Black, the Shoe Man, has just received the THE UNIVERSITY TIMES. Published every Friday morning by the TIMES E. M. MUMFORD, JUS. D. BOWERSOCK, JR. President. Secretary. EDITORIAL STAFF. F. E. REED, Editor in Chief. ASSOCIATE EDITORS. W. D. Ross F. C. Schraeder C. S. Hall, W. L. Taylor, Gerrade Crotty, Anna McKimmon M. W. Wixon F. Webb, A. Fullerton, Freed Funston, Emma Bartell, W. P. Harrington. —TRIBUNE PRINT. F. W. BUTTER, WM. HILL. Entered at the postoffice of Lawrence, Kaua as, as second-class matter. UNIVERSITY DIRECTORY BETA THETA Pl. Meets on fourth floor of the Ogawa House block. PHI KAPPA Ps1, Meets on third floor of Opera House bock. PHI GAMMA DELTA, Meccus in the Eldridge House block, third floor. PHI DELTA THETA, Meets on second floor of Opera House block. SIGMA CUI. Meets on the fourth floor cast of the Omeen House block. SIGMA NT, Meets in the Eldridge House block third floor. PT BETA PHI Meets every Saturday afternoon in homes of members. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA, Meets every Saturday afternoon at the homes of members. KAPPA ALPHA THETA: Meets every Saturday afternoon at the homes of members BASE BALL ASSOCIATION, Manager, Prof. A. M. Wilcox, Capron of the Nine, Charles A. Womack. UNIVERSITY SCIENCE CLUB Hall. POLITICAL CLUB, Meets in room No.30, every other Friday at 8 p.m. TENNIS ASSOCIATION, President, F. R. Roed; Secretary, F. H. Kellogg; Treasurer, W. A. Snow. SCIENCE CLUB, Every other Friday at 8 p.m. PATRICIAL SCIENCE CLUB, Every other week at 8 p.m. OROPHILIAN LITERARY SOCIETY, Every Friday at 8 p.m. ATHLETIC LITERARY SOCIETY, meets every Friday at 8 p.m. C. P. Chapman, C. S. Meade, President, Secretary. FOOT-BALL ASSOCIATION Meets every Saturday, in Room S. Hall, president; Chas.Wright, secretary; Schuffs and Wixon, captains. Y. M. C. A. Meets every Friday evening at 7:30 p.m. Room D, President, L. I. Sewell, secretary; H. D. Brown, Y. W. C. A. Meets every Friday evening at 7:30 p.m. Third floor of U. President, Flor Newlin; Anna McKinnon. ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION of the students of F. H. Kellogg, L. T. Smith, C. P. Chapman, Secretary. Executive Committee, E. M. Munford, Chas. Sewell and Hildeke. On one point we do agree with our W. C.—vis, that the old association was "kicked out of existence." WHAT's wrong with Mrs. Rice? The frats haven't had a good "write up" for quite a while, guess it is time for another tammorce. *The provided image is too blurry to accurately recognize any text. I'll just provide a list of keywords and a prompt to generate a caption that matches the content.* ANOTHER fraternity lamboree has been suggested. Yes as soon as Adelaide Moore is billed for Lawrence again it will be in order. WE don't like to be continually making corrections but we would simply like to suggest that our W. C. make a change in that part of its directory which refers to the Oratorical Association. In the United States $12.42 per capita is spent each year for liquor and only $1.97 per capita for educational purposes. In consideration of the fact that we have prohibition in Kansas why shouldn't our legislature now appropriate a little more liberally toward the school fund? SENATOR EVARTS of New York, is engaged in the preparation of a sentence which he will deliver at the Commencement of the Kansas State University in June.—K.C. Star. Wouldn't it be a good idea to have the Senator pronounce sentence upon him who stole the book? At last Mr. Poe has decided that his anti-English resolutions et al were merely jokes and says he is now in favor of the University appropriation bill (After it had passed.) A little severe chastisement at the hands of the State press generally brings an ordinary human being to his senses. THE UNIVERSITY BILL. It Passes Both Houses and we are Fairly Satisfied--- The Moody Bill. Late last week the University appropriation bill was recommended and passed by the legislature. When the members had finished cutting it down the bill was as follows: salary of chancellor, $3,000; salary or professor of natural history, $2,500; dean of law department, $2,500; salaries of fifteen professors, $28,000; salary of dean of music department, $600; salary of eleven assistants, $10,000; for salary of librarian and assistant, $800; salary of clerk and bookkeeper. $1,200; salaries of superintendent engineer and janitors, $8,355; for fuel, lights and firemen, $2,350; for engineer and mechanics, electrical engineering, $900; for night watchman $450; for care of grounds, $400; for labor in laboratories, $600; for chemicals, $700; for additions to cabinets in natural history, $1,000; for maps and charts, $500; for advertising and postage, $600; for care of meteological apparatus, $720; for care of museum