UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE NEW VARSITY TONIGHT ONLY ANN MURDOCK in "A ROYAL FAMILY" (Not a costume picture) We Change Program Daily Wednesday: "Adventures of J. Rufus Wallingford" JUNIOR MEMORIAL STARTS Committe Will Begin Work Right Away—$40 now in Treasury Plans for raising the necessary funds for the junior memorial are already well worked out by the memorial committee. All the names of the class will be divided among a committee of sixteen, and these committeemen expect to reach every member of the class within a week. In addition to the amount raised from these personal assessments, the plan is to raise a large share of the required fund by means of a series of "stunts" and dances, which will be announced later. "With the announcement of the committee Friday the memorial committee is ready to begin work," said Willard M. Glasco, chairman of the committee this morning. "We have forty dollars collected by the class last year and expect to add to this at least one hundred and fifty We are still offering our justly celebrated Non-Flunkable Quiz Books For the Quizee who is having more or less trouble they are just the thing. CARTER'S 1025 Mass. St. more. I want to urge each junior to pay the assessment of fifty cents right away to any member of the committee. A list of those who pay will be published each week and we want the name of every junior on these lists. We shall give receipts for the dues and the members of the class who do not pay now will have the amount of the assessment added to their senior dues. But the big word is 'Pay Now.' Y. M. Secretary Some Boxer Hugo Wedell, the new Y. M. secretary, was limbing his muscles in the gymnasium yesterday when he spied two freshmen batting each other with box-glovees. He went over to the scene of action and put on the gloves to show them how. The lesson progressed splendidly and the freshman gaining courage under the blows decided to make use of one of the punches just shown him. Accordingly he drew back, and—Wedell took the count. "Eating at the Sanitary Cafe is good eating every day."—Adv. "Blondie" Jones, president of the class, said this noon, "Our aim is not to try to surpass the other class memorials that have been placed on the campus, but to give the class a memorial that it will be proud of and one that will further the plans for the beautification of the campus. Several members of the class have mentioned the desirability of an arch over the entrance to the University grounds. I shall get the consensus of opinion in the class and work toward the end that they desire." Alaxander Graham Bell inventor of the telephone lays his long life to drinking distilled water. Order a bottle of McNish. Phones 198.-Adv. You'll Like Our Bakery Goods Once tried, always used. Brink mans.—Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. We are offering soaps for laundry and toilet in quantities at prices that will pay you to lay in a supply. Also Other Good Values in Groceries 19 lbs. sugar ... $ 1.00 18 lbs. berry can sugar ... 1.00 1 gallon can catsup ... .40 1 glass jar jug catsup ... .75 1 doz. cans wax beans ... .85 1 doz. cans hominy ... .80 1 doz. cans peas ... .75 1 doz. cans corn ... .75 DUNMIRE'S Phones 58 8 bars Pearl White soap. .25 2 cans asparagus. .25 Also new shelled nuts, Swiss cheese, Green Chili Cheese and Olive Pimento Cheese. .1 1 lb. cocoa. . $ .30 2 lbs. best peanut butter. .25 1 large can sliced pineapple. 1.60 1 large can white cherries. .15 6 bars napta soap. .25 Particular Clearning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE 12 W. Ninth Lawrence Pantatorium Phone 506 Conklin Fountain Pens Non-Leakable and Self-Filling Sold in Lawrence at F. D. McCollock's Drug Store 847 Mass. St. KOCH "THE TAILOR" Full Line of Fur Suiting Full Line of Fall Suitings We are handling all University accounts, and we solicit your business, deposits guaranteed. 707 Massachusetts St. CITIZENS STATE BANK Order your Groceries FROM W. A. GUENTHER STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES 721 Mass st. - Phone 226 FREE A box of Hurd's 50c Papers with every SHEAFFER SELF - FILLING PEN A. G. A. Arch, 744 Mass. St. Inks, Munich, Germany, Erasers, Rubber Bands, Typewriter Papers, Printing, Engraving. PROTSCH The College Tailor Athletic Supplies of All Kind FOOTBALL GOODS Wedell and Assistants Will for 800 New Members Tomorrow KENNEDY and ERNST 826 Mass. St. Phones 314 TO STAGE Y.M. CAMPAIGN WILL HEAR NOTABLES With a committee of 105 students and fifteen faculty members, the University Y. M. C. A. opens its membership campaign tomorrow, when an effort will be made to enlist 800 men students in the ranks of the staff. A later one-day campaign is expected to reach the rest of the students. "The campaign will not be dragged out, to spread over several days," said "Dutch" Wedell, general secretary this morning, "but will be started and ended the same day. By October that a very successful campaign can be put on, and sufficient funds raised to cover the needed amount." The captains of the various subcommittees are: Lyle Anderson, Benjamin Baltzer, Otis Burns, Alex Creighton, William H. Dodds, Harry Harlan, Neal Ireland, Walter Pickering, Fred Rodkey, Glenn Russ, James L. Sellars, Charles F. Sloan, Freed L. Soper, M. M. Smith. The committeemen are: Howard Adams, Billy Aimsow, Robert Albach, Robert Bacon, Ward Barber, E. E. Bennett, E. E. Blincoe, Roland Boynton, Ben Brown, Percy Brush, Edmund C. Burke, J. R.Caffrey, John Calene, Russell T. Cowgill, Elvin S. Cowgill, Elmer Clark, J.P Cooney, Harry Crum, Deardorf, Chas. E. Delhotal, Wayne Edwards, Lawrence Engler, Lester J. Barnett, Fearie J. Gardner, B. Welvin B. Glovey, Donald Good, Louis Gorrill, E.G. Grecian, Charles Hagenbuch, James Hardacre, Cecil Hangan, Rolla Harger, A.M. Herron Herbert Howard, Albert B. Irwin, M.J. Johnson, J.W. Johnson, Stanley Jones, Jesse D.Kabler, Willard C. King, Randall Klein, Ed.D. Kroesch, Randolph Kennedy, Harold D.Lytle, Harold Mattoon, Sherwyn E. Mella, John M. Michner, Harry V. McCulloch, Fred E.Mewen, E.F Mcintosh, Earl D. Nixon, Karl Noll, Hoyt Nelson, Fred B. O'Donnell, Avery Oney, Chester M. Patterson, Myrpen Harry F. Perival, W.Ewart Mark, Freed F. Fred, C. Preble, Ward Bernice, Kenna Pringle, Aaron L. Pipenburg, William Ransom, A.R. Bichmond, I.B. Riggs, Harian Russell, Henry Shinn, Stanton S. Smaily, Gail A. Smith, Gall R. Soper, Ephaim J. Sorenson, Charles H. Sterlain, W.D. Steinhauer, Leland Thompson, Ed J. Todd, Alden H. Torrey, Jr. Arthur Tucker, Laurance A. Walworth, Warren F. Wattles, Wardie Weltmer, Llod Whiteide, W. F. Woolsey, W.H. Wilson, Ed.Wolf. ANNOUNCEMENTS International Polity club meets Wednesday night 7:30 at the Kappa Sigma house. Discussion of "Armenment." Grades will be given out to all students at the Dean's office Monday and Tuesday, Oct. 25 and 26. Place of meeting of the Choral Union, which meets Tuesday evening, October 19th at 7:30, is changed to the high school auditorium at the corner of Ninth and Kentucky streets. K. U. Dramatic Club will meet Wednesday night Oct. 20th in Green Hall, 8 p.m. The amount of money made at the Bowersock Wednesday afternoon and night is not definitely known. Up to the present time the exact receipts have not been carried in although the receipts contain all that was taken in over $50. ALL OF W. S. G. A. MOVIE RECEIPTS NOT YET KNOWN ALL OF W. S. G. A. MOVIE Every year the W. S. G. A. raises $100 to be given to a deserving University girl to help her through school. The girl must be self-supporting and do good work in school. A committee is appointed by the W. S. G. A. to choose a girl to whom the scholarship may be given. The committee consists of: Professors Eugenie Galloo, Hannah Olver and Ida H. Hyde. The committee chooses two girls and refers them to the W. S. G. A., who takes a vote on them. The scholarship is given in installment with $25 every quarter semester. Two weeks from Tuesday the date rule will be set to go to the Varsity, and the W. S. G. A. promises to have a good program, as they have the privilege of selecting their own pictures. Smoke Little Egypt, mild smoke, 5c cigar.—Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. University Has Full Schedule of National Leaders for Coming Year Three more speakers have been added to the list who will appear before students of the University during the coming school year. Raymond Wyer, director of the Hackley Gallery of Fine Arts, will give an illustrated lecture on art the last of three weeks at the University of high repute and has been obtained especially for the students taking art at the University. "The Orators and Oratory of Shakespeare" is the subject of a lecture by Lawrence L. Southwick, Dean of the Emerson School of Oratory of Boston. Mr. Southwick will be in Lawrence January 6. Henry Philip Burchell, sport editor on the New York Times comes November 7, to talk on "The Place of Sport in the Modern Newspaper." He has been invited especially for the students in journalism and will lecture before the classes in that department while at the University. Others who have been obtained for the year are: Daniel A. Heuback, Cleveland art lecturer; Frank Speight, London, "The Man who makes Dickens Alive." Prof. H. A. Millinik, head of the department of physics of the University of Chicago; Irving Baccheller, author of "Keeping Up With Lizzie;" Ida M. Tarbell, editorial writer and author, and Dr. Alma Webster Powell, prima-donna soprano, who is travelling in the interests of more and better music for the community. SWEET AND SCRIVNER EDIT Will Have Charge of the Daily Kansan During the Next Month The senior council of the Daily Kansan Board met Friday afternoon and elected Charles Sweet of Burlington, Kansas, editor-in-chief and Guy Scriner, of Kansas City, news editor. They will serve one month. Each has worked on the Daily Kansan for three years. In addition to this experience, Swett edited the Burlington Republic and Independent and Scriner was a reporter on the Kansas City Journal during vacation. Sweet will be entirely responsible for the editorial page. The Council ratified his appointment of Zetha Hammer, Salt Lake, Utah, and William S. Cady, of Fredonia, Kansas, as associates. Scriner, who will speak of the new press of Maureen McKernan and Chad Sturvent, with top of Topela, as assistants. Both editors, associates, and assistants are seniors. All these positions are honorary carrying no salary. Candidates are required to be a Kansas Board. Any student in the University is eligible to the Board. Individual care is taken with every garment we press or clean. You can depend on us to do your work properly every time you send. New York Cleaning Company. Phones 75. -Adv. Bowersock Theatre Tonight Beginning at 8:15 If you're going to attend the game take a box of Wiedemann's chocolates along—Adv. Pauline Frederick in a superb photo production of the dramatic sensation of the century— . "Zaza" By Benton and Simon Admission 10 cents For information or line party reservations call Bell 10. When you think of FLOWERS Think of The Flower Shop 825 1/2 Mass. St. Phones 621 Unique Recital AT Uniterian Church Monday, October 18 at 8:15 P. M. The Bell Brothers Music Company has arranged a rare treat for the music lover of Lawrence. You are cordially invited to attend this informal demonstration of Edison's latest and most favored invention— Miss Cora Reynolds, Soprano An opportunity will also be given of hearing our own popular singer, MISS CORA REYNOLDS. A varied program will be given so that all will hear music to their liking. Miss Reynolds will sing to the accompaniment of the Phonograph that you may hear the wonderful life-like tone of the instrument. All Music Lovers Are Welcome Tonight at Uniterian Church. Come Try a Jar of"SAN-TOX" Cold Cream for Chaps, sold only by E. R. HESS DRUGGIST DRUGGIST Successor to C. C. Shaler, 742 Mass. St. The Big Kansas Game K. U. vs. Aggies - Manhattan, Kansas Saturday, October 23rd. Union Pacific Special Train Leave Lawrence 9:00 A.M. Arrive Manhattan 11:30 A.M. All departments of the Agricultural College will be open for visitors. It's worth a visit. E. E. ALEXANDER, City Ticket Agent Phones 5 J. H. ROBINSON, Depot Agent Phones 76 1.