UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THEATRE VARSITY TONIGHT and THURSDAY MAE MARSH Star in "The Birth of a Nation" in "Hoodoo Ann" Films艺 production (D. W. Griffith) ALSO "Wife and Auto Troubles" Two Real Keystone Comedy Arrow Shirts—guaranteed fast color Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl FLOWERS FROM THE FLOWER SHOP are always a pleasure to receive. Arrangements superior to all others. The keeping qualities are well known. A comparison is all we ask of the uninitiated. MR. AND MRS. GEO. ECKE. Leading Florists 8251½ Miss. St. Phones 621. INVESTIGATE the merits of CORONA AND FOX TYPEEWKITERS Carter Sells Them Exclusively in Lawrence 1025 Mass St. Buy your paper here Conklin Fountain Pens Non-Leakable and Self-Filling Non-Bekkale and Sem-Tiling in Lawrence at F. B. McColloch's Drug Store 847 Mass, St. THESIS BINDING Engraved and Printed Cards A. G. ALRICH typewriter Paper 744 Mass. S PROTSCH The College Tailor University Women We do ladies tailoring and dressmaking at very reasonable prices. Competent assistants. MRS. M. A. MORGAN 1321 Tenn. Phone B 1116W At 900 Tennessee RAYMOND'S PRIVATE DINING BUNGE For desserts, banquets and dinner feeds, etc., call 22 on the Bell for reservations. Let us prepare your next picnic lunch. ASK FOR and GET HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Cheap substitutes cost YOU same price. MRS. EDNAH MORRISON at 1146 Tenn. St., Does Fancy Tailoring and Remodeling for University Women. Bell Phone 1154J. Three-year course leading to degree in Mathematics or a related Quarter system, may be completed in four years. College education required for regular admission. County counted toward college degrees. Law degree required. The University of Chicago LAW SCHOOL The Summer Quarter offers special opportunities for students, teachers, and practitioners. 1st term June 19-July 26 2nd term July 27-Sept. 1 1st term June 19- July 26 RUSH MEDICAL COLLEGE Offers courses in the medical branches Detailed announcement will be sent upon application to the DEAN OF PHYSICS, THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO DRAMATICS FOR 10 CENTS K. U. Club Will Give Four Farces at "Prices" An evening's entertainment in dramatics for ten cents is the latest thing in the "pop" line for K. U. The Dramatic Club voted at its regular monthly meeting in the theater of Green Hall last night to open the final meeting of the year, some time during the latter part of May, to the general public, and to charge an ad-hoc fee that would be enough to pay for hauling three hundred chairs over to Green Hall to increase the present seating capacity. There will be four farces, one given by Professor MacMurray's class in Dramatic Art, and the other three by members of the Club under the direction of Ihasa Hilsiman, Frank Ahlers and Michael D. Burr, the farces have already been picked out and the casts will be announced shortly after the Easter vacation. Enough time and care will be given to the production of these four farces that everybody who can afford to spend the ten cents will find as pleasurable an evening's entertainment as the members of the club can turn out. The Club was entertained last evening by a clever one-act farce with all-a-star lady cast in composed of Jack O'Neill, Jared Florence Cooke, Dorothy Anguevine, Hazel Longebaugh, and Vera Blackburn. Four new members were admitted to membership on the recombinations of the Executive Committee. SILVER TONGUES TO SPEAK Student-Orators Prepare to Deliver Maiden Speeches in Poetry Two student speakers, trained by the department of public speaking, will make their debut on Friday night. Avery Ohey of the Graduate School, will give his lecture-rival on Kansas State University's Kansasas. On the same evening at Turner, Kansas, Kenneth H. Lott, '17 Law, will speak on "The Spirit of the West." These dates are the first of a series that have been made through the Extension Department for those who want to see the department of public speaking. Oney and Lott have spent considerable time both in the writing and delivery. It is believed that they will create a favorable impression throughout the state of the character of work done by the different departments of the University. If they succeed in the completion of the endeavor to connect the work of the University with the people of Kansas. Receipts from the French war medal campaign have not been counted yet. The members of the