UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THEATRE VARSITY The College Theatres TONIGHT ONLY CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG IN “CAMILLE” TOMORROW—"Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines" Don't worry about getting your shave in time to keep an appointment. Don't worry about the way your hair or skin looks. Don't worry about your hair coming out or your scalp trouble. Come to us. Why Worry? We'll Do It Place yourself in our hands. Let us know that you must keep an appointment and wish your work done quickly, that you want dandrilled cured, hair invigorated, scalp cleansed. We'll take the time to step on to complain what you want. But don't worry about it. Our shop is one where our customers do not worry. We do it for them. HOUK'S The Shop of the Town The Housewife Looks For The Best Grocery Prices She is vitally interested in the cost of every article on the table because she has the economy of the household at heart. You, Madam, can find something better and cheaper at our store for the meal tomorrow or Sunday. Call 40 on either phone and order from this list: 3 qts. cranberries . . . 25c . mackeral . . . 25c 3 cans hominy . . . 25c 1 gal. kraut . . . 25c 1 lb. Red Wolf coffee . . 25c 3 cans oysters . . . 25c 3 lbs. mince meat . . 25c No. 3 cans F.F.O.G. pumpkin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25c 1 quart bulk olives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25c 1 lb. English walnuts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20c 2 cans corn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15c 2 cans peas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15c 3 cans tomatoes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25c 3 lbs. evaporated peaches . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25c 1 lb. bulk dates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15c We are waiting at the othe, end of the line with an order book and pencil in hand. Allen's Park Grocery Sold by PECKHAM PICTURES ROUSE INTEREST Snapshots of Vanity Fair Competitors Appear on Hill The appearance of the big show case containing kodak pictures of all but seven of the contestants in the Vanity Fair Contest caused a great increase of interest in the selection of the ten persons who are to occupy the Vanity Fair section of the Jayhawker, according to Ross E. Busenkard. There will be a daily announcement of the standing of the contestants in the show case for the first three days next week. After that time the standings will be kept secret until the final round where at which time the successful candidates will appear. The contest closes at 6 o'clock, Friday, March 3. The Jayhawker management says that the contestants at the present time are still very well grouped. There is a difference of only about 5,000 votes between the two extremes. Some of the contestants now standing in front are having their votes hold back in order to make a firing finish. That votes might be cast with more convenience a ballot box has been installed in the office of the box that is in the Jayhawker office. ...Votes may be cast in either of these places all next week. Ballots to be voted on areaker or officer or from the contestants. E. M. Johnson announces that an entirely new display feature will make its appearance next week. A task force is set up to the effect that each organization that has paid its dues will receive 1,000 votes if it has taken a single page or 1,500 votes if it has taken two pages. The organizations will decide whose candidate or candidates to cast their votes at their regular meetings. WOMEN'S GLEE CLUB IS PLANNING APRIL FESTIVAL The choruses for "The Spanish Gypsies," which the women Glebe will give in April, are divided into three parts. The Spanish chorus will meet every Wednesday at 5 o'clock at North College, and the Gypsies will meet there on Thursdays at the same hour, who have a part in the choruses are: Gypseis: Helen Rhodes, Marie Buchanan, Josephine Gillett, Margaret Fitch, Pauline McNeil, Heilen Naismith, Jane Parmeer, Helen Topping, Dorothy Cole, Gladys Bitzer, Cora Shinn and Edna Davis. Grape Gatherers: Ruth McCord, Dora Lockett, Pauline Ketchum, Myrie Cruse, Adrians Gillet, 'Forest Denigan, Gladys Henry, Mona Clair, James Jorges, Evelyn Hall, Hester Lamb, Joergs lernamb, Jessie Buck, Mina Canfield, Ruby Whitcraft, Mary Lin, Clarra Scheuer, Margaret DeForest, Rose Haworth, Beulah Wingfield and Lucile Phinney. If you miss your paper, phone the Western Union (4321 Bell) between 7 and 8 o'clock. Mary Munford, '16 Pharmic, returned Wednesday morning from Garnet, where she was called last before the serious sickness of her nephew. Please be sure the carrier has missed you because he is fined 25c for your call. "Three fingers down," "hards it," "roundsons," "no fudgen." "slips go," "knucks up," and a few other words will make up the small boy's vocabulary for the next three months. NORMALS GET FEATHERS I have sold my confectionery and ice cream business to Mrs. Ida E. Pollock who will conduct the business unless she will permit it, that the liberal patronage that I have enjoyed will be extended to the new firm. They will give prompt service and courteous treatment, and the bills will be paid in full. The new firm will collect all bills due me. Anyone having a bill against me will please leave it at the desk for settlement. Thanking the public for their business has given me these many years, I am. Friday and Saturday are fruit salad days at Wiedmann's.