and collections of specimens, $500; for geological museum and preparation of specimens, $500; for labor in taxidermy, $600; for water supply, $500; for janitor's supplies and material, $700; for office expenses, freight, etc., $500; for steam heating repairs, $300; for blackboards, $100; for additions to the library, $6,000; for apparatus in the department of chemistry, $500; for apparatus in the department of pharmacy, $150; for apparatus in the department of physics and electrical engineering, $3,000; for microscopes and accessories in the department of natural history, $550; for cabinet cases in the department of natural history, $1,250; for water tank in Snow Hall, $175; for fire hose, reels, etc., $1,000 for repairing foundation of main building, $8,000; for tools and supplies in taxidermy, $300; for drain pipe, north side of boiler house, $60; for carpet for rostrum, University hall, $90; for matting, $230; for coal house, $500. The total allowed the institution for the coming year is $84,870; which is $41, 000 less than was asked for in the bill. Among the items cut out of the bill as originally introduced were the following: Two instructors in art, $1,000; for carpenter, $720; for steam coils in Snow Hall, $1,700; steam pump and fixtures, $650; for coating steam pipes, $800; piano $600; models for department of art, $200. On the whole considering the general financial condition of the state we have very little reason to complain, although we might have desired a little different apportionment of the various appropriations. Yet, we ought to be satisfied as the sum total ($84,870) is considerable more than we have ever before received. From the latest accounts we learn that the Moody Bill is progressing finely, and the only points hindering its immediate passage are a few minor amendments upon which the House and Senate fail to agree. The value of the above motto to a student (or anybody else) can hardly be overestimated. It should be worked on cardboard and hung up in every office, school room, and family sitting room in the land. Parents can hardly begin too early to impress its importance upon the childish mind. The teaching should be at first by example, as soon as the child can talk, by precept. A little later, he should be introduced to the old school reader (we all know it) which contains such awful warnings against the thief of time. A delay of five minutes in the arrival of a reprieve has been known to cause the death of an innocent man; even a tardiness of one minute, causing the loss of a train, may exercise a balefal influence over the whole future of the procrastinator. BE ON TIME. Let these considerations once be firmly impressed on the facile mind of youth, and exemplary promptness can not but result. Who would put off till to-morrow what ought to be done to-day, when he reflects that the intervening twenty-four hours is a period sufficient to make him miss fifteen hundred trains—to cause the sacrifice of three hundred men. Surely the contemplation of such facts can not fail to arouse in the most thoughtless spendthrift of time a sensation of awful responsibility. How much effect should they have then, upon a body of students who are laying the foundation stones of their characters. I trust that all students who read this will repent of the many minutes they have wasted in loitering from class to class, especially when they consider this amount at compound interest, from the time the student entered until the present date. A word to the wise is sufficient. KANSAN. No one ever expected that the "late unpleasantness" between our factions could be brought to a final issue without a woeful wall from those whose hopes were blasted. And no one was disappointed or surprised (when the source was considered) at the ease with which accusations of broken promises, lack of honor and honesty were hurled at "the victors through the columns of our contemp." Although we consider our purpose a laudable one—one which would secure the best results to the greatest number of the students of K. S. U.