mitteee e sake e sets library. leading in the versity. them valua- iladol- onded a city. light- te ex- ent of have away The city be immer- are hill for him toorkhill viladel- Abe Levy sells good hats. Nice eating apples at Luthers. Good wool socks at Abe Levy's. Sam Erwin Ryan all next week. Buy your new hat of Abe Levy Boys buy your hats of Abe Levy Call on Smith for fine cigarette tobacco. Abc Levy sells the best hats in the city. Go to Abe Levy for your winter under wear. Anything in the grocery line at Lu thers. For good hats and shirts go to Abe Levy's. "Only to see the Smile," vocal, by Anton Streizeki. Fancy fat mackerel at Luther's, 721 Massachusetts street. For good shirts, collars and cuffs and neckwear, go to Abe Levy. Sam Erwin Ryan at the Opera House all next week. Popular prices. Instrumental, "The Mill in the Black Forest," by Richards Eilenberg. Indian Clubs, Dumb Bells, and Base Ball goods at Smith's News Depot. The great Irish comedian, Sam Erwin Ryan all next week. Popular prices. For a quiet, social game of billiards or pool, stop in to Reynolds & Hill's parlors. Century, Scribners and Harpers Magazines for October, at Smith's News Depot. Smith, the news dealer, carries a full line of the leading daily papers and periodicals. New popular music, "The Song that Reached My Heart," vocal, by Julian Jordan. Fluke & Son has the finest and most tasty music holds and racks of any house in the city. TO THE MUSIC STUDENTS.—Fluke & Son makes a speciality of renting pianos for the college year. FRATERNALLY—We solicit the trade of the students of K. S. U. on business principles, GEO. INNES. Reynolds & Hall have lately opened up a first class billiard and pool parlor in Millard & Cooper's old stand. Miss Iola Pomeroy, leading lady with the Zozo company last season, is the soubrette with Sam Erwin Ryan this year. Did you ever wear a hat you were ashamed to "tip" to the ladies? Well Bromelsick didn't sell it to you, did he? The Sam Erwin Ryan combination while playing to cheaper prices is not a cheap company, but as strong a one as there is on the road. We carry the best stock of Dry Goods, Curtains, Carpets, etc., in the market, and will be glad to have you trade with us. GEO. INNES. Hard and soft coal, best quality. delivered in good order. C. L. EDWARDS C. L. EDWARDS, 845 Mass St 845 Mass St. Licorice drops, lime fruit tables to mixed fruit tablets, red cross cough drops and all the remedies popular for curing colds, at Ravmond & Dick's. During the month of October, you will find special bargains in all kinds of dry goods, carpets, ladies and childrencloaks, etc., at L. O. McInture. Fluke & Son has just received a case of new musical goods, which they will sell at lower prices than any musical goods ever before brought to the city. Passing along Massachusetts street one is struck with the beauty, the variety of the goods, and their artistic arrangement in the windows of J. Fluke & Son's music store. The best students are not wearing flour sacking for underwear this year because a fine suit can be had down at Bromwells a fine too cheap to make it pay. We are now making very low prices on all kinds of black and colored silks. All kinds of wool dress goods, trimmingss etc. Before buying give us a look. L. O. McINTIRE. Tennis use to be at a very low ebb in K. S. U, but it it livening up very much now; the only thing that is at a low ebb now is Field & Hargis prices on all kind of tennis goods. Smith's News Depot is headquarters for cigars and cigarettes. All of the best brand always in stock. Students who indulge in these luxuries will do well to give Smith a call. While a cane is a nice thing to have around, still there is nothing so useful as a silk umbrella. And when you think it over it don't cost so much at least Bromeliad sick sells them cheap enough. A crush hat is the handiest thing in a students ward robe. It will do for the ball ground, for the street, for opera, and for school wear. Bromelsick has the neatest thing in that line in town. The K. S. U. base ball club has changed management at the recent election but Field & Hargis never change their prices on balls, bats, marks, gloves, chest protectors, etc, they are always the lowest. If you want the latest style of hair cuts go the Eldridge House Barber Shop, it is the most attractive and complete shop in the city. Only first class barbers employed. GEO. NICOLAY, FOUND! At Kunkel's Merchant Tailoring establishment, the most complete stock of Over Coatings, Suitings and Pants Goods in this city. All garments made in the best possible manner. A