestroom around the checkstand. Sample ballots, bills and pleas for votes were rained upon her helpless blonde coiffure. (Pronounced co-ah-fwah). Finally convincing her capitors that she was a member of the faculty, she took her bearings after the manner of seamen and learned to walk under the door and steered an uncertain course toward the English office on the second floor. What she steered through would make a fine theme for the Lynn O'Leary narration and description classes, for the jam was terrific, banzains, and bills floated through the air; with two football candidates blocking the line ahead, and a plumed suffrayette elbowing through the line from behind, the frail little instructor was becaleday be-smothered, be-fuddled, and be-wildened, besides being almost be-neath the hoofs of the surging herd about her. helm, Florence Shade, and Ruth Burnham, and were far superior to anything ever shown at the local movies. The most sensational sidowess of all was Bluebeard's Wives. The seven gory heads hanging to the wall by their hair made the spectators' blood run cold. In life those heads belonged to Catherine McCreath, Vale Housholder, Dorothy Ward, Anna Savage, Alexia Laix, Sajene Salvete Edwards. The earwires Eleanor Myers, Vee Flinn, Ruth Litchen, Rhea Wilson, and Mary Thomas, could have given pointers to professional spielers. Throwing her hands desperately up to her tootting her co-ah-fwh, she gritted her pearly teeth, hissed "Charge, on the floor on full steam ahead. (How's that?) The committee that planned and directed the mammoth circum comprised Misses Claribel Lupton, Irma Goldman, Elizabeth Flesson, Bess Bozell, Amarythia Smith, Agnes Engel, and Lina Coxedge. CLASSES HOLD DRAWING FOR PARTY DATES Charles Coats, president of the Student Council, had secured seventeen dates at Fraternal Aid Hall. Of these the Seniors get six dates, the juniors six, the sophomores three and the freshmen two. By actual count it was twenty (20) minutes from the time she entered the east door of Fraser till she reached the English office. An old timer looked her over, took in the rumpled co-ah-wah, and murmured sympathetically: "How's the election going or could you tell from the talk?" The newly elected class presidents and the chairmen of the social committees met in Mews Hall at 4:30 p.m. to draw for dates for parties for the year. "Election? The only thing I can recall hearing didn't mean election to me; somewhere in that inferno I heard some cookers say, 'I'll never 'fierce cookers.' I hope they win". Then of course other members of the faculty were flattered by many requests to come and "vote 'e straight'; a husky delegation of farmers crowding into the Chancellor's office to see Champ Clark also got a little taste of real college ward heeling. But it took a freshman to put this in print. He came into the freshman voting precinct in the basement of the Museum well informed to vote. Going to the office on Monday, he received his ballot, and started on. "One moment, please," said the judge. "You haven't paid your election fee yet. It costs all freshmen a quarter to vote." You don't have to believe this; but the freshman behind will testify that the easy one dug into his jeans, handed his two bits, and probably voted for "Bonny". Reber. Can you beat it? To the eugenists, who affirm that healthy parents are desirable Dr. Hassall retorts that loving ones are indispensable Where people love they will marry, and have many children. And just as universities of science fit men for life or universities of medicine fit universities of love will fit them for domesticity, by making them amorous. Munich, Bavaria, Oct.-Herr Dr. Wolfgang Hassal of Vienna and Munich, wants to start a University of Love. It is the one way to save Germany's marriage rate, and her birth rate, which has dropped in thirty years from nearly 40 to 30. NO TROUBLE WITH ELECTION SAYS COATS According to President Coats, no election ever held on the hill in recent years went off with so little trouble and so few disputed votes. For the first time in class elections, printed lists of all students, classified according to the class in which they were eligible to vote, were on hand. As a result there were in all about twenty questionable votes, owing to the ignorance of voters, there were but two votes thrown out in the seniors, two in the juniors, and two in both freshman and sophomores. These votes were largely thrown out on account of persons voting at the wrong place and depositing votes with the wrong class. There were no challenged votes and no traces of ilegal voting. A GERMAN PLANS TO OPEN COLLEGE OF LOVEMAKING Herr Hassall is a serious man and does not call his university "Universität der Liebe" as it would be in Ger-学习大学. It is called "wissenschaften" that is, "Hilf School WYANDOTTE COUNTY CLUB TO ORGANIZ The Wyandotte county students will hold a meeting next Wednesday evening at Myers hall to complete the organization of a Wyandotte county club. Russell J. Bodman is the temporary president. The club proposes to co-operate with the Student Council in its campaign for the mill tax for the University. All Wyandotte county students are urged to attend the meeting next Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. of the Marriage Sciences." However the high school will approach marriage only via love. The practical obstacles are great. The high school will hold at most only 500 pupils, male and female, while the college will hold only 200, will love or could, would or should have loved. To teach all is impossible. The university, therefore, proposes to train, not lovers, but teachers of love, When the 500 men and maids have graduated in the high school of love, they are taught to selfishly and narrowly themselves, but to spread the gospel and