Torch so far have paid their money collected the last of this week. The speeches that these men will deliver are the product of a year's work in the study of oral interpretation. A thorough knowledge of the life and work of the poets, whose poems they read, is essential to a successful rolling in this course. The lectures are one hour in length and are prepared for public presentation. Twenty young women wore on the Hill last Friday selling these medals. The medals are designed by Lalique, the French artist, and represent a woman clasping two children in her arms. WAR MEDAL MONEY WILL BE TURNED IN FRIDAY Tot Tarrant, '18 College, took an Easter vacation worth while. He went home a week early and in, he wore a glove in two years attendance at K. U. "Oh! Oh! Oh!", Soph Hop Farce Features An Original Song IT'S A PEPPER POT! DEPENDS ON FACULTY An original song by Henry McCurdy, '17 College, is to be the feature number in the Soph Hop farce, "Oh! Oh! Oh!" The song's title is "Love's Melody in A Flat." McCurdy himself, assisted by Ray Gafayen, '19 College, and Gladys Bitzer, '18 College, will sing the number. Sherlock Holmes himself couldn't find a plot in 'Oh! Oh! Oh!' A Kansas reporter who makes some pretensions at being a sleuth slipped into the gym for rehearsal one day last week; but so far as he could observe the face has no more plot than a snake has hips. First of all, there's a snappy opening chorus, song by Paul Sauter and a chorus of twenty girls. Jimmy McNaught and Helen Topping do a "frolic" to the music; and between watching Sautter, the chorus, and the two dancers all at once, the spectator (who is often a bit skimming) to that of a small boy at a three-ring circus. He simply can't see it all! After the opening chorus, Bud Irwin and Gene Dyer enter, in blackface, and proceed to hold down the arena for five minutes with their more or less ludicrous remarks concerning the other chorus number, led by Adriance Jailrite. "Your Photo" is the title of the song—but nobody will ever know it the night of the farce! They'll be too busy laughing at the embarrassment of some male spectator for the song; they'll be for a chorus girl's amatory attentions. Frank Miller slips onto the floor for a few thrillers on a bicycle, and then comes Guy Waldo, in rubber make-up. He has a couple of sycroped melodies up his sleeve, and he proceeds to let them out of a hole in his elbow. About this time, the scene is suddenly shifted to Greece, and Paul Sautter and the chorus emerge in Grecian costume to sing a lyric noun "The Ragtime Pipe of Pan." Then enter the Wooley Irish man and he demonstrates the effect of Pan's chansy by dancing a bad chansy. The K. U. song brings the farce to a close. At this moment, Patti Hart and Opal Holmes, disguised as "Beauty Contest Girls" burst upon the scene, having been restrained with difficulty because of a nose injury. There's little left of any of their friends after they finish gossiping. Just as Patti paddles a particularly funny "gap," Ray Gafney and the chorus enter, and proceed to sing a university song entitled "True to K. 11." If your life needs spicing, "Oh! Oh! Oh!" Oh!" is the peper pot. GRAD STUDENT GOES TO LELAND STANFORD Mr. Dudley J. Pratt, who has been a graduate student in the department of botany for two years, has been appointed graduate assistant in the biosciences department of Stanford University. Mr. Pratt received offers of assistantships from three large universities, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Laeland Stanford. He expects to compete with other students in his physiology with Dr. Pratt at Stanford for his doctorate. Milton Madden, 16' Eng., has withdrawn from the University to work for the Santa Fe with headquarters at Albuquerque, New Mexico. Do you usually pay for a truly nice shirt? Fast colors, Latest style, Excellent material? HOW MUCH Ideal Shirts $1.00 and $1.50 Remember the place 820 Mass. Open Evenings For Your Con- vidence The success of the proposed co-operative book store depends, in the main, upon the willingness of the stockholders to become stockholders in the institution. The Establishment of a Co-Op Store Rests on the Purchase of Shares A capital stock of only $200 or $300 is necessary to buy fixtures for the store and to raise this amount, the committee has planned to sell shares to the faculty members at par for $5.00. This will give each stock holder twenty-five cents per annum on each share