—yet we never for one moment expected all of our opponents to calmly submit without attempting to malign the character of the successful ones. Remove the feeling of chargin and defeat which brands such assertions as malicious and untrue and a meek, harmless spirit is all that remains. We feel in duty bound to make the above explanation for the sake of K. S. U's fair name in college journalism. We would not have any of our exchanges infer that we had a class of students here who would intentially assail the name of their fellow-students except under these extraordinary circumstances when angered by defeat. But for this we would not have taken notice of remarks so easily interpreted by our students. --- The complimentary notice given by the State Journal of Topeka, to Prof. Sayre's paper on loco weed, read at the last meeting of the American Pharmaceutical Association at Detroit is worthy of attention. It seems rather strange that there should be the least difficulty in getting money from the State through some of its boards, for the purpose of carrying out investigations such as those Professor Sayre has offered to superintend. But there does seem to be difficulty. The State would not be ungrateful perhaps if the Professor would conduct the experiments upon herbiverous animals at his own expense. But it is a question if it will even see the advantage in sharing the expense with him. Prof. Sayre has shown that the State of Colorado spent $300,000 on this weed, basing the expenditure on the hearsay evidence of non-scientific men. If our State would place but one thousand dollars at the disposal of Professor Sayre for the purpose of carrying out some physiological experiments in the field right in the heart of the Loco region, it would do more to the settlement of this mooted question of the poisonous properties of this weed than all the $200,000 spent by the State of Colorado. As to the practical result of the settlement or the question we would quote from one of the recent scientific contemporaries "The subject is one of vast and growing importance. Not only is the area over which the weed is indigenous a very large one, embracing many thousand square miles but it is one towards which the population is flowing in mighty streams; and while the numbers of horses and cattle are not likely to increase in the same proportion as in the past, the value of the individual animals carried thither (or which would be carried thither were it not for the Loco) is vastly increasing each year to costly and improved stock. Hence it is of vital importance that the true nature and character of the weed should be definitely settled by competent investigators, provided with all the aids and apparatus necessary." We learn that Professor Sayre has provided himself with the very best talent in veterinary science, gratuitously offered to aid in furthering his work. It should be stated that Professor Sayre gives his time and takes that time given for recuperation and study during the summer holidays. We present herewith an extract from the proceedings—embodying a resolution and the discussion thereon—of the Pharmaceutical Association which met at Detroit; Mr. J. L. Thompson, of Nashville, Tennessee, presented the following resolution at the American Pharmaceutical Association held at Detroit, Michigan, in September last: WHENRAS, The able and interesting paper presented to the association by Prof. L. E. Sayre, of the Kansas State University, shows that he has made extensive investigation of the properties of the loco weed, and that still further investigation and experiment will prove of great value to the state of Kansas, and the other states in which the weed grows; therefore be it Resolved. That the American Pharmaceutical association recommend to the legislatures of the aforesaid states that they give Prof. Sayre their hearty endorsement and support for further investigation of loco poisoning. Mr. Thompson - The reason I introduced the resolution is because Prof. Savre has carried on the investigation at his own expense, and I think that the endorsement of this association may act as an inducement for the legislatures to make appropriations in order that Prof. Sayremay carry out the work to a further point for the public good. Mr. Alexander—There is no difficulty about sending forth a resolution of this kind, but whether it will be acted on by these states or not is another question. I think we ought at least to give Prof. Sayre the benefit of our endorsement, and then if he can get some of his expenses refunded to which he has been subjected, it will be no more than justice to him. Mr. Painter—I hope the association will adopt it unanimously. There is a large amount of work to be done in this line, as shown by the report, and the work is incomplete. If the states would make a liberal appropriation they could make his work more complete than it would be otherwise. I hope it will be unanimously supported. "The Collegian," a new monthly magazine, edited by Samuel Abbott, and published in Boston has been received this week. The field that the Collegian intends to occupy is a new one in college journalism. It will contain the best contributions from the "under graduates of all colleges," while many of our college papers, especially the months possess a high degree of literary merit, yet no one of them reflects all that is best of the under-graduate work. It will be a medium for the discussion of