UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A dressy young men's coat light weight, silk trimmed, shower proof- Just the coat for right-now wear $25 Johnson & Carl Face Lotions —and their proper application after a shave are your two biggest problems when you shave yourself. Applied Right —with hot towels they prevent smarting, and heal the skin. Lotions that are good act as a skin food. If you shave yourself you use lotions on the recommendation of others and they are not applied right. Third door north of the Varsity is where lotions are applied right. HOUKS' THE SHOP OF THE TOWN WANTS MILITARY TRAINING LIKE THAT AT ALFORDIA "Military training should be give in every university in the Unite States," declares Hugh B. McGuire of California, a junior in the College "Our standing army numbers less than 90,000 men and the organize militia consists of only 125,600, whiche gives a force of only one-tenth that we need. To drill college men would give more men of the class which could be used as officers and drill masters." At California, McGuire says, five units of credit in military training are required. Of these, two are classroom and three are actual drill. All units require a variety of drills a week are prescribed with two half-days a semester of actual field work and one hour a week of classroom work. At the end of the freshman year one is eligible to try out for corporate or military training. It is a little more advanced than that for a freshman but the time put in is the same. This second year ends the compulsory part of the training, but there are many optional courses which are well attended. Sergeants and lieutenants are chosen from the junior class, and the captains are all senior. The captain, who is the head of the unit, is the best examination, comes back on a salary for his fifth year and acts as colonel of the corn. The course is very popular. McGuire recommends a course modeled along these lines for the University for three different reasons. First, it would aid in solving the very pressing defense problem. Second, it will help you acquire and courtease which it is impossible to acquire in any other way. And it would give u more popular and beneficial exercise than the present gym work. Return This Book! Will the person who has Professor Thorpe's copy of Clayton Hamilton's "Materials and Methods" return it immediately to the Journalism Library? Limeade, five cents at Barber & Son's Drug Store.-Adv. MUSIC TREATS COMING K. U. Will Have Many Good Attractions This Spring, Says Dean Butler Music lovers are to be given many and varied treats this spring, according to a statement made by Dean Butler, of the School of Fine Arts. Two of the best programs of the year are those to be given by the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra, May 2. There are to be a matinee and concert in June and September to appear in these programs are: Lenora Allen, soprano, of the Chicago Grand Opera Company; Jean Cooper, contralto, and Albert Lindquist, tenor, both of Chicago; and Louis Crauvre, bartone, of New York. "Albert Lindquist," said Dean Butler, "is a very talented singer. He has appeared in Lawrence before and now in Boston among the finest soloists in the country. A local solostar is always a feature of these concerts, and this place will be filled this year by Joseph A. Farrell, professor of voice at the University. Another splendid musical program is the oratorio to be given by the Lawrence Choral Union the night of Palm Sunday, April 16, in Robinson Hall. The choir's depletion will be given under the direction of Prof. Arthur Nevin. This is one of the greatest oratorios ever written, and since it is a long and very difficult composition, only the interesting portion of it will be given." There are other worth while programs mentioned by Dean Butler which will be given in the near future. A recital will be given by Prof. Brennan, Mathews University at 8:15. No admission will be charged. The Shoostae String Quartet which has caused a furor in Kansas City will play Thursday evening; March 30. Miss Nelle Bryant applauded her and April 7. Miss Bryant is a soprano from the Ulm Grand Opera Company of Germany. Zipp! iwant a stake, and the patient black cow, moored for eightteen hours a day on a vacant lot in the 1500 block on Tennessee street, staried her dog. The dog was breaking the speed limit when she met three hysterical students. "Save me," gasped one, and scurried to the shelter of a telephone pole. The cow missed the girls by not more than fifteen or twenty feet. Another sign that spring is here is shown in the instructors' office in the women's gym. All books, magazines, papers have been stored away in a very orderly manner. The accumulation of old letters and periodicals is held in the library basket. Even the rug on the floor receives a good beating while the delicate strokes of a mop worked artistically on the floor beneath. K. U. LINEUP VS. AMES SOPHOMORES WILL MX The refereeing abilities of Miss Hazel Pratt, women's sport director, were used Friday night in the Lawrence high school gym when the Lawrence high school girls played in an interclass tournament. Four games were played, the sophomores winning the final game. Parker fountain pens at Barber & Son's Drug Store.-Adv. Coach Leon McCarty Gives Prob able lineup After Watching Successful Practice Some idea of what the K, U. lineup will be against Ames in the opening game is given at Thursday and Thursday of next week on McCools Field was given out last night by Coach Leon McCarty after watching on most successful practices of the season. A so-called first team infield of Andy Groff, football veteran of the LA Dodgers, recruited by sophomore recruit at second; the veteran Rabbit Wood at short; and Gibben the basketball star at third, put out on the field. But it outed on the Hamilton Field diamond. Behind the plate Coach McCarty is well fixed for the first time in several years. Another player is the leading rebounding candidate and will probably also probate gain a square seat. The outfield will be the scene of some hot competition for George Smee when not on the pitching slab will be used as a gardener because of his heavy hitting. Captain "Pete" Wandell will of course hold down his old position in center field leaving the俞 Chinmery to scrap it out with the outfield lineup and dates. Smee, Wandell, and Chinmery will probably be the outfield lineup against Ames in the opening game according to Coach McCarty. HAVE STAR PITCHERS Red Craig, ever-victorious pitcher of last season for the top league championship nine, will be used by Coach McCarty in the opening game against the Iowa Farners. Although the weather is far from being as warm as the Independence star like, Craig is the one he did at any time last season according to his team-mates. George Smee with who Bishop pitched Kansas to a 1914 Valley championship will face the visitors in the second game and show the home folks that he still has a winning hurler two years ago. In addition to the two veterans, Coach McCarty has a pair of promises second batters in Poirier and Craig must keep them out of all but a couple of practice games on the road. RECOMMEND 17 UNIVERSITY The Fellowship Committee, at its meeting Tuesday evening, recommended seventeen persons for University fellowships for the coming year. The Committee elected the Kansas College fellows last week. The Board of Administration will take the final action on the matter. FELLOWSHIPS Letters were mailed Wednesday to the successful candidates, appraising them of their election. The names of the candidates be announced at Commencement time. WANTED—LIMERICKS Here is a sample: Dickery Dickery, Dockeray, I had some Lab. Psychology. But I had a bad thunk, so he gave me a闪亮. Did Dickery, Dickery, Dockeray FUND HELPS STUDENT Many Take Advantage of Movement Started by Class of '94 The student loan fund that was started by the class of '94, began with $42.30. Since that year, it has increased to $1,900.00, and is at present loaned to needy students in the University, in amounts varying from $40, to $100. There is at this time only $16.42, that is not in use by students. Different classes, clubs, and organizations have added to the fund until Jockey Club that once thrived here, and the Debating Council have contributed to the fund. In 1916, Governor James L. Meade, now president of the Meade Cycle Company of Chicago, put $1000 in charge of a committee in charge of the loan fund. Professors E. F. Engle, George J. Hood, and Miss Alberta Corbin compose the loan fund committee. It is their duty to investigate applications. From three to twenty students each year have received some benefit from the fund started by the class of '94. The student who has received the fund, he must have attended the University at least one year. He cannot borrow more than $100.00 at a time. The loans are made on bankable notes at 4 per cent per annum. Boxing, Music and Good Eats to Feature Smoker On April 6 Send Exhibit to High School So popular did the exhibit of the department of home economics prove that the superintendent of schools at Neodesha has requested that it be sent there for display. The exhibit was given here on the occasion of the thirteenth annual conference of school principals and superintendents in Boston, where the exhibit created, it is expected that it will be an annual affair hereafter. More than 500 visitors saw the display. Send the Daily Kansan home. The sophomores are going to mix. Not a row within the family circle but just a general all around good time. The event, the annual sophomore, takes place at Hall Thursday evening, April 6, at which time some 200 second year men will gather around, swap stories, witness several boxing matches, enjoy some classy "eats" and touch off with some good old Hayaffa snippets. Billy Koester who is in charge of the smoker is authority for the statement that it is going to be some event. "There are smokers and smokers," he said this morning, "but I don't believe that it is individually type. The program which we are arranging will be one of the most elaborate that has ever been presented at a class smoker in recent years and I might say that when I use the word ever I mean it in the superlative degree - Bau loch or Loch Lomond. Spin a few of their best yarns, five ebony hued mit wielders will disfigure a quintet of facial features, music of the Ragtime Kelly brand will be offered in abundance, and classy eats and smokes will be supplied. Besides these features there will be a very large match together with several other strictly new events which will be saved for a surprise." FAVORS WOMEN'S DEBATES Requests for Meets Come From Oklahoma and Washburn In regard to the advisability of having a women's debating team at the University of Kansas, Prof. H. T. Hill said this morning, "I strongly favor the idea, and I find an increasing desire to work with our team. Our only handcake in making a success of this adventure in the way of intercollegiate meets is the lack of finances and the limited number of instructors in the department of public speaking. I see no reason, however, that we could be made a question of local interest. "The women interested in this phase of work might organize debating clubs and societies. I always refer the women who ask me concerning this organization, but I do not that this organization could successfully promote such a movement. "In the past two years we have had requests for a women's debate meet first at Washburn College, S. A. C., and Washburn College. At these institutions the idea has been worked out very satisfactorily. If the women can win, then why it cannot be made possible." William Y. Stewart, of Hutchinson, a freshman in the School of Eng- ineering at Michigan State. Chancellor Frank Strong delivered an address at the Coates House in Kansas City City Tuesday night before the memorial service of Reverend James, the Baptist churches of Kansas City. Although spring has been here today and gone tomorrow for some time, new spring hats and suits are beginning to flourish. All there is to look forward to now is the first straw hat. ANNOUNCEMENTS All Varsity basketball men that played in any game come to Bricken's tonight at 7:30. Banquet and election of captain, W. O. Hamilton. All students or professors interested in the formation of a society to fight the use of cigarettes are asked to attend 110 Fraser, Monday, April 3, at 7:30. The Methodist students will give a war foil in Myers Hall tomorrow night at eight o'clock. Everybody out. "NO FOOD RIOT IN BERLIN" Writes WRRS C. HOFFMAN There never has been a food riot in Berlin, or anything ever approaching a riot according to a letter received Saturday by Mrs. Charles Kennedy, an assistant secretary from Mrs. Corrad Hoffman, wife of U.S.'s former Y. M. C. A. secretary. "It is all so quiet and peaceful and everything moves with such a regularity that it almost annoyes me. The cars run right on schedule, the subway trains are always on time to the second, and everything runs so systematically that I feel sometimes like musing it up a little," writes Mrs. Hoffman. "What suffering is going on in Berlin is all under the surface and one has to get well acquainted with folks who were also suffering in hospitals. One woman I saw and talked with almost every other day for two months before I learned that one of her sons had been missing for fifteen years. They bear their sorrows stocically." Mr. Hoffman's work is enormous and Mrs. Hoffman is aiding him by keeping the account books of money sent to German prisoners in Russia through the Y. M. C. A. and money loaned by the Russian A. M. to the Teutonic captives to be repaid by their friends and relatives. TIGER AND JAYHAWK TO CLASH IN FO The Tigers were bemused during Thanksgiving day on their home fi by the Jayhawker football clew The Jayhawkers were more or chagined by the "show me" crowd a certain Convention Hall in Kau City recently. But the bird of t. Crimson and Blue recouped and can, be held at St. Louis with a vindicated. However, there's another time coming, for on April 7 K. U. will mix with M. U. again. In the debate arena this time will the fight be resumed when the question of abolishing inter-collegiate athletics will be affirmed by Missouri and the kansans in Fraser Hall The kansans in Fraser Hall this debate will be three of the following four: W. H. Shinn, Odis Burns, Raymer McQiston, and L. N. Anderson. C, J. Mcdock, of Silver Lake, was Lawrence Friday visiting his dau- ter, Ruth. On his return home he gave him the command and visit until Monday. Perfect Fits Prof. E. Gallon, of the d2 archa- tology of Romance languages, has return- ed from a two weeks' visit to Chicago and Wheaton, Illinois. Miss El Neu Schwender had charge of P classes during her absence. In order to get the perfect fit you so desired in your new spring gown, suit or coat, you must have the new model corset to fit it over. Our expert corsetiere will be pleased to fit you in the right model in a W. B., C. B., or Gos sard corset. WEAVER'S --- For the Dressing Table IF you want to see a beautiful line of toilet articles for the dressing table you should pass by our window. Here is displayed an exceptionally attractive line of dainty toilet requisites consisting of manicure sets, toilet sets, military sets, powder boxes, brushes, combs, and many small toilet articles. We believe you will see something in the window that you need and we know that if you come inside and look over the complete line you will certainly find something to add to your dressing table. YE SHOP OFF FINE QUALITY Clothes Don't Make the Man, but try to Get a Job in Soiled Linen and Threadbare Trousers "Dress Up" puts confidence in your approach