held. The books will be purchased on credit and will be sold on a strictly cash basis; each student receiving a receipt with his purchase. At the end of each year or possibly at the end of the semester, the profit made outside of the actual handling of the books will be divided equally among the holders of these receipts according to the amounts of purchase. In this way a student may save from one-fifth to one-sixth of his former costs through the co-operative store. The store is to be situated in Fraser Hall the first year unless the Board of Administration makes an appropriation for a special building. A book exchange is to be run in contact with the Office of the profits derived from the exchange will be used in paying the expenses of the store. PHYSICS DEPT. REPAIR THE OWN APPARATUS The department of Physics has installed a shop where they repair their instruments and make some of the research instruments which they are unable to secure because of the great length of time it takes to get them. The laboratory experiments a portion of the apparatus breaks and the experimenter is forced to wait until the broken portion can be replaced. Since the repair shop has been installed students are able to repair their own instruments with a saving of both time and money. "It saves us a lot of money, saving to the state," said Leo L. Brooks, physics custodian, this morning. which side of the "Prepredress Question" are you on with respect to life in your home? Cecil S. DeRoin, 17 College, who withdrew from school on account of sickness, was on the Hill during the Easter vacation. He says that the school looks better than ever and that he will be back next year without fail. Send the Daily Kansan home to the folks. High Grade Clothing for Less Money L. S. Broughly 15c Each the new Spring and Summer Ide Collars have—exclusively— Linocord Unbreakable Buttonholes OEG. P. ID & E.C., Makers, TROY, N. Y. Also Makers of Ide Shirts FLOWERS Cut flowers, funeral designs, potted plants and shrubs. Orders taken for parties. PHONE 1546 W ALPHA FLORAL COMPANY, 304 W 14th LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. wants ambitious young people to enroll and prepare for exceptional positions, as bookkeeper, stenographers, private secretaries, civil service. Positions secured as soon as competent. Enroll any Monday. Write, phone or call for catalogue. 645 Mass. St. Two Floors. E. S. WEATHERBY, Superintendent. W. H. QUAKENBUSH President Full of the same old stuff that is going to push a certain little Jayhawk aggregation headed by one "Beau" Olcott through a glorious season next fall— PEP that's what you will find in Copping the Grapes This Year's Senior Play Written around K. U. life, featuring K.U. characters with an enthralling climax and happy ending, this "Made in K.S.U." play is bound to please. It is Unique It is Different TONIGHT Prices: 25c-50c-75c. Seats Now Selling BONWIT TELLER & CO. CAMARADERIE The Specialty Shop of Originations FIFTH AVENUE AT 38TH STREET NEW YORK CAMARADERIE Sports apparel for every college event. Originations that reflect the new "Spirit of Play." Specialized types for the jeune fille—in coats and suits for sports wear—in silk sweaters—gay little blouses—frrocks of the La Zerz, Georgette crepe, crepe de chine, serge and linen. Quaint Tams, broad Canotiers, ElSombrero—Hats for Sports Wear with a special appeal to the jeune fille. Close little turbans to defy campus winds—always with that distinctive esprit de jeunesse. "Bontell" Originations in sports footwear—hosiery—necklets, and hand bags for sports wear. Jeunes Filles Fashions for apres midi and dansant occasions. Intimate wear for leisure hours. Every type of apparel for the needs of the girl in college. Send the Daily Kansan Home Back to Two Bits, Fellows Haircuts, like drugs, seem to fluctuate in price. The thirty-five-cent sting didn't remain for long and we are back again to the old charge. And when you come in this shop, you can be assured that you will receive the same amount of expert service you would if you paid the other dime. Our highest aim is to have our customers perfectly satisfied with the work—satisfied to the extent that they will come back again and recommend this place to their friends. When one speaks of "Houk Service" he does it in a spirit of loyalty—he speaks with the knowledge that comes only from experience—he realizes the deeper significance in the phrase THE SHOP OF THE TOWN