all the college questions which are being agitated in all of our universities. Believing that the literary work of under graduates is worthy of a more extended circle of readers. The Collegian is to be a connecting link if possible between the world and the college. Mr. Abbott says editorially: "The term, 'College Journalism,' has held so peculiar a place in the world of literature, that the would be definer of its locus, feels himself to be in perplexity. One cannot locate it antipalear to the secular press, certainly not above it, and yet not parallel. The figure, a wheel within a wheel, sounds strangely in this connection, for this wheel whirls secul. densily within the circle of the greater world press and yet barely touching it. The connection is broken. Causes for this may be found in various quarters. The entanglement existing between the city and country journal and the under-graduate periodical, based on the parental stand maintained by the former, is preeminently a ground for the isolation. Again, the literary月牙lines of the college association fail to claim attention at the hands of the article columns of more powerful magazines. Why? you have only to read the diction of one of our famous novelists, purporting the college writer to be a mere typo and incapable of work, in any degree satisfactory, to understand in part the reason. Without mentioning names, the absurdity of the gentleman's statement is at once proved. Look over the catalogues of our numerous institutions for the past one hundred years, and pick out here and there, man after man now famous in letters. The fact that some of their very best work was done, while undergraduates, an opinion often reiterated, makes valid the belief that our contemporary has erred. It is certainly unreasonable to imagine that genius is born in years following the movements of the intellect. It must be coeval with thought and the college halls are supposedly the places by nature sacred to learning. Personally we can point to a score of young fellows, but two or three years graduated, laboring excellently for the secular press. They were invited to positions on the strength of their college record, and have in no sense deceived the estimation of their superiors. Yet, withal, one must be candid, and the honest mind admits the relevancy of the world criticism aimed at the pages of our college papers. We are too confirmed in ideas, crowding the realistic into a corner by the vain use of idealistic tendencies. For example, read the plethora of love strains, inconceivable plots, and garnished essays constantly allowed to appear. The unhealthy effect of this manner of writing, exotic and utopian, renders a large quota of college editors unfit for the immediate work of the world on graduating. They have become acclimated, thus losing time and money." "The Collegian" starts out with bright prospects and we wish it success. While it represents eastern college work more than western, yet it starts out with flattering notices from the periodicles of many of our western and southern colleges, and unless the signs of the times fail, its pages will contain many a sterling article taken from our western magazines. Our papers here can plead not guilty to the charge of publishing "the stuff" referred to above, but there is still room for improvement. The Times occupies the same position in the college as the daily does outside, and is essentially a news paper, and as such can not have much value to outsiders except as a criterion of college spirit and life. Its scope is local. The Review is the literary medium of the university and occupies a high position and we refer its columns to the Collegian, as good samples of the literary work done in the colleges of the west. Mrs. Luther on Massachusetts street will furnish cut flowers for parties, etc. at very reasonable rates. Boys buy your collars, ties and shirts of Abe Levy. For a first class bath, shave or hair cut call on Andy Reed. New ties just received at Levy's. Guitars, Mandolins etc., don't fail to call on Fjuke & Sen. Go to Abe Levy's for your shirts and ties. Fluke & Son rent pianos at the very cheapest living rates. For a good clean shave or a neat hair cut go to McCullough Bros. Fluke & Son carry the finest line of sheet music in the city. Have you seen that new selection of collars at Bromelsicks? All the latest styles. Andy Reed's barber shop is the oldest in the city. Boys, look at my window full of collars. BROMELSICKS. McColough Bros. have the best barbers in the city engaged at their shop. The finest ties for party or opera wear at Bromelsick's. Boys remember that Andy Reed can give you the smoothest shave in the Boys remember that Andy Reed can give you the smoothest shave in the city.