APRIL 10, 1919. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN By The Way Kappa Sigma will give a dinner dance Friday night at the chapter house. Dinner will be served at half past six at quartette tables. Music will be furnished by Chaquette and McMurray, Out of town guests and alumni will be, Milward Idol and Knowlton Parker of Robinson, Floyd Fink of Kansas City, Leslie Cable, Archie Woolters, Floyd Cole, and B. N. Betz of Topeka, J. C. Combs and Hoart May of Manhattan. Kappa Alpha Theta will give a Spring Rushing dance at the Country Club May 10. Alpha Chi Omega held initiation Wednesday for Mildred Tihen of Andale and Ethel Whitmer of Wichita Mu Phi Epsilon启堂 initiation Thursday for Roberta Bair, Ava Bair, Reva McBride, Hazel Hess, and Ruth Raynolds. Prof. C. C. Williams of the School of Engineering is ill and unable to attend classes. Marvel Rullman, c'22, went to her home in St. Joseph Wednesday to visit her parents. Sigma Nu will give a house dance Saturday night. Jessie Rankin will go to Kansas City Friday. Elizabeth James of Baldwin visited Faith Gottschall, c'22, and attended the Follies. Mary Poindexter went to Topeka Wednesday. Romana Hood, Kathlin Yood, Ruth Syster, Frances Ludeste, Nell Hohn, Leora Seacat, Ruth Oakleaf and Mrs. J. A. Sickam from the Achoh house will go to Kansas City Thursday to hear Galli-Curci. Sigma Kappa announces the pleidg of Catherine Colter of Eureka. Mrs. Charles Matthews of Topeka is visiting her daughter Violet Matthews, c20, at the Sigma Kappa house. Kansas Engineer Contracts To Be Let This Week Magazine to Appear Early in May—Has Sixteen Page War Section Contracts for printing the Kansas Engineer, annual publication of the associated engineering societies, will be let this week, according to Rex L Brown, business manager. The magazine will be out between the first and fifteenth of May. An office for the stuff has been opened in Room 3, Marvin Hall, and material for the year's issue is rapidly being gathered under the direction of C. A. Keenner, editor. A special feature will be a sixteen page section containing forty or fifty pictures of engineers who have died in the service, not only of K. U. students and alumni but of engineers throughout the United States who were not graduates of the Uni- tion. Rutledge, e'19, now chief engineer of the Santa Fe Railroad, will contribute an article. In as former years, a number of pages will be devoted to field, campus, and alumni notes. Warren E. Blazier, circulation manager of the Kansas Engineer, announces that about one hundred copies of each of the four previous issues are available to freshmen who desire a complete file. With the 1919 issue of the K. E., three bulletins will be distributed to engineering students free. "Engineering Economics," by J. A. L. Waddell, consulting engineer; "Transportation," by John S. Worley, member of the Engineering Board, Interstate Commerce Commission; and Transactions of the Kansas Engineering Society, containing a report of the eleventh annual meeting, held at Toperka recently at which addresses were given by Dean George C. Shadd and Prof. F. Ellis Johnson of the School of Engineering. Among those present will be: Chan- cellor Strong, A. J. Boynton, M. Ferguson, Miss Galoo, Willard Wattles, and a bunch of others. YILL YOU? The Negro Boy.-Adv. Herb and Dorothy, Jones or Leach and "Dot" Feed will be here to see Jessie. They are going. ARE YOU? You the Negro Boy—Adv. These fellows will probably stag it; Swenson, Lockwood, Gempil, Hobart, Shall we let them, girls? No. Watch the negro boy—Adav. For a real fountain pen buy a Waterman at Rankins Drug Store. Adv. Kansas City Star Says Big Stadium Would Be Suitable K.U. Memoria Would Develop Grad Pride in Institution and Attract Students A great athletic field and stadium as a memorial for the University soldier boys who gave up their lives in the world war as suggested by the board of alumni visitors and enthusiastically endorsed by Manager W. O. Hamilton is also urged by E. C. McBride, sports editor of the Kansas City Star. He believes it one of the best possible memorials to the University soldier boys who died during the world war. He writes in last night's Star: Students "K.U. is beginning to talk of a great athletic stadium, and William O. Hamilton, manager of athletics at the University, could do no greater thing for Kansas than to everlastingly urge that a stadium be built and to keep at it until the work is started. "A stadium for athletics would be a great asset to the University of Kansas. It would prove a wonderful advertisement for the Lawrence school, an "ad" of the right type. It would attract high school athletes to the university for the invitation games in greater numbers each year. It would bring the old grads back and would be a source of pride to every undergraduate and to every alumnus. "The Yale bowl is the pride or every Yale man, the Harvard stadium is one of the show