10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 THE ADDRESS. [Continued from page 1.] er nail a dishrag to a broomstick and threaten what you will do, but you have discarded both and are doing it.' You are here everywhere, and it is for you to set the pace. More so now than ever before.' The world has placed you upon a pedestal and will continue to fall down and worship you, provided you prove yourselves in every way worthy of being' worshiped. "To thyself be true." It is your life to live and that life will be just what you make it. Live the life that is free from that which contaminates, defiles or blemishes; free from that which harms, vitiates, or pollutes. Noble minds are above whatever is low, mean, degrading or dishonorable.' May the good Lord give you virtue, purity of heart and nobility of soul. My young man friend don't be a chump, a lobster or a quitter. The world demands men of honesty, ability and character; and it is for you to meet the demand. Don't drink, don't smoke, don't chew, swear nor gamble. And above all things don't lie. Be a man every day in the week; be a man at all times, and you will go up head, go to the top, and the world will applaud you. You may fool your parents, you may deceive these instructors, but you can't fool yourself. It is your life you have to live, and if you don't live the honest, decent, square deal life in your youth, you will suffer for it when you go galloping down the western slope. Right here upon the back of this hand is every cut and scar that it has received from infancy. Every one, and I can account for many of them. So it will be with your life. In after years your youthful tollies, your youthful sins, will return to punish you. As you go out from these walls go with a determination to work; to put forth intellectual exertion, mental effort or physical toil, directed to some useful end. The world is calling you to work. And to all of you: Please remember that there is no death. There are no dead, no waiting for the resurrection, in that it releases the spirit from the body. If there was a Christ, and there was, and if He said anything while on earth, and He did, He said to Mary at the grave of Lazarus, "Whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die." So my young friends, live the life that promises you an upholstered seat in the Amen corner of that happier and more glorious world beyond the grave. Live the life that gives you the courage to look the world squarely in the face and say, I am everything a man ought to be and nothing a man ought not to be. I am a man. Live the square deal life so that when you are enveloped in the shadow of the borderland of the shoreless stream, to enter the boat of Charon, to be ferried over the river Styx, you can look out upon the waters and mentally exclaim: "How sweet the moonlight lies upon the peaceful bosom of the river." Marcella Howland Scholarship. Owing to the resignation of the student appointed to the Marcella Howland Scholarship, a new appointment will be made for the present year. In addition to the applications placed in the hands of the committee in May, new applications will be received up to the first of October. Applications may be directed to the Chancellor of the University, or to Miss Galloo, the chairman of the committee. Further information will be found in the catalogue. Good things to eat—Vic's. Professor W. C. Stevens of the botanical department of the University of Kansas is just completing the copy of a new work on histological botany to be published in the spring by P. Blakiston, Son & Co., of Philadelphia. Professor Stevens has spent the entire summer in his laboratory at the University upon the manuscript for this volume which will be used as a college text. It will be a book of about 250 pages. Vanilla, chocolate, cherry and bananna ice cream at Wiedemann's. Professor Cady, and Professor McFarland, both instructors in chemistry at the University of Kansas, have been working all summer on the natural gas supply from the different fields in Kansas. They have discovered a considerable quantity of the rare chemical element, helium, in the natural gas which flows from a well at Dexter, Kansas. Prof. Cady presented to the recent meeting of the chemical society in Kansas City a lecture on the subject, illustrating his talk with apparatus by means of which he extracted helium gas from Dexter gas before the society. The INNES STORE Methods and prices make permanent friends. Its roots grow deeper and its branches spread farther each year. The store is magnificently prepared for the autumn trade with stupendous stocks of merchandise. In our North Room are many Bargains in women wear-Suits, Coats, Skirts and Muslin Underwear. In Middle Room will be found a most captivating variety of Silks, Dress Goods, Wash Goods, Embroideries, Handkerchiefs and Trimmings. In South Room there is something to suit every taste in Underwear, Hosiery, Corsets, Table Linen and Muslins. Innes, Bullene & Hackman Dr. F. H. Snow of the University of Kansas who recently returned from his twenty-sixth annual expedition for the purpose of collecting entomological material, is in receipt of a letter from the famous entomologist of Germany, Dr. W. Horn, making inquiry concerning some of the specimens taken in the recent hunt, especially the Amblychila, an extremely rare species of tiger beetle. Only five speci- K. U. Pins Buttons Seals Belt Buckles Fobs Spoons Hat Pins Tie Pins Also a line of Jewelry that appeals especially to K. U. Students. Gustafson, The College Jeweler. We like to do little jobs of repairing. We know how. Try a marshmallow nut sundae at Wiednmann's. A good assortment of nuts dipped in chocolate at Wiedemann's. mens of these were in captivity before Dr. Snow's expedition and they are valued at $35 each. Dr. Snow made a determined hunt for these beetles and was rewarded by finding nearly a dozen specimens. In addition to the specimens of this rare beetle, the expedition brought home 7,000 beetles, 2,500 butterflies and moths, 3,000 bees and wasps, 1,500 bugs, 1,000 grasshoppers, 300 two-winged flies, and 150 dragon flies. Dr. Snow was accompanied by three of his students, and the party did most of their collecting in Pilla county, almost seventy miles south of Tucson, Arizona. Chocolate ice cream sodas at Wiedemann's. Homeseekers' Excursions TO THE Great Southwest SEPTEMBER 4 AND 18 OCTOBER 2 AND 16 NOVEMBER 6 AND 20 Rate ONE FARE PLUS $2 FOR THE ROUND TRIP Write for Particulars and Descriptive Literature. A.Hilton, Gen'l Passenger Agent, St Louis, Mo. J. C. Lovrien, Ass't Gen'l Passenger Agent, Kansas City, Mo. Ed. Anderson Student Headquarters for Something to Eat, Drink, and Smoke. THE LAWRENCE STEAM LAUNDRY COMPANY 908 Massachusetts Street. All Work Up to Date and Guaranteed. Domestic Finish. M. B. Galloway, University Agent. Both Pphones. 383. W J. Francisco & Sons LIVERY AND HACKING SADDLE HORSES A SPECIALTY Open Day and Night. 812-14 Vt. St. Both Phones 139 Dr. A. R. Kennedy DENTIST. Room 5, Jackson Building. Phones, Bell 1515 Main; Home, 344 HIAWATHA CAFE After the Opera or Dance go to the Hiahawata Cafe for a Lunch, Regular Meals, Cigars, LOUIS POCKLUND LOUIS ROCKLUND STUDENTS! Send your work to the Model Steam Laundry All work guaranteed. FRANK W. BROWN, Mgr. L. U. RUTLEDGE, K. U. Agent, 806 Vt. St., Bell phone, 156; house, 145.