UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPRING Don't Worry; They're Torpedo Proof. HUSKERS PLAY TENNIS QUIZ SCHEDULE OUT Dual Match With Nebraska or McCook Courts Tomorrow Morning Morning The Nebraska tennis squad of three men is due to arrive in Lawrence tonight for the dual match with Kansas tomorrow. Harry Ellis, James Gardiner, and Orville Chatt are the three Cornhuskers who will attempt to show Dix Teachener and his partner how to play tennis. The big match starts at 10:30 to tomorrow morning on the two northwest courts at McCook Field. A fourth court, the two courts in fine condition and they will be chosen. The Kansas captain With a little warmer weather added now by the weatherman the contestant will show some real form on the courts. The Kansas team has not been chosen yet. A final practice will be held this afternoon at which time a partner for Captain Dix Teacamer will be chosen. The Kansas captain has been the only dependable man on the Missouri State team in competition three years ago. His work has been noticed all over the Missouri Valley and his recent choice as the best man in the K. C. A. C for the summer tournaments was approved by everyone. He has entered all the big tournaments in Kansas City for the last few years but would rather stay under the blue diamond colors until his eligibility at K. U expired. At the same time as the Nebraska dual match the annual high school tennis tournament will start on the remaining tennis courts near McCoole Field. This will be the only tournament held this year on the Kansas courts and the entry list is the largest of years. The Kansas City high school graduate trophy honors in this tournament and this year will be no exception, at least if interest and entries have anything to do with it. The Nebraska dual match and the high school will both be free to the public and will no doubt attract a large crowd of spectators. Seats will be provided for spectators as far as possible. MICHIGAN WILDCAT IS CHAMPION IN THE SIXTH Windsor, Out, May 4.—Performing in old time style, Ad Wolgast whipped Willie Gradwell of Newark, N. J., in six rounds here last night. Three times the ex-champion forced Willie to the mat before the Newark boy decided, in the sixth, that he could not take any more punishment. The bout was scheduled for ten rounds. Miss Helen Carroll, of Conway Springs, is visiting Lois Hunt and Vesta Talbert. Helen Chamberis, 19', College, has returned from a short visit at Chapman. Lawson May, '19 College, returned from Ottawa, where has been visiting Clifford Myers, a student of Ottawa University, from Hutchinson. Maurice Miesse, who has been visit ing his sister, Lenora Miesse, returned to Marion, Friday, where he is located in business. Send the Daily Kansan home to the folks. Senate Arranges Fatal Hours None on May 30 This Year The schedule of examinations for the second semester was announced Tuesday afternoon by the faculty committee on examinations. The week starts Saturday May 27 and continues until Thursday, June 2. No exams are scheduled on May 30, Memorial Day. The schedule is as follows: Exclusive Saturday classes will be examined Saturday afternoon, May 27. 11:30 Classes Monday. a. m. May 29 10:30 Classes Tuesday. a. m. May 31 10:30 Classes Wednes. a. m. May 31 4:30 Classes Wednes. p. m. May 31 9:30 Classes Thurs. a. m. June 1 3:30 Classes Thurs. p. m. June 1 3:30 Classes Thurs. p. m. June 1 1:30 Classes Friday. p. m. June 2 Three hour classes (and one hour classes meets on Mon. Wed. or Fri.) will be examined from 8:30 to 10:30 if scheduled above for the morning; from 1:30 to 3:30 if scheduled above for the afternoon. Two hour classes (and one hour classes meeting on Tues. or Thurs.) will be examined from 10:50 to 12:30 if scheduled above for the morning, from 3:50 to 5:30 if scheduled above for the afternoon. Four and five hour classes will be examined from 8:30 to 11:30, if schedled above for the morning; from 11:30 to 12:30, if schedled above for the afternoon. Laboratory classes will be examined at the time corresponding in the schedule above to the first laboratory period or at the time corresponding in the second (eight hour exists) at the discretion of the head of the department concerned. Classes meeting on Saturdays and not on other days in the week will be examined as scheduled above on Saturday p. m. from 1:30 to 3:00 for one and two hour courses; from 1:30 to 3:30 for three hour courses. Waterloo, Iowa, May 4- Ewait Hankerin, 23, was dead here today as a result of a four round bout with Gordon Vaughn last night. Hankerin struck his head against the cement floor of the ring when he fell. He died at the hospital from concussion of the brain. HANKNER DEAD FROM BOUT WITH VAUGHN Miss Fern Larrick of Lenora, who has been the guest of her sister, 3rmah Larrick, '17 College, since Friday, left today for Chicago. Edna Potter, '19 College, has withdrawn from the University and returned to her home in Ashland. She expects to resume her work next fall A:曼山蒂 hold initiation for Mili- Ngri and Carl Neuman Thursday wednesday. Kansas City, Mo., May 4- The search for Carl Messer who slashed William Pitts to death yesterday in a carer chair continued today. Messer's friends believe he is demigned, so that he had acted strangely if late. PHARMICS PLAN DAY Man Hunt Continues Fridays and Saturdays are fruit salad days at Wiedemann's.—Adv. Druggists Leap Into Limelight With "Daddy" Sayre's Day; to be Next Tuesday Special—the Brown Bread ice cream at Wiedemann's.-Adv. SCHOOL IS 3:0 YEARS OLD Ball Game in Afternoon; Banquet For Old Grads at Night "Daddy Sayre Day" will be celebrated for the first time by the professors and the students of the School of Pharmacy next Tuesday, May 9, in honor of their dean, L. E. Sayre, celebrated in honor of Dean Sayre but not in commemoration of the thirtieth anniversary of the school. A banquet will be given at 8 o'clock in the evening at the Eldridge house. A number of graduates are expected to be present. Two graduates, Charles C. Cramer, '12, of Gardner and Bruce Killian, '12, of Olathe, have said that they would attend the banquet. They did not believe never took his degree until this year. Short after-dinner talks will be given by professors and students. In the afternoon a baseball game in which the juniors cross bats with the seniors will be held. A spirit of hostility already exists between the two classes in regard to the outcome of the contest. The students of the School of Pharmacy expect to make "Daddy Sayre Day" an annual event. Under the leadership of Dean Sayre, its first professor, the school has passed through a period of stress and strain, of pioneering, of sacrifice, of small beginnings, yet he has learned what is most of the frontiers, and proved its worth. Its alumni numbers into the thousands and many of them have achieved not only state but national reputation. STECHER GETS ORDEMAN IN THREE FALLS Minneapolis, May 4.