UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ICE CREAM FOR SUNDAY Pineapple Ice Chocolate Fresh Strawberry Caramel Nut Brown Bread Phone Your Order Early. BELL 645 HOME 358 REYNOLDS BROTHERS We Deliver. ANNOUNCEMENTS The University Orchestra will give its last concert for this year Thursday evening, May 18, in Fraser Hall, at 8:00 p. m. The Kansas City Branch of the Associated Collegiate Alumnae has established two seventy-five dollar scholarships for junior and senior women of Kansas City, Kun. or Mt. Ole. to graduate from a committee on scholarships for women, Miss Gallo, Miss Oliver and Miss Charles. 148-15. Mrs. Eustace Brown requests that all students who participated in the Scotch Dance at the Halloween Party and who are still owing for the gingham for their costumes, please call at once on her office and pay the small amount. The greater part of this bill is still unpaid, and it is unfair to expect the merchants to carry the account any longer. May Fete will be held at 4 p. m. Saturday, May 13 if the day is clear. If it rains Saturday it will be held Monday, May 15. If it rains Monday Friday, May 19. If it rains then it will be given in the gym both Friday and Saturday, May 19 and 20. Blanche Mullen. "The Technique of Soul Expansion," Dr. S. Olinger, Presbyterian Church, Sunday night.-Adt. The May Convocation will be held Friday, May 19 at 10:30, and will be in charge of the Student Government associations. Fruit salad, whipped cream and wafers. Ten cents a plate. Wiedemann's.-Adv. Frank Strong. (In the Co-op) Student: "Got ar Spearmint?" Absent--Minded Clerk: "What cours it is it?" -Yale Record. SIGMA CHI BEAT PHI DELTS With Baker holding the Phi Delta to one hit, the Sigma Chisw won their second game of the Pan-hellenic series on Hamilton Field yesterday afternoon. The score was 5 to 3. The contest was full of thrills, and only by bunching a couple of hits along with some costly errors in the third half, the Sige able to gain a lead of three runs and thus decide the game. Baker Holds Phi Delta to Onc Hit in Close Game Dever pitched consistent ball for the Phi Delta, but his support was a bit ragged at times. His team got their first run in the sixth inning and thus settled the dispute as to a shut-out. In the first half of the seventh, the last inning, the Phil Dilts started a rally that at first looked as if it might terminate in a backslide for the Sigs. But when Hettlinger, in the third quarter, made a catch in big league style and brought about the final out, the score stood 5 to 3 in favor of the Sigs. An evidence that men are not entirely giving up the teaching profession to women is shown by the fact that 90 percent of Ohio State University boasts of a 200 per cent increase in the men graduates this year over last. intings; Sigma Chi 102 011 x-5 Pho Delta Theta 102 Pho Delta Theta 102 In order to prevent students holding spring baseball season tickets from transferring them, the athletic department made a compulsory that each holder have his photograph taken and placed upon his ticket. GRADUATES GET JOBS One-third of Applications for Teachers' Positions Already Filled One-third of the graduates who have applied for teaching positions through the Teachers' Agency Bureau conducted by Prof. W. H. Johnson of the department of education, have received positions. The remainder of the 150 applications are now being considered by the high school principals and boards. By June 1, Professionals must be an applicant to have a position. The following is a partial list of those who have been accepted: Haworth Approves The Latest Fashion in School Excursions Filled BOOMS TRAVEL CREDIT Lester D. Lacy, Osborne; Mamie Higgs, Ida; Avery Olnley, Leavenworth; Virgil Gordon, Winfield; Nami Simpson, Winfield; Bessie Buff, McKay; Peter Perez, John Fitzgeralds;萨司 City; Paul W. Harnly, Clay Center; Clara Gene Dains, Pratt; Beulah Davis, Leavenworth; Zula Chase, Leavenworth; Nami Nelson, Meherson; Anna Baker, Anthony; Stirling Minneapolis; James Sellers, Lawrencery Bertha Sallee, Hutchinson; Sibyl Rose, Greenleaf; Gauldys Saunders, Eskridge; Margaret Lorimer, Proston; Ethel Keeler, Reading; Raymer Stafford; Robert Berry, Stafford; Ella Hawkins, Ackison; Allen Sterling, Atchison; Florence Sheidenberger, Iola; Blanche Mullen, Burlington; Edwin Winnow, Grace; Mary Jarvis, Pratt; George P. Bunn, Alain Branleke, Pawnee Rock; Edward Kroesch, Holdings; Fral Poos, Oganai; Alen M. Herron Onaga. And the little old Ford still rambles