correct fit at the lowest price assured. Proprietor Boys step in and examine Reynolds & Hill's new balls and cues, they are daisies. Billiards and pool are scientific games, but at the same time very charming. No in door game gives the muscles of the body, chest and arms better exercise. There is nothing that brands a student so quickly as the hat he wears. A shoddy shapeless affair is a snare and a delusion, but a neat trim hat, in style, such for instance as you find at Bromelsick's does more to improve the appearance of a student than anything except perhaps the brains under it. Students! Stop a minute and think whille way from home a fine photograph is the nicest and most appropriate present you can send to your parents and friends. Hamilton's photograph gallery is the place to go to get first-class work done. Cabinets only $3 per dozen. If you have any intention of having your pictures taked drop in and see Hamil on's work. Prof Snow told his meteorology class. Wednesday, that for to-morrow they might go to Hall. It is a difficult task for Prof. Canfield to impress the fact upon his Junior classes that "a chair has four legs." The University Telegraph club is putting up five new lines and instruments. When completed the club will have twenty-three instruments in operation. The department of Chemistry has recently received direct from Germany, a $300 stock of chemicals and apparatus, much to the delight of the Pharmacy students. Every student should talk and work for the scheme to open the University Friday nights. This would mean new life to the societies, and a great convenience to everyone. Help it along. Gas fixtures are being put up in Snow Hall. These are of the latest improvements and have wires so arranged that by attaching a dynamo to them, the building can be lighted with electricity. Fixtures will be put in all the finished rooms and when completed, the building will be the best lighted, both by day and by night, of any public building in the west. Political Science Club The subject of "reinstatement" is being discussed by the students and the question often arises: "Why does a student who represents a family of wealth and influence, have less trouble in being reinstated by the faculty than one who does not represent these desirable qualities?" K. S. U. Political Science Club held its first meeting of the year last Saturday. The club has doubled in number this year, there being about forty members. A very interesting program was rendered. G. M. Culver opened the program with a short sketch of the condition of the money market and labor movement, for the last two weeks. Miss Manley then read an interesting and instructive paper on the condition of the factory laborer. The last piece on the program and to most Political Science students the most interesting, was a sketch of the American system of party politics, by Mr. V. L. Kellogg. The next meeting will be held one week from to-morrow at 9 a.m. Orophilian Literary Society held an enthusiastic and well attended meeting in its hall last Friday afternoon. The following program was rendered: Music . . . Miss Nellie Franklin Reading . . . E. E. Squires Recitation . . Miss Flora Newlin Recitation . . Miss Reasoner Declamation . G. O. Virtue Recess. After recess, owing to a large amount of business on hand, the debate was dispensed with. Committees were appointed to make this a prosperous year's work. From present indications, the society will soon be able to hold night sessions, and literaries will then flourish as in "the days of old." The next meeting of Orophilian will be held a week from to-day. The committees are at work, and extra preparations are being made to make this formal opening a grand success. A good program will be presented, and all those who wish to take a part in proficable literary work for the coming year, will be invited to join. Pharmacy Notes. S. M. Barnes of Beloit dropped in to see us on Monday. He will attend a medical college at Washington, D. C., this year. Leroy Hackett has entered the Junior class. The Juniors began work in the laboratory this week. They enjoy (?) wrapping up sawdust, sand, etc. The TRIBUNE in its list of societies of K. S. U. omitted the Pharmaceutical Society. This is the most unkind cut of all. The subject under discussion this afternoon will be, "Does the excitement of the tariff benefit the retail pharmacist?" The answer may definite in the master. The Seniors are delving in the mysteries of quantitative analysis. E- E. Slosson will take charge of the chemistry class during the absence of