science of love among the loveless. Diplomatic experts in amourfulness will be sent about Germany to teach everything about love that is worth knowing. And that, say the experts is much. O'BRIEN KNOCKED OUT OF BOX BY NEW YORK Five Runs in First Inning Gave McGraw's Men a Lead That Boston Could Not Overcome Score by Innings— 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E BOSTON 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 7 2 NEW YORK 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 11 2 New York. Boston. Devore, lf. Hooper, rf. Doyle, 2b. Yerkes, 2b. Snodgrass, cf. Speaker, cf. Murray, rf. Lewis, lf. Merkle, 1b. Gardner, 3b. Herzog, 3b. Stahl, 1b. Fletcher, ss. Wagner, ss. Cady, e. Cady, e. Marquard, p. O'Brien, p. Special By United Press To Daily Kansan: New York, Oct. 14—New York fell heavily upon O'Brien in the first inning of the fifth game of the world's series here today and emerged with five runs and five hits. Boston fought back herely in the third but the series ended up good 5 to 2. The series now stands three to two in favor of the redox. Rube Marquard showed his worth as a pitcher again and allowed the Boston batters but seven hits and these were well scattered with the exception of the second inning when a double by Engle after an error had been thrown. The Giants scored. Collins, who replaced O'Brien, held the Glants without a break. Boston, O'Brien and every man of the Red Sox rooters went availing in the first inning and New York scored five runs on five hits. With Devore out, Gardner to Stahl, Doyle beat a grounder to Yerkes and promptly stole second. Snodgunn grassned and Murray arrived safely at first after knocking a fast grounder to Yerkes who was unable to handle it quickly enough, Doyle taking third on the play. The captain scored on a balk by O'Brien, on which Murray advanced to second. Merkle doubled and scored Murray, and was himself brought home by Herzog '71 when he missed a third. Herzog '71 paid no attention. Myers singled and stole second, Herzog coming home, Fletcher, the next man up, worked the squeeze play with Myers successfully and the catcher scored, Fletcher going out, O'Brien to Stahl. The score stood at the end of the first inning New York; 5; Boston, 0. Boston came back in its half of the second and scored two runs. Engle proved the hero of the inning when batting for O'Brien, he doubled to left field, scoring Gardner and Stahl. Marquard's error in muffing Gardner's easy grounder gave Boston a start which Stahl followed up with a single. Wagner, fanned and Cady fouled to Myers. Hooper's foul to Myers ended the inning. The score stood New York, 5; Boston, 2. Collins replaced O'Brien for Boston in the third inning. Rightfielder Hooper made an amazing play in the fifth when he seized Snodgrass liner and throw to Stahl doubling Devore at first. Rubi Marquard was invincible in the sixth and fanned Gardner and Stahl in succession, with the record at the close of the sixth stout Marquard, 4; O'Brien, 1; Collins, 1. A brilliant double play cut Boston off in the fourth without a tally. Stahl beat out a grounder to Herzog, Wagner flied out to Snodgrass. Cady singled and advanced Stahl to second. Collins hit Fletcher at first, then hit Herzog in the net, putting the captain flashed the ball to first and Merkle cut off Collins by a foot. Fully 50,000 people were crowded into the Polo grounds today to witness the decisive struggle in the world's series. With the realization that within one hour, the climax of 1912 baseball would be reached, the throng grew restless and cried repeatedly "Play ball, play ball." Manger Jake Stahl was confident before the game. "We have got the edge on New York," he declared, "but I do not propose to claim the world's championship until the last Giant player is out in the final innings. When we then make claims, but then we won't have to, for we will have won it." "I realize that the Red Sox have a big advantage because they have won three games and the Giants only one," said McGraw. "We expected to win with Mathewson and would have done so if our boys had been able to solve Bedient. The youngster pitched great ball." "Monday we will be at home and Marquard will be rested up and ready to pitch the class of ball he did in the game he won. If he is steady we ought to win. He will check the Boston club and then we will go out and play the next two games. We are not a bit discouraged and believe we will win." The announcement that Joe Wood would not pitch for the Red Sox came as a surprise to the crowd and a distinct hush was noticed among the Boston rooters. Stahl at the last minute decided to send in O'Brien with Cady to receive him. Rube Marquard, the only Giant pitcher with a victory to his credit in the series, was named by McGraw. He was cheered when he appeared on the grounds to warm up. First Inning. Boston—Hooper singled. Hoopee, out, Marquard to Merkle to Fletcher to Merkle. Yerkes flied to Snodgrass. Speaker walked. Speaker stole second. Lewis flipped to Devore. One hit, no runs, no errors. New York—Devore out, Garner to Stahl. Doyle beat out a grounder to Yerkes. Doyle stole second. Snedgrass fanned. Murray safe on grounder to Wagner. Doyle took third. Doyle scored on O'Brien's balk. Murray took second. Merkle doubled, scoring Murray. He zag doubled. Myers singled. Myers stole second, Herzog scoring. Fletcher and Myers work the squeeze play, Myers scoring. Myers out, Obrien to Stahl. Five hits, five runs, one error. Second Inning. Boston—Gardner safe when Marquard muffed a grounder. Stahl singled. Wagner fanned. Cady fouled to Myers. Engle batted for O'Brien. Engle doubled to left, scoring Gardner and Stahl. Hooper fouled to Myers. Two hits, two runs, one error. New York—Collins replaced O'- (Continued on page 4.)