UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THEATRE VARSITY TONIGHT ONLY HENRY B. WALTHALL in "THE RAVEN" A Romance of Edgar Allen Poe 1 CITY CAFE Eat there and get good coffee with Pure Cream Creamy Butter for your hot cakes A. HAKES. Promote. MODEL LAUNDRY 11 and 13 W.9th Phones: Bell 156; Home 145 Special discount to K. U. students. Market Cafe Open and Ready for Business Neatest little lunch room in the city Perkins Bldg. J. J. Collins, Prop. Corona and Fox Typewriters are sold exclusively in Law- rence by F. I. Carter, 1025 Mass. St. We have machines for rent and a full line of supplies. Who should you buy Straight Life instead of a 90-Pay Life Policy? L. S. Beagly SHUBE MR. CYRIL MAUDE THE DISTINGUISHED English Actor MR. CYRIL MAUDE In His Internation^a^3 Trumph, The Concert Meiodrama NEXT—"ADELE" From Other Campuses Students at Cornell have an iced toobogan slide and lake for skating, just off the campus. While a hand plays the skaters do their starring on the ice, all for an admission fee of ten cents. "She!' we continue to have the special hours for 'stunt' nights?" is a question which the Student Government Association at DePaul University is trying to decide. After concerts and school stunts girls go down town, even though the concert lasts longer than the usual date hour. Football and other sports will be restored at George Washington University, the faculty committee means that activities can the students mean for taxing them. During the fiscal year ending June 30 last, 4,162 persons contributed $90,683 to the Yale University Alumni Fund. The rapid growth of George Washington University may necessitate the limiting of the student body next year. No operations have been performed at the University of Michigan hospital for two weeks. The gripe is the hospital and forty nurses are sick. McGill University, Canada, has 50 many students serving in the armies in Europe that the authorities have authorized to visit contests for the rest of this year. Flirting among the freshmen coeds of Pennsylvania is punished by a nose imposed by the sophomore girls. While listening to a speech on preparedness in the Armor's scene of University of Minnesota last Friday, several hundred students were drenched and a hundred or more new equipment for the occasion, were ruined. A water pipe in the fire protecting department, burst. Twenty-six members of the Sixty Fourth Congress now in session are graduates of the University of Michigan, the most alumni of any university in congress in congress Harvard has twenty. Women Want Building, Too The women at the University of Missouri have started a campaign for a women's building. Letter men in athletics at the University of Utah will, hereafter, receive the button-hole pin, if they desire. Thus decided the athletic council at its meeting, Monday. This pin will be awarded in place of the sweater and will be a badge of honor and all men who wear such a pin will be admitted to athletic games free of charge. who have won two, three or four varsity awards undoubtedly will choose this pin as one of the awards. It will be a gold pin with a red central background upon which will be engraved the block "U." A report of the university loan fund committee at Illinois shows that $70,000 has been loaned to the students from the loan fund of the university. In 1895 the total available fund was $158. Harvard Cets New Pool Harvard Gets New Pool Harvard is to have a new swimming pool. The alumni and the undergraduates have already subscribed $10,000 toward the fund for building the pool. Athletics Are Popular At Princeton, 78 per cent of the students are engaged in some form of athletic competition. Harvard Sports Popular Harvard athletic statistics issued recently show that 1638 student have engaged in some form of sports, of which football proved the most popular. New Courses At Princeton Ten new courses... seen added to the curriculum of Princeton on our versity. These consist of special courses in Ethics, English, Byzantine Art, Greek Paleology, Byzantine History, Christianity, Advanced English Composition and Psychology. Skate On Gridiron Jordan Field, the former athletic field of the University of Indiana, will be converted into an ice skating rink this winter. Vale Athletics Pay With a losing team this fall the Yale Athletic Association was still able to take in approximately $115,000, of which over $100,000 was taken at the Princeton and Harvard games. 16 "Talk With Sociology" 17 "Career Pathology" 18 "Will, speak before - the class in Socia Pathology Thursday on "Social Settlement Work." Since leaving the University of California, Gee has been in contact with the Taoist and Settlement in Kansas City, Missouri To Talk To Sociologists ANNOUNCEMENTS The Correspondence Study Department of the University Extension Division has been moved from 117 Fraser to 111 Fraser, the room vacated by Assistant Registrar, Miss Emily Zwick and her force. Those who have rooms to rent for the 'Merchants' short course Feb. 7-11 please call Extension Di division, K. U. 101. Professor Hill wants to meet the debate squad in his office at 5:30 Monday. As a result of an intelligence test given to twenty-four freshmen at Texas University, it was found that only nineteen of them could name the two United States senators from Texas. Twenty of the twenty-four were unable to give the names of Texans in the present Cabinet. Eighthien were ignorant of the names of former University graduates, and nineteen did not know where they was founded, while only seven of the class could give the names of three famous generals in the European war. WHERE ARE ETCHINGS? And yet, according to the Texas English department, this class is far above the average English I education in intelligence. -Student 1242 WAKE UP, TEXAS! A NURSERY RHYME The great Henry Ford, He climbed up aboard To eat international pie. He stuck in his thumb at a hep bone And said, "What a good boy am I!" Minnesota Daily. Exhibit Sent From Tulane University Seems to be Missing The question of the whereabouts of the 160 etchings for the exhibit that was to have taken place in the museum at the month of July becomes a puzzling one to Prof. W. A. Griffith. The exhibition which was in New, Orleans at Tulane University during the latter part of the year, has been on here by January first. "The pictures are supposed to be here now and I have no idea where they can be," said Professor Griffith yesterday. "I am very interested in the secretary of the Society of Etchers asking me to send to Chicago a certain etching in the group. The picture is by an American living in Europe and is wanted for a magazine article on Etching. It is the only one in the collection made by this artist. The exhibit may be expected by express at any time." The date of the art exhibit has been definitely set for the last week of February and the first two weeks of March. The paintings are at the University of Nebraska now and will be sent to Manhattan from there, then on to the University of Kansas. The exhibit this year will be much smaller than usual only twelve masterpieces having been selected as against forty last year. However these twelve are much better works of art than any that have been shown in previous years, according to Professor Griffith, and as much to them as the forty that have been displayed last year. Most of the paintings came from the 'National Gallery of Art of Washington, D. C., and are among the choicest pieces. The exhibit will be made larger by several paintings by Kanss, including some by Prof. W. S. Griffith, himself. A few of the Kansans who will be represented are: represented are: W. S. Griffith, Lawrence. Fern Edie, Lawrence. Lettie Brown, Lawrence. Virgin Underwood, Lawrence. Virgin John T. Moore, Lawrence. F. M. Baredicet, Lawrence. Gladwy Nelson, Lawrence. C. Dickenson, Lawrence. Stone, Toneka. * * 64 * * agge, Topeka. Dave C. Topeka. Berger Almanzen, Lnsborg. John Lindsborg. John Jenkins, Wichita. John oble, Wichita. Elizabeth Sprague, Wichita. Men You Know—and Don't Prof. C. A. Dykstra Old man, your century-long search is ended. Here's a man that without the slightest hesitation, admits that he is a teacher's son. But that "Mister" doesn't sound just right, either. And he is much too intellectual looking to be called a professor. 'lets see' (business) the whitewheel Mr. Dyfstyei 8 near) how will it sound to call him "Dvk." M. Dykstra, step up and shake hands. Dyk—as he is a university-all-known was cut out for a preacher. In the political campaign of 1884, when he was stirring the racism—having been born in 1883—his father, who was a minister in the Dutch Reformed church in Cleveland, Ohio, decided that Clarence Addison should be educated for a preacher. Clarence Addison thought other- POLITICAL CENTER TERMINAL END. Dyk's political career began in the age of 5 years. He carried a torch in a parade and lifted his voice, which, by the way, has since become some voice—in the stirring hymn: At the tender age of sixteen, he entered Central College in Iowa which had for its chief purpose, the training of ministers and missionaries. In order of things was shown by the fact that when a cow was found the morning after Hallowen on the third floor of one of the buildings, only two men in the whole college came to do it. The other was his brother. To those who have followed his political career from its incipiency, it did not come as a surprise to hear of his being vigorously mentioned for the Kansas Senate in 1914. But that's another story. POLITICAL CAREER BEGINS EARLY Harrison is a wise man Cleveland is a fool." "Harrison rides a white horse. WAS RIGHT IN THE SWIM The subsequent three years, he spent at the University of Iowa. Here he was bored almost to the point of extraction by the lack of things to do. He tried to fill in the gap that he had in his baseball, football and track and participating largely in literary societies, debates, winning first money in an oratorical contest, organizing the first dramatic club, managing and taking the leading role in "The Rival," and playing the lad in the senior play, "The Rivals," handling athletic news for the Quill, helping to organize the Daily Iowa—and a team at a college to the University of Chicago. His next political triumph, before the Senatorship was offered, was the management of the Junior Hop, which wasn't so bad for a minister's son. After a year spent at the University of Chicago, he accepted the chair of history and English at the Pensacola Classical School at Pensacola, Florida. Here he coached the football and basketball teams, taught and篮球队 and when the Yale University basketball team was touring the south, a picked team was organized from the town men to oppose them. Clarence found himself staring into the face of Hyatt, the All-American that forgot the exact number of points that Yale scored, but it was enough. The next year found him back at the University of Chicago where he was a fellow for the first year and became his second. Then Ohio State University called, and Professor Dykstra's name was soon on the Ohio payroll. The University of Kansas next burst into fame, by adding his name to the already long list of tennis players. But Clarence Addison Dykstra came not to the University alone. Mrs. Clarence Addison came along. He thought it best to begin the new life in a new country. Until 1914 his sole bid for fame was the fact that he was graduated in the same class with Valjalmar Stephenson and Rudolph Anderson the Arctic explorers, and that the Ames, Drake and Oklahoma Aggies coaches all departed into the cold world at the same time. That seemed not enough. He had to get Paddy. Paddy, as you know, is a bull terrier—and some bulldog terrier at that. Since he is closely related to the Becker dog, Bunny Wilson's dog and "Pink," who belongs to C. C. Young, his cupboard iteration of Mr. Chew in the chewing machine reviewer's shoe leather and disposing of plenty of white hair on blue serge trousers. CONGRESSIONAL BOOM DIES YOUNG CONGRESSIONAL BOOM DIES YOUNG In the language of the Daily Kanat at the hands of "Pug" Ferguson, petitions were circulated and Dylstra-for-Congress clubs were organized intention of ending the popular political teacher to congress. However, since the Class in American Government was where the movement was born, it died an early death. "But," smiled Professor Dykstra, "I received letters for a long time from my friends over the district saying that they would organize the event. I offered to offer myself as a sacriste to the newspaper ability of Ferguson." Colorado U. To Have Campus Day A Campus Day, for the purpose of beautifying their campus, is being considered by the student governing body of the University of Colorado. Last spring the students waged success against the idea for the Campus Day, which will be held some time in May, grew out of this. Oriental Languages Taught by Prof. M. J. Fitzgerald the Chinese languages will soon be offered at Chicago. There are already courses given in the Russian language. Oriental Languages Taught Of the thirty men recently elected PRESIDENT, six are at Harvard, four PRESIDENTIAL position. Organize Rifle Club American universities are busy forming an intercollegiate club club. According to reports, European colleges have been engaged in the same pursuit for several months back. None At K. U. No Freshman Participation The University of Washington has barred all freshmen from intercollegiate athletic contests. The idea is gaining favor with other coast universities. No Freshman Participation Wisconsin Gets Stadium Wisconsin Gets Stadium The new concrete athletic stadium of the University of Wisconsin will be started as soon as the weather permits. Faculty Men Bowl Faculty members of Syracuse University have organized a bowling league. Faculty Men Rowl Form New Coast Conference Portland, Ore.—A new Pacific oast football conference which includes the University of Oregon, University of Washington, and the University of Oregon has been formed. The arrangement of the schedule is such as will permit a rame between each school. SENATE INTO POSTER The Horrid Things! The Lyceum at the University of California will debate the respective merits of buttermilk and grape juice. Chancellor and Faculty to Probe For Source of Anonymous Poster An anonymous poster attacking Percy B, Shostac, instructor in rhetoric at the University, was distributed over the Hill this morning. Chancellor Strong, when the bill was thrust upon his attention this morning, said in referring to the poster: "This attack is a knife thrust in the back. I cannot think that any student, having any real love or proper respect for his University would resort to this means of righting a wrong, if it be a wrong. Any student who cares to put his compliance into effect, to harm in all my office, may have the matter taken to the University Senate, for action. There is no need for such underhand methods. "Since the bills are addressed to the Senate," the chancellor continued, "that body will be compelled to take action on the matter, and, if the perpetrators are to be punished, it will be through its hands." Another Apronstring Ohio State has forbidden any member of the Varsity football team to play professional football after he leaves college, under the penalty of losing his standing in the "O" association, which is formed of other institutions. If regulations require the only legitimate thing for the Varsity athlete to do after he graduates, will be to retire or enter the ministry. "The Witching Hour" staged by the K. U. Dramatic Club Wednesday night, was recently presented by the dramatic clubs of the University of North Carolina and Utah Agricultural College. WHEN YOU TAKE 'EM Classes meeting at 1:30 will be ex- amined Saturday m. p. m. Jan. 22, 1916. Classes meeting at 8:30 will be exam- menced Tuesday a. m., Jan. 25, 1916. Classes meeting at 4:30 will be exam- menced Tuesday a. m., Jan. 25, 1916. Classes meeting at 9:30 will be examinated Monday a. m. jun. 24, 1916. Classes meeting at 3:30 will be examinated Monday d. m. jan. 24, 1916. Classes meeting at 11:30 will be ex- cluded Wednesday a. m., Jan. 26, 1916 Exclusive Saturday Classes will be assigned Wednesday p. m., Jan. 26. Classes meeting at 10:30 will be examined Thursday a. m., Jan. 27, 1916. Classes meeting at 2:30 will be examined Friday a. m., Jan. 28, 1916. Three hour classes (and one hour classes meeting 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 Tu. or Th.) 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 scheduled above for the morning; or from 8:30 to 11:30 if scheduled 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 to the next (hour exists) at the discretion of the head of the department concerned. Classes meeting on Satdays and not on other days in the week will be examined Wednesday p. m. from 1:30 to 3:00 for one and two hour courses: from 1:30 to 3:30 for three hour courses. What is the Reason SECOND FIRST they want a Good Picture. that so many of the seniors are going to the Loomas Studio for Quality Photos? A DOZEN PICTURES AND A GLOSS PRINT FOR THE JAYHAWKER $3.00. they want to pay a Reasonable Price for their photos. Seniors, juniors, sophomores, and organizations should confer with a photographer of twenty years' experience, and arrange for a sitting by calling up: (Over the Electric Light Office) The LOOMAS STUDIO 719 Mass. St. Phone H-210 Paramount Picture PROGRAM CONSTANCE COLLIER The Famous English Beauty and Actress In THE TONGUES OF MEN. A sparkling comedy-drama of the Stage. 7:45 9:00 Admission 10 Cents Bowersock Theatre --- DELICIOUS "SUN MAID" RAISIN BREAD Three Times a Week Tuesdays, Thursdays and Satursdays 10 Cent Loaves Only Ask Your Grocer BRINKMAN'S BAKERY Do You Bowl? Just opened BRUNSWICK BOWLING ALLEYS 714 Mass. St.