—Adv. Chocolates, to be good must be fresh. We make our own. Wieden. Beers. Notice 99-3 Very respectfully, Wm. Wiedemann. Jerk Out a Few Jayhawker Plumes in Basketball Very respectfully, W. H. J. Tangle The Emporia Normal's defeated K U. in basketball last night. The game was important in several ways besides the 36 to 25 score which the Emporarians roller up, in a play by "BIL" Hoggis, a former assistant to Coach Hamilton, and the honor of being the first—and probably the last—non-Conference basketball team to defeat Kentucky in years. Years Coach Hamilton has been here. From the start the game looked bad for Kansas, for the visitors took a two point lead on the Holt, Kennedy, Kowalski. The team was opened for the Crimson and Blue. By the middle of the period it looked worse, and by the end of the half it resembled a funeral, the score standing 22 to13 with Kansas on the short The start of the final half looked fine for Kansas, for Gibbens, Pattinson, and Uhlrubl got budy and narried down to five points. Then the Kansas attack stopped and the Teachers resumed. The second period closed with a total of twelve points for Kansas and half and fourteen for the Emporiums. As an individual scorer and star, Cross, the Teachers' right forward, gets the prize. A total of ten field goals by the team have peved one's contribution to his team's score. Culter of football fame ran a good second with six. Normlas (36) G. FT. F. Culter, f. 6 2 2 Cross, f. 10 0 0 Hartgweil, c. **0** 0 3 Hendrickson, g. 0 0 1 Herschler, g. 1 0 3 The details of the game: Totals, 17 17 Kansas (25) G. G. FT. Kennedy, f. 2 0 Gibbens, f. 2 1 Kowal, f. 2 0 Pattinson, f. 2 0 Holt, c. 2 0 Uhrlub, c. 2 0 Rober, g. 0 1 Neison, g. 0 0 Appel, g. 1 0 -- -- Totals 11 3 Referee, Lowman, K. S. A. C. HALL OF WISCONSIN TO ADDRESS POLITY CLUB Arnold Bennett Hall, professor of International Law at the University of Wisconsin, will address the members of the International Polity Club naxxat to the jury night. Professor Hill asks the jury night of the regular Polity Club speakers sent out by the American Association for International Conciliation of New York City. A book on international law has recently been published by the University's subject of the address has not been given out, but will probably deal with some present day problems concerning international relations. The place of meeting will be published Monday's issue of the Daily Kansan. Professor G. Lowes Dickinson of Cambridge University, London, England, will address the club March 22. The reporters on the Daily news kept their bargains in this column. In this column, morrow or real service in their newspapers, they on to the readers, assing them on to the they too, will benefit from them. Advertised in this column have been their them on to you with no hesitation article, advertised in "Tomorotomorot" column and are not perfectly satisfied money will be refunded by the newspaper. TOMORROW'S BEST BARGAINS Bigelow has a new line of "Sunshine Multi'l" for tomorrow. A ten-cent package contains thirty wafers with a delicious blending. You can phone your order in. A big 16-course bottle of Maple sugar sold at the tomorrow of William Le- thorne for the tomorrow of William Le- thorne. "The Student Lunch" at the Varsity Library, in preparation for those downstairs at the preparer's office. Limbs are now in season. You can train them to run or row by getting a limbadee "made" row by getting a limbadee "made" leg using a leg exercise. The Schumann Club, at 1325 Kentucky, enjoyed a seven o'clock breakfast at Woodland Park, Tuesday morning. Jane Weaver, "16 College, returned to her home in Blue Mound, Saturday, for a few days. A special ice cream will taste great on the morning known tomorrow. Reynolds a la hale. The University Book Store has a designer to create custom paintings. They are selling now. Pop corn crisp. Fresh every day Twenty cents per pound. Wide mde size. $0.99. Senior Play Troys Friday afternoon at 4, Saturday morning at 10 Old Grads Pay K, U. A Visit Among the old graduates and former students of the School of Pharmacy who visited the University of Texas penned the following ancient pill-shooters were recognized; John Smart, '15, of Gainesville, Texas; Ernest Gates of Galena and W. N. Squires of Galena and Leland. N. Squires in 1841 in '14; Melvin Johnson of Sabeth; and C. A. Pedroa of Hill City. SUGGESTS MEMORIAL PLAN Dean Templin Would Spend Money for Beautification That appropriations for memorials from the graduating classes could be used to better advantage than they are now, if given toward the goal of the college, the belief of Dean Olin Templin of the College. His suggestion is the abolition of annual individual gifts by the senior