Prof. E. Franklin. Several members of the Junior class of last year attended the examinatin before the State Pharmaceutical Board and the greater number of them succeeded in receiving certificates to practice Pharmacy in this State. This speaks well for the efficient instruction and management of the Department. The Senior class consists of thirteen members, while the Junior class has an enrollment of twenty-three members. WEAVER'S. Our specialties this week are BROADCLOTHS HENRIETTAS, CLOAKS, JACKETS, WRAPS, CARPETS, OIL GLOTHS, BLANKETS and UNDERWEAR. We want your trade. We will do all that is honorable to secure it. Our prices we guarantee the lowest. The best goods only can be found at WEAVER'S. At a recent meeting of the Philadelphia Bay Association some little flutter was caused by a letter from the church at Lower Merion, which announced that Robert J. Burdette, the well known humorist, had been licensed to preach. THE TEXAS MUSTANG. The Most Serviceable Horse to Ride on the Prairie. He is a small, hardy little animal, usually good tempered and easy gaited. I think if he were used more in cities for pleasure ride he would soon become a great favorite with all equestrians. My horse, saddle and style of riding is very different from what is usually seen in cities, but I venture to say that if they were tried all would agree with me that I know what was comfortable, says a Western writer to the St. Louis rider. The horse is soft, the stock saddle. It is generally used on the plains. It is large and comfortable, and has a high pommel in front. It is made to sit on. This saddle, of course, is securely strapped on the horse, and then the next thing to do is get into it. I take the reins in my left hand, holding them short, place my left foot in the stirrup, put my hand on the pommel of the saddle and then quickly raise myself in the stirrup, swing my right foot over the horse's back and drop into the seat. This can all be done quicker than it looks like. I have always raised my saddle and have control of the horse almost before he knows what is going to happen. When in the saddle I sit firmly and erect. My weight is partly in the stirrups, which I have long enough to rest my feet in when my legs are hanging straight down. I get a hold on the horse by gripping him with my legs from the hip to the knee. The prettiest way to ride is to sit on your horse so well that you move as he moves and both appearing as one. A fancy way to ride may all appear as one. It allows you to ride the A THREE-CENT CHECK. The Trouble It May Cause If Its Owner Refuses to Cash It. The Boston *Transcript*'s Listener was lounging, with other listeners and loungers, in a marine insurance company's office the other day. He hath no argosy bound to either Ind, nor shawl, or thereof; there had not allowed to do with policy or premium. Nor need it be said why he was there; but, being there and waiting, he overheard some interesting bits of anecdote touching this appendage of healthful commerce. One gentleman, a retired merchant, was showing to the others the lists of illnesses and signed by somebody and somebody, assignes; and, asked how he came by all that money, he told this little story: "About two weeks ago I received notice from the assignes of the Nova Scotia Cana-bail舟保险 Company, ruined by the Chicago fire, you remember, that there was an unpaid dividend standing to my credit. The amount was not named, and there was inclosed with the notice an addressed and stamped envelope, which I was requested to provide, for an observer. Here was two cents postage paid on the notice and two cents for reply, to say nothing of the cost of stationery and printing, and then how stupid, after sending me the notice according to my address in the directory, to ask我 for my correct address! However, I answered the request, and by return mail I received (two cents more for postage, more expense for stationery) this check for three cents and 2 printed and addressed postal card (another cent, making seven cents postage), on which I was to write an acknowledgement. The dividend I found was due on an unexpired premium of a policy in my name made worthless by the bankruptcy of the company." "What are you going to do with this wind fall?" asked the listener. "Nothing whatever," replied this favorite of fortune, "except to show it around and in it." "but you will not enter the assignee and the bank哎靡 by not using the check." "Just so; and that is what I want to do. It may make necessary an application by the assigns to the Supreme Court for auptrity to dissolve this