right along. The lazy student who does not wish to exert himself and yet would like to enjoy the reminiscences of Cameron's Bluff can weariness, stiff joints, lame legs, and solemn shoes for the trip can be made cheap enough in a four-wheeded vehicle. What are a few bumps, jolts and blowouts in comparison with aching motion has been opened in the seven hundred block of Massachusetts street. TOUR IN SPECIAL TRAINS Olliie May stopped off in Lawrence Thursday, to visit her son Lawson, a freshman from Hutchinson, while on her way to Leavenworth. The May Convocation will be held Friday, May 19 at 10:30, and will be in charge of the Student Government associations. Frank Strong. Adrian Parr, '18 College, will serve Sunday and Saturday at home in Topo. Use School Buildings for Classes in Towns Visited Prof. Erasmus Haworth of the department of Geology is intensely interested in the subject of travel study. When approached for an interview, this morning, he said, in his kindly manner: "Why, I'm just full of the subject and I guess I could run on indefinitely, but I realize that brevity is a necessary requirement of a newspaper. They have to leave space for their medicine advertisements, of course." "The immortal bard is accused of having said, 'Home keepyouts have homely wits,' a statement which I wrote in his time and surely is true today. "Travel schools may or may not be a modern invention. At any rate they have flourished in one form or another during the last twenty years. The ordinary travel school of today is merely an excursion for the purpose of sight seeing and the knowledge gained from experience time has come for a modification of the travel school to be introduced and I thoroughly believe that within the next few years someone will take up the matter and carry it to success. TRAVEL IN STATE "I have looked into this matter quite a little and I am sure it is entirely feasible whenever the institutions of America wish to take it up. For example, suppose an excursion train should leave Lawrence, having a car to five hundred students, properly equipped with teachers who would act as chaperons as well. This train could travel over any part of America desired. It could stop at interesting points as long as necessary, and I am sure abundant facilities would be available to five hundred students in any large city in the United States. The excursion, for example, might go to Niagara Falls and stop there for a week. The first day could be devoted to sight seeing entirely, after which at least five days of good study and recitation could be had. During this time, students would gatherings, time now entirely thrown away by students, much sight seeing could be done and much local history could be gathered which would be of perpetual benefit to the student. From Niagara Falls the next stop might be at any point, such as Winnipick, which would be headed westward and from there across to Calgary, or Edmondson, or Prince Rupert, or Vancouver, or any place determined upon. The cities named have large and commodious school rooms, and I am sure would be glad to loan the same to a traveling school to another. With proper arrangements made in advance abundant facilities for living could be provided, just as well there as elsewhere. MANY SCHOOLS CO-OPERATE "with a proper corp of teachers from a number of different institutions, examinations and grades could be prepared and reported to the several institutions in which the students wish credit, and in that way a school cosmopolitan in nature could be carried across the country," she wrote. "and all institutions into which the students wish to enter the following autumn." "At the present time there can be no question but that our young people waste an enormous amount of time, and this by force of circumstances. They walk down the streets of Lawrence, view the same signs, the same sidewalks, the same buildings, the same people. How many others will it be for them to walk their own way? As they walk down the streets of other great cities and see other faces and other business houses and learn other local history and connect such local history with the history of the development of America. ADVANTAGES OF SYSTEM "I would state, therefore, that I am thoroughly in favor of travel schools for the following reasons. First: It will utilize so much more of the students' time. Second: Constant changes in surroundings keep the mind clear and active, so one can learn much more readily. Third: We will be taught in this way to young people at the time of youth when they can best learn and retain the knowledge, and also, they will have this information to use throughout the remainder of their lives. Fourth: Many people go to summer resorts simply to spend the time and come back in the autumn with little better prepared for the future life than though they had not gone. "By combining a travel school with such excursions the maximum good value." "I feel confident that America is sufficiently supplied with young people who would be available for such a purpose," she wrote of many thousands engaged on excursions of this kind every season, and I know our railroads and transportation companies would be glad to provide facial necessary for sun travel. mobile phones A class of sixty girls in home economics at the University of Wisconsin recently estimated that a couple should be able to live comfortably on five hundred dollars a year. Most of five hundred dollars a year, the middle should have saved at least three hundred dollars and own a house and lot before getting married. Jessie Lea Messick, '17 College, and Agnes T. Crawford, '16 College, spent last week-end visiting in Emporia. TIGERS WIN FIRST GAME Jayhawker Baseball Athletes Lost Opener of Missouri Series 8 to 4 By Cargill Sproull, special staff cor- respondent. And Red Craig pitched. Columbia, Mo., May 12—Whether it was the drizzling rain that fell all afternoon or the fact that Missouri's record of victories absolutely refused to be broken, is not certain. But Kansas lost the opening game of the Tiger series yesterday afternoon by an 8 to 4 score. The KC team two straight games in two days that Craig pitched in Lawrence last spring and won and by doing so threw Missouri out of the 1915 Valley championship, were still fresh in the minds of the Tiger team when the auburn haired one mounted the slab. For two innings he escaped but in the third came a volley of hits and three M. U. runs. In the fifth the deluge and five more TUMOR, the Draig left the slub but Coach McAry's athletics collected seven hits off Bryant and Giltner, the two Tiger hurriers, but only in the second game they able to bunch them effectively. The score by innings: R H E Kansas ... 000 100 003—4 7 3 Missouri ... 003 050 00—8 9 1 AFTER NEWS OFFICES Journalists Get Busy for Their Tuesday's Annual Election Officers to be elected are: president, vice-president, women's secretary, secretary of the Board. The Associated Journalism Students will hold their spring election on Tuesday from 8:30 to 1 o'clock. Regular Australian ballots will be used. Petitions containing the names of five signers who must be students in the department of journalism must be submitted by Marjorie Rickards, secretary, before 6 o'clock. Twenty-five cents must accompany the petitions. president, women's president, menn's secretary, sergeant-at-arms. The Associated Journalism Students organized early this semester to bring the students in journalism closer together. The present officers are: Guy Scriven, president; Emae Mauxel, vice-president; Harry Morgan, treasurer; Marjorie Rickards, secretary of women; Cargill Sproull, secretary of men; Charles S. Sturtinev, sergeant-at-arms. One hundred and twenty students of the senior class, '16, at Yale, have earned all or part of their way through college. Should a thing as important to your organization be a source of a revenue or profit to stockholders? Students at the state University of Montana have petitioned the faculty that instruction in military training and tactics be offered next year. Indestructo Trunks Bags and Suit Cases Sold Exclusively by Johnson & Carl FISCHER'S SHOES ARE GOOD SHOES ABOVE ALL . There's many a young fellow who has gained the reputation of wearing the best looking shoes on the hill, who laughs in his sleeves when he thinks how economically he does it—wearing Barry shoes and Oxfords, the biggest known combination of style and quality at the price. $5 Strong & Garfield Shoes*and Oxford$6 and $6.50 Otto Fischer Don't Buy a Thing Until Jones' Annual Profit Sharing Sale The First Week in June War Time Prices will be wrecked in all of our 70 Single-line Stores that are gathered under this one roof. Once a year we divide our profits with customers by means of this Profit-Sharing Sale. We pay the Round Trip Railroad Fare of our out-of-town Customers, so wait for the Announcement of our Sale in this paper. THE JONES STORE Kansas City's Profit Sharing Store. 414E881LA D34TA XV22V