UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The"Layer-Felt"Mattress Built—not stuffed—to last and give comfort for a life-time. Let us show you one. Layer Felts are cheap at prices ranging from $8.50 to $20.00 "If We Haven't It We'll Get It." "Acquaint Us With Your Needs." Baby Mattresses and cheaper grades of full sized mattresses $2.50 and upward 806-810 Mass. St. BELL BROS. Talking Machine Headquarters The only store in Lawrence showing Victor Victrolas, Columbia Grafa- nolas and Edison Diamond Disc Phonographs. The only store where you can see, hear and compare in an im- nas and Edison Diamond Disc Phonographs. The only store where you can see, hear and compare in an im- ment of the merits of the different standard machines. The only store where you can see, hear and feel the partial way the merits of the different standard machines. If you are thinking of buying any talking machine come in and test them to your own satisfaction. All the Newest Models. All the Latest Records. Easy Monthly Payments Private demonstration booths and musically trained salespeople are distinctly to your advantage. Bell Bros. Music Co. G. W. Hamilton, Mgr. AN INVITATION Is Extended to You To visit our Spring Exposition Suit Department of the Season's Authentic Styles In Ready-to-Wear Suits, Silk Dresses and Dancing Dresses Beautiful sport coats, Georgette crepe waists in coral, flesh, blue and white. We invite you also to inspect our stock of Cotton and Silk Hosiery Our stock of coed taffetas, street and evening wear, crepe de chines, Georgette crepes, tub silks, fancy crepe silks Innes, Bullene & Hackman TO GRANT FELLOWSHIPS Committee has Received 48 Applications for Scholarships Forty-eight applications for University fellowships in the various departments of the Graduate School next year, have been received by Dean F. W. Blackmar. The time for receiving applications closed March 1st. After carefully considering the individual merit of the applicants, the fellowship committee will select seven from the number, whose names will be announced at commencement. time. These fellowships, which are worth $2500 each, are granted each year by the University for the encouragement of advanced study and research, and are open to all persons holding B. E. degree from this institution or other accredited institutions. The fellowships are opened to almost every department at the Graduate School. the Kansas College fellowships will be announced at the same time as those of the University fellowships. A fellowship is also granted to a graduate from each of the eleven following Kansas colleges: Baker, tawa, McPherson, Mpheson, Fairmount, Southwestern, Miland, Wesleyan, Bethany, Bethel and these fellows are elected by the respective colleges on the individual scholarship. The winners of NOTED GEOLOGIST HERE The Rev. Mr. Bennett is an Authority on Rock Formation The Rev. John Bennett, of Kansas City, who spent Thursday visiting the department of geology has contributed more to Kansas geology than any other one man. He is an Episcopal minister, but has found time in the past twenty years to minutely the minute of eastern Kansas, and Missouri. There is an alien outcrop of rocks or shale in eastern Kansas that he has not studied. The state geological report is almost entirely based on his work. Reverend Mr. Bennett has carried on this study as a pasttime, and has used it as a diversion from his regular ministerial work. As a result he has become the best known authority on geological formations of the state Reverend Mr. Bennett was 80 years old. While at the University he was the guest of the Sigma Gamma fraternity which elected him an honorary member. Sigma Gamma Epilon is an honorary Mineral and Geological fraternity. "So long as the problems of poverty, defectiveness and crime remain matters of sentiment, there can be no solution for them. Only as men see the loss in dollars, will they realise the waste of these evil's. The true facts must be brought before the people of the state, and especially the businessmen in order that remedial work may be done." Problems of Poverty and Crime Must be Faced Squarely Says Gillin ELIMINATE SENTIMENT Thus spoke Prof. J. L. Gillin, of the department of sociology at the University of Wisconsin, at a lecture yesterday afternoon in Fraser chapel, on "The Cost of Crime, Poverty and Defectives." Mr. Gillin, author with Prof. J. L. Gillin, Blackmar of their text, is used by students at U. U. The numbers, or rather estimates of those falling in these classes, the cost of their maintenance by the state, methods of arousing public sentiment and of coping with the situation were set forth by the speaker there. "According to Eugene Smith, there are 250,000 dependents while Bushnell places the figure at 3,000,000. These estimates are based on exhaustive studies in the eight states of York, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Wisconsin, and California. The most conservative research is based upon those who were reported to public authorities, places the number at 550,000. Somewhere between these two widely varying figures lies the truth. Says Gillin varying budget. "Here in Kansas you have 6,309 dependents cost the state $1,028,000, which almost equals the amount of money spent on your state University and your state Agriculture. In Wisconsin we spend nearly enough money for our state's dependents to pay state capital building annually. Business estimates that the cost to the United States of maintaining these classes amounts to $1,000,000, while the U. S. Department Reports state that the U. S. government charges on the money invested in penal and corrections institutions would equal $1,224,597. 597. "In order to prevent these wastes, the public should be enlightened as to the best methods of dealing with the problem. The bringing of the manless job and the jobless man together, the better use of leisure time by young people, both in the factory and small country town, the substitution of work farms, workhouses and jails, and appointment of a higher education efficient class of relief officials are steps that must be taken in order to bring about a solution of the problem of the anti-social and pseudo-social elements of our population." Plain Sales from thh Hills Harold Yost, who is a sophomore in the College last year, writes from Santa Ana, Calif., that he is enjoying the southern climate and averaging 1000 miles a month with it. "When on the asphalt road," he says, "I'll walk for K. U. sometimes and am going to try to be back with the bunch again next fall." Chairs are in great demand by the class in history of American painting. There is one ideal always reserved for those who come into class last and most students feel that it is better to hurry a little than to sit for an hour with feet dangling about a yard from the floor. The following new members have been elected to Pi Gamma Sigma, national educational sorority: Janet Thompson, Hazel Carson, Rachael San-che, Ruth Daniels, Rachel Mona, Mona Undergraduate; and Louise Hodgers; undergraduates; and Anna Myers, Jessie Jacobs and Anna Baker from the Graduate School. Do you belong to that class of people who enjoy a long walk alone? If so, you have brains, according to an instructor in the English department. Sigma Gamma Epsilon, mining, geology and millage fraternity, held graduation Wednesday night for the following men: Elmer Smith and Mort Snoop, '18 Engineers; William Ainsworth, '16 College, Prof. William A. Whitaker, and Dr. John Bennett, of Kansas City, Kans. Mrs. J. S. Engel, of Abilene, is visiting her daughter, Viola Engel, at the Alemannia house. of Kansas "CHP" Doctor Justus is an Episcopal minister who has done a great deal for Kansas geology, which he admits is his hobby. "Early to bed and early to rise," is the motto of other schools than the institution of Kansas. The faculty board of the University of Washington has ordered all dances to close at 11:30. Mona Glare Huffman, Bonnie Lingenfelter, Corrine Leesh, Lorum Pumpfries, Skinner, Marie Basten, Mink Banks, and Alice Davis will spend Saturday in Kansas City. They will shop in the morning, and see the Russian Ballet at Convention Hall in the afternoon. The scarcity of chocolate caused by the falling off of imports on account of the European war threatens to hit at one of the dearest things in a K. U. student's life—the "Hersahey." For six weeks, E. C. Bricken, owner of the Oread Cafe, has had his usual standing order of fifty boxes a week of the wholesalers, but not all of any chocolate bars, he appeared. Reduced to necessity, he has borrowed a score more of boxes from down a store or wholesalers, but Wednesday night found this source exhausted. Unless there is a speedy shipment, practically all of the Lawrence merchants will be sold out of the delicacy. If you miss your paper, phone the western Union (4321 Bell) between 7 and 8 o'clock. A loom has been received in the department of home economies. The women who have been trying to thread it say that it requires so much time and effort that we see how clothes were ever made by their great-great grandparents. Braden, '17 College, grand vice-president of the Achoor sorority, is attending the annual conclave of the sorority and is being held in Atlanta this week. Please be sure the carrier has missed you because he is fined 25c for your call. ... TOMORROW'S BEST BARGAINS The reporters on the Daily Kananen have found the bargains listed in this column for morale service their individual and are assinging them on to the readers in the hope of receiving them. The articles advertised in this column have proved on to you with no hearsay. It is purchased, however, if advertised "Tomorrow's Best Bargain" column are not perfectly fulfilled by the Kananen and no questions asked. Take Nylal's Luxative Pine Balsam for that cough. It it's mentholated, Two revitalizes in one. For 50 cents at Nirafson's at Nirafson's. Initial post cards, 5c the dozen, at Heady's. Chocolate almonds 59 cents a lb. chocolate nints 29c. Saturday and Sunday only at the Round-Corner Drug Co. Safety razor free at Gustafson's to anyone wearing in our store Saturday needing a shave, providing you buy the blades. Fresh fruits for little spreads are applicable to most of the following: the standard, high-grade. Lacoste. Presh oblipment Sunshine cakes, 10 to 25 lbs the lib. Just the thing for that Sunday dinner, Court House Grocery. You Lawnt! you can get a regular 50 box of stationery for two-bits the rest of the week at Rowland's. It will keep. *Banana nut ice cream* for that Sun- sack. It is a keymold a special for the Sack. A brass student lump stand 40- inches high - displayed at Ecke's front entrance. Regular price is $7.5, but tomorrow for $4.50. After the dance take her to the Var- sity and enjoy some fine line of sandwiches and hot drinks. Correct English The buildings of the University are used not only in the daytime but also at night is the conclusion of one student, after passing through the campus on his way home from school at a stadium. He reports that there was a light burning in some room in nearly every building, where some worked professor or student Josephine Turck Baker, Editor A Monthly Magazine Josephine Turck Baker, Editor A Monthly Magazine For Progressive Men and Women, Business and Professional; Club-Women Teachers Students Ministers Doctors Lawyers Stenographers and for all who wish to Speak and Write Correct English SPECIAL FEATURE EVERY MONTH Your Every-Day Vocabulary: How to Enlarge It Sample Copy 10c Subscription Price $2.00 a Year EVANSTON, LINOIS Josephine Turck Baker's Standard Magazine and Books are recommended was using the "midnight oil" method of keeping up his work. Special caramel nut ice cream at Niediemann's.—Adv. Special caramel nut ice cream at Wiedemann's — Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. 13 off CANDY SALE All Chase and Douglas box candies are being closed out at 1/3 off 1/3 OFF Take her a box tonight GRIGGS BANANA NUT for SUNDAY DINNER Also Chocolate, Vanilla Strawberry, Caramel Nut ORANGE ICE Call Up On Either Phone We'll deliver your order in time for Sunday Dinner REYNOLDS BROS. BONWIT TELLER & CO. The Specialty Shop of Originations FIFTH AVENUE AT 38TH STREET NEW YORK Vivacious Fashions for College Wear There's a viacite these fashions for college wear—a new independence. Care-free, happy-go-lucky sports suits of studied negligence. Hats—close fitting to defy campus winds—or broad flaring to defy campus suns. And new modes in apres midi frocks for the jeune fille. Simplificate, the esprit de jeunesse—but with a suggestion, too, of old-world coetetric that is delightful. Danse Frocks, Taillleurs, Blouses, Footwear — every accessory for apparrelling the jeune fille. BOWERSOCK THEATRE Today and Tomorrow Four Complete Shows Matinee 2:30-4:00, Night 7:45-9:15 FAMOUS PLAYERS PRESENT THE FASCINATING MARIE DORO IN A PICTURIZATION OF SARDOU'S GREAT INTERNATIONAL DRAMA "DIPLOMACY" PRODUCED BY THE FAMOUS PLAYERS FILM COMPANY Marie Doro will be remembered as being here in "MORALS OF MARCUS" and "THE WHITE PERIL." She is a regular Paramount star now and will be seen here often. Admission 10 cents. ALSO PARAMOUNT TRAVEL WEEKLY