trust. Then the bank, when it comes to wind up its affairs, will ask the Comptroller of the Currency, or some other officer of National bank affairs, what it shall do with three cents, defendants required for. And as nobody auptrity can answer, application to Congress to know what disposition can be made will be necessary. And Congress having no precedent, will have to make a special law, perhaps applying the ancient feudal system concerning the tenure of property or working into a special statute the principle of common law which relates to treasure trove. On! there will be lots of fun, and you will not only find it easier to worry them by waving in their faces, defying them to make me indorse it and deposit it!" "But your executives may collect it," quietly observed one of the company. "Thunder! I never thought of that!" exclaimed the apparently irritating but really amiable owner of the three-cent cheek. "But I'll fix that by taking the teller's punch at our bank and canceling the signatures." An Experiment in Evolution. A striking illustration of the influence of environment on animal forms may be quite easily produced, according to Dr. Winslow Anderson. If the embryo of the land salamander be taken from the egg and kept in water of moderate temperature, abundantly supplied with oxygen, and肥 fed with small water animals, the organism is remarkably changed even in a single genera-mental. The new adult remains undeveloped and gills grows instead, a rudder tail and even fins are gradually developed for the new function of swimming, and the unnecessary foot and legs become mere rudimentary appendages. "I can bear the heat very well," said a student forced to spend a summer in the city, "but I can not endure the noise." Possibly he did not stop to consider that, in making such a declaration, he placed himself in illustrious company. Thomas Carylle "could not abide" a noise, especially that of the morning crowing of cocks. Wallenstein, acustomed as he was to the din of battle, had an unconquerable dread of the night. He was also dead in the large spurs fashionable in his day. In order to ensure quiet, he engaged twelve patrols to make regular circuits about his house night and day. The injurious effect of ordinary noises has been recognized by the authorities of European citic, and, in some cases, the nuisance has been suppressed. Heavily laden carts are not admitted to certain streets of Berlin, and in others they are only allowed to pass on condition that the horses walk. The street-carts of Munich have no bells, and those of us who live in places where these bells are not used on Sunday can testify to the relief attendant on the consequent "peace and quiet." A writer in the Popular Science Monthly asserts that noise is one of the most injurious influences of city life. It may not be sufficiently loud to attract the attention of those who live nearby, but it acts as inevitably upon the nervous system as water in dropping upon a stone. Neither Julius Caesar nor the philosopher, Kant, could tolerate the crowing of poor chants/iceer, who, indeed, seems to have friends among the studious and sensitive. CONCERNING NOISE One of the Most Injurious Influences of City Life. Experiments made upon animals show that when they have been subjected, for a number of hours, to the vibration of a tuning-fork, their nerve nerves became agitated, as certainly as muscular fibres would be affected by an acid or an electric shock. The amount of the matter seems to be that the city dweller must regard noise as one of the necessary evils of his condition—one to be borne philosophically, and requiring a large stock of grace and patience. The rest of them, in their long, hot months, are only disturbed in their morning slumbers by the song of the birds, or the crowing of cocks. "I if I hear a dog barking for hours on the threshold of a house," he writes, "I know well enough what kind of brains I may expect from its inhabitants." Shoenp亨auer exceeds almost all lovers of quiet in the extravagance of his denunciation of noise. He declares that the case is in inverse ratio to his mental power, CHIN MUSIC. The Boston players greatly admire the Detroit ball grounds. The New Yorks admit that Morris, of Pittsburgh, is quite a pitcher. Pittsburgh has been shut out thirteen times this season. Captain Anson says he will lead the league in batting before snow flies. Slattery, of New York, is so fleet of foot that he is seldom compelled to slide to a base. If the New Yorks win the pennant Mutrie's chances for the mayoralty of New York are good.