UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE NEW VARSITY VIVIAN MARTIN in "Little Mademoiselle" TUESDAY, one day only—CHARLES CAHPLIN in "Work.", and HAROLD LOCKWOOD in "House of a Thousand Scandal." Men You Know—And Don't (Continued from page 1) it was impossible to break away from business and go back to college, he took his wife and 3-weeks-old baby and went to Yale. For two years he taught history, and then had the nerve to leave with a thousand dollars more than the little bit of money he took there. It took nerve to get that too, but he worked hard, corresponding for three big newspapers, writing a book and reading all of the Greek history examination papers, besides a few other tasks. He took his thousand dollars, all of his degrees, and his family to Oregon where he was president of the University. That was in 1899, and in 1902 he came to K.U. to be our Chancellor. Perhaps Our should be capitalized also, for Frank Strong is yours' and mine as truly as Rock Chalk will always be yours and mine. The more personally students know him, the more they admire and esteem him. But to get back to those wind pipes and bass; Chancellor Strong ought to know their connection, for all during his school days in New Haven, he played a $10,000 pipe organ, and also composed the music for the choir of the church where he played. PROMINENT PEOPLE USED TO PUBLISH K. U. PAPER John Sullivan, of Kansas City, who was associated with William Allen White on the University Courier in his undergraduate days, was in town this week. Mr. Sullivan was the editor-in-chief of the Courier, and Mr. "white" was one of his associates. Others who were associated with him are: Lieut. Gov. W. Y. Morgan; Perley R. Bennett, later managing editor of the Chicago Record-Herald; Frank Marshall, now editorial writer on the Kansas City Journal; Florence Finch, now widely known as an author; Ralph Stout, managing editor of the Kansas City Star; and Glen Miller, a former United States marshal in Utah. Send the Daily Kansan home. PROTSCH The College Tailor GOTHIC THE NEW ARROW 2 for 25c COLLAR IT FITS THE CRAYAT CLUETT, PEABODY & CO., INC., MAKERS K. U. Polity Club Will Hold Hague Court on U. S. Armament WOULD AID UNCLE SAMUEL Increased armament, cost, desirability and probable effect on the international relations of the United States will be the topic for discussion at the next meeting of the International Polity Club. "The International Polity Club is not a pacifist organization," said W. W. Davis, professor of American history, this morning. "The object of the club is to assist in the formulation of an enlightened and reasonable public opinion concerning our foreign interests." The club is making arrangements to bring a number of prominent men here during the year, but has received little interest. The nation's poll headquarters at New York. The meetings are open to anyone caring to attend, but only members of the club are permitted to take part in the discussion. University students and members of the faculty will be admitted to membership on the ten application form. A complete club. The next meeting will occur Wednesday evening. October 20th. The place has not been arranged. CARL DUNBAR GOES ON NEWFOUNDLAND EXPOSITION Carl O. Dunbar, graduate of the class of 113, and student at Yale for the last year, has been chosen by the members of the Yale department of geology to accompany them on an extended trip through Newfoundland this excursion will begin next summer will extend throughout the summer. The purpose of the trip will be to collect specimens for geological study at Yale. Mr. and Mrs. Dunbar have been in Lawrence for several weeks visiting with relatives. They left Saturday morning for New Haven where Mr. Dunbar will resume his second year of study. He stops steps their trip, for the purpose of collecting fossils at Columbus, Ohio and Niagara Falls. Mr. and Mrs. Dunbar were married in Lawrence September 19th. The bride was formerly Miss Laura Beamer, a former K. U. student and a resident of Lawrence. Two hundred rooters from DePauw rode the bumpers from Greencastle to Bloomington last Saturday to witness the DePauw-Indiana game. The fare was two dollars and those who made the trip will pledge the money saved for a new stone arch on the campur of the Methodist school. James Thorpe, the gridiron hero of Garlisle, has been secured by the University of Indiana as assistant coach this year. The Indian arrived in Bloomington yesterday and will start work Monday. Fein's for Mazda Lights and gas mantles.—Adv. - BONWIT TELLER