places of the Crimson school, Ferry Field is an athletic plant that every Michigan man can talk about for hours. "Ian't it time for the University of Kansas to be starting a great athletic plant of its own? The big foot ball games at Lawrence attract hun dreds of Kansas Citians each fall. How would it be if K.U. had a football field surrounded by concrete stands? The Missouri game at Lawrence would grow in distance, and has grown in Kansas City And so with the Nebraska and the Oklahoma and the Kansas Aggie games. "All the stands need not be built at once, but the plans could be made and the work started. Year by year the work could proceed until in the course of a few years K.U. would have an athletic plant that would be the pride of the valley and one of the university's greatest attractions." Dr. Albright, Chiropractor, 1027 Mass. Office phone 1531. Res. 1769. —Adv. Fresh Limeade at Rankins Drug Store...Adv. See the latest styles in the new fashion magazines at the City Drug Store.-Adv. Improve your completion by using Woodbury's facial or Jergena violet soap. Rankins Drug Store—Adv. C. E. ORELUP, M. D. Eye, ear, nose, and throat. Glass work guaranteed. Phone 445. Dick Building—Adv. Senior Committee Wants Ideas for Memorial Gift The committee for the senior memorial meet Wednesday to begin their work. It was decided that the minimum assessment should be one dollar. The suggestion was made that a dance might be given to raise an additional amount and that the proceeds of the Senior Play be used for the memorial. No definite plans have yet been made. Anyone wishing to make suggestions should give them to Esther Moore or Herman Hangen within the next week. The committee is: Florence Ingham, Fanny McCall, Edith Wynn, Ernest Pickering, Faye Doddridge, Lewis Severson, Mary Burnett, Francis Dysinger, and Katherine Fulkerson, and Esther Moore, chairman. May be worn with four-in-hand or bow tie. Illinois has Citizenship Course The University of Illinois has a new regulation that every student before graduation must take a year's course in patriotic citizenship. Although there is no such regulation in the University of Kansas, the course in Greater European Governments now being given by Prof. H. B. Chubb, really a course in comparative governments, taking up the laws of citizenship in the United States, England, France, Germany and Italy, practically covers the same as the Illinois course according to Professor Chubb. All kinds of tooth brushes for all kinds of people. From $1.00 down to 15 cents—Rankins Drug Store.—Adv. Illinois has Citizenship Course THORNDYKE 2¾ KEMPTON 2¾ Two heights in the style of the hour IDE COLLARS SOLD BY SKOF STADS SELLING SYSTEMS Say fellows, before we have any tire work done, lets go into the shop across the street from the Masonic temple and see the Bowling Green resules that they vulcanize on the tire. They say you will get more miles than you get from most any new tire at one half the cost. Phone 991.—Adv. Chocolates to be good must be fresh. We carry a full line of our own make, and other popular kinds. Wiedemann's—Adv. Now that all restrictions have been removed, we are back on the old basis in the manufacture of pure pasturized cream. We make a special rate for clubs, sororities and fraternities. For further information call Wiedemanns. Phone 182—Adv. Send The Daily Kansan Home. Taxi 148 Calls Answered early or late Moak & Hardtarfer Conklin and L. E. Waterman Fountain Pens MeCOLLOCH'S DRUG STOR 847 Mass. PALACE BARBER SHOP The Most Sanitary Shop in Town FRANK VAUGHN, Prop. 730 Mass. 17 degrees DIXON'S ELDORADO "the master drawing pencil" Your enthusiasm for things American will be greater than ever, after you have used an Eldorado at all stationers Dress Up For SPRING We offer you the finest suits on the market; the best quality of cloth and the very latest and most exclusive styles. You spend your money wisely when you order from the famous Chicago Tailors, who make your suit to your own individual measure. Wear our suits and your friend will inquire Who's Your Tailor W. E. WILSON 712 Mass St. Phone 505 Order your suit now. Come in and see our line of elegant and exclusive styles. Hundreds of patterns and weaves at your disposal. Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE 12 w. Ninth Lawrence Pantatorium Phones 506 Mr. Jayhawk, Miss Jayhawk DON'T FORGET TO Just a Step from the Campus JAY WALK THE OREAD CAFE E. C. BRICKEN, Proprietor FRIDAY, APRIL 11 ROBINSON GYM KUHNS & CHAQUETTE $1.50 Cold and Blustry Outside, But— How nice and warm and cozy at Brick's— Order a big steak and forget the weather— You are always welcome at SENIORS ORDER YOUR Commencement Invitations Thursday and Friday APRIL 10 AND 11 Orders must be taken on these days. Number of invitations desired must be turned in immediately. No surplus invitations will be ordered. Leather Bound 47c Card Board 27c Fraser Hall Book Exchange 8:30 to 5:30 SENIOR INVITATION COMM.