—Joe Stecher, Nebraska grappler, added more laurels to his list last night when he defended Henry Ordenman in two straight falls. Of being the first man to stay more than 20 minutes with the Nebraskan. ST. LOUIS IRISH CHEER Sons of Erin Go Frantic With Enthusiasm For Freedom of Blarney Isle St. Louis, May 4—Several hundred local Irish wept and cheered last night at the organization meeting of the local branch of the Friends of Irish Freedom. Every member in attendance appeared apologetic, with Judge O'Neill Ryan said every St. Louis Irishman was ready to fight for the freedom of his fatherland. Rv Carl W. Ackerman "Get France, Belgium, Serbia and the others out of the war," said Father Peter Dtm Demater, pastor of St. Michael's Church in England to Germany and the Irish." Sturdy sons of Erin wept when Father Tim said he decorated Kaiser Wilhelm's picture with shamrocks sent him from Ireland. He said he was a proud and especially memorial mass for the patriots that died in the recent rebellion. ANNOUNCE TRAINING CAMP Kansas Men to Lead Soldiers' Life at Fort Harrison H. A. Lorenz, who attended the Military Training Camp at Plattsburg, New York, last year, received a circular recently, stating that a Military Training Camp will be held at Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indiana this summer, beginning July 5th and ending October 5th. The Government Military Camp will be under the direction of regular United States officers of the army. The purpose of the camp is to teach each attendant as much of the fun activities as possible, commissioned officer, and an officer as can be imparted in the duration of the camp. To become a member of a Military Camp, the applicant must be a citizen of the United States, must be between 18 and 40 years old, sound physical condition, able to stand the knocks and hardships of camp life, and he must have a college or high school education. He must also bear military burden in the community where he lives. When asked if he was an editor E W. Mieke of Chicago, said emphatically "No, it takes a smart man to be a businessman." He sentting the Payer Mills Company of Chicago has been in the business sixteen years. The line includes high grade stationery and paper which he is offered from all over the United States. The limit was reached the other day when Grace Marshall, '19 College, asked an upper classman if the stores would be closed on May Day. Send the Daily Kansan home. JOE MITCHELL CHAPPLE Boston, Mass. Give Electric Moon Dance The Architecture and Engineering gave their first annual Englewood at Woodland Park Saturday night. An electric moon which, as Arthur Nigg says, "was just as natural as we could make it," shining through the columns of the temple of Aphiaa furnished an effective setting for several dances. Professor and Mrs. F. H. Sibley chaperoned the party. VISIT DISPLAY CORNER IN_JOURNALISM ROOM Mr. George B, Cooper, representing the Paper Mills' Company of Chicago, invites the students to make them realize that they are a corner in the main journalism room. The display includes advertisements of all kinds, programs of functions, menu cards from some of the largest and most noted hotels and cafes of the city, artistically covered and printed catalogs of the many mail order houses. Lloyd W. McKcney, of Winchester, came to attend the concert. He has junior standing in the College but on account of sickness has to be out of school. K. U. Man From Parsons Ralph Hoffman, a K. U. man of several years ago from Parsonza, is visiting some of his old acquaintances on the Hill this week. Mr. Hoffman returned recently from South America where he has been a mining engineer for three years. When asked if a language education received here would do him much good where he was located, the Good Spanish I received at the University was quite a help to me and it is my idea that within a few years Spanish will be taught in all high schools to supplant Latin." When down street don't forget to try a dish of Wiedemann's pure ice cream.-Adv. There's Goodness in the Good Reynolds' Brothers For Downtown Refreshments Vanilla Ire Cream Tonight Strawberry Chocolate Pineapple Ice The LINOGRAPH The Linograph will do anything that can profitably be done on any slugecasting machine. It has desirable features that are not to be found on any other machine. It is so simply constructed that the uninitiated very easily and quickly master the mechanical details required to operate it successfully. The Linograph is the embodiment of mechanical simplicity—and, as all know, mechanical simplicity is the goal for which every efficiency engineer is striving these days. The Linograph has come to this meeting to make its initial bow to the publishers and printers of Kansas. It is here to "talk" for itself. It has no apologies to offer, nor criticisms to make. It is content to be judged by its performance, past and present. Its future is positively assured. Concisely stated, the Linograph is a dominating factor in the slugcasting machine field, now and in the future. The Linograph embodies features which—comparatively—make it the least expensive to install, the least expensive to maintain, and the easiest to handle. It is suitable for the largest office as well as the smallest. It is running in job offices, and in daily and weekly newspaper offices, side by side with machines of other makes, and in each instance has the earnest commendation of owner and operator. The Linograph purchasers have not, and will not, suffer the experience of seeing their machines depreciate in market value overnight, because of a startling reduction in price. They deserve fair play—and they'll get it. There are many other reasons why YOU should install a Linograph. Ask the man who demonstrates the machine. The Linograph Company DAVENPORT, IOWA, U. S. A. This entire advertisement, including border, with exception of two display lines, was set on the Linograph with three magazine equipment.