class, and that the amount raised for this purpose be planted in planting trees and shrubbery. "I think that if the graduating class could add, say, two hundred or two hundred and fifty dollars each year toward the improvement of a building would be a long step in the right direction," said the Dean yesterday. "True, the memorials already given have been and always will be appreciated, but if enough money could be obtained we would have a campus that would be one of the best in the country—even better than it is now. If every senior class takes a trip to a museum or perhaps a certain part of the Hill the buildings and sections that now look so barren would be greatly benefited. Take the south slope back of the Gymnasium, for instance. There's a place that would look a whole lot better if some trees were growing KEEP EVERY PICTURE You've been saving every one? Perhaps. Get all of your kodak pictures out to night and count them. Try to remember the ones you took and saved from last year's kodakaking; the football games to which you carried a kodak and were so careful to get a snap-shot of; the winter seals of the campus; time-exposures taken in your room. Where are they? You've lost several, the ones you wanted most? Had you kept each picture in $p$ MEMORY BOOK You would have every one today. They would have been secure from the friends who are always asking for just one, the one that you don't wish to part with. When you unpacked the trunk last June there would have been no broken corners, no warped or bent prints, no ruined pictures. Get one of our Memory or Scrap Books tomorrow. They range from 50 cents to three dollars. Art Corners, a new device for putting your kodak pictures on the page, will keep the corners down and allow artistic grounding. Those pictures you are keeping now in that old stationery box, get them out, and arrange them in one of our memory books. Then when you have them in the book "title" them with the new white lead pencil for writing on black or gray paper. You have the pictures. Get the book. Arrange them with the new art corks and "title" them. Will you show pictures of K. U. life to your friends this summer? See our windows when you are down town this afternoon and tomorrow. University Book Store 803 Mass. St. there instead of the way it is now. if the Museum and buildings at the southern end of the campus had a few shrubs or trees near them it would make all the difference in the world." Helen Chambers, 119 College, who has been ill for the last week, took up her college work again Wednesday. Prof. and Mrs. Griffith and son George had just returned from a shopping trip to Kansas City. During the evening the Chancellor's name was mentioned several times and the little five-year-old's curiosity grew. This is this Chancellor Strong and what does he do?" asked George. His mother explained the Chancellor's duties in the most common terms and asked George if he understood. I understand perfectly, mamma," he said, "the Chancellor is a floor-walker." Carl "Swede" Kennedy, one of Coach Hamilton's mainstays on the basket ball team, went to Blue Rap-onday to visit his sister and friends. W. O. Hamilton went to Topeka Tuesday night to attend the banquet and caucus of the Democratic party. Mr. Hamilton made a speech nominating him as the director of athletics at the university, for the office of governor. SAMUEL G. CLARKE 707 Mass. Street. If it's $20 or so that you care to pay for your Spring Suit, by all means have it tailored to order by Ed. V. Price & Co., Merchant Tailors, Chicago. It is a recognized fact, that no ready made shop or small tailor can give you equal value for the same money. See me today. You May Be Sure OWEN SERVICE that when we press or clean your suit it receives the same careful treatment that you give it. Our methods are the most modern and painstaking possible. You get your suit back looking as if it had just come from the store where you bought it. is what you get when you call 510 Bell. OUR WORK WILL SATISFY—or we will. Pressing Tickets on Sale at Rowlands. KRESS' 5-10 AND 25CENT STORE MONDAY SPECIAL—Framed Pictures Genuine wood frames and the pictures are "Old Masters" SPECIAL 25 Cents Spring Sale of Household Utensils Begins Monday Specials Every Day "WATCH KRESS' WINDOWS" Make your savings WORK, don't let them SHIRK, but remember, "SAFETY FIRST." Twenty years' experience making loans. Ask me. Interviews strictly private and confidential. E. L. HILKEY, Investment Banker LAWRENCE, KANSAS, PELL 155 Peoples State Bank Building. HOME 2202. SHE WILL APPRECIATE THEM Flowers from THE FLOWER SHOP Kodak Finishing----2 1/4 Hour Service If You Teach School next year you are probably getting ready to send out applications for a position. Are you not going to send a GOOD picture of yourself with the applications? Why not get a Loomas Photo at the Loomas Price? 50c for six photos "three by four" pictures, unmounted, ready to put in the envelope. Take advantage of this remarkable offer and arrange for a sitting by calling up: The LOOMAS STUDIOS 925 Mass. St. Phone H-210 719 Mass. St. (Over Bell Bros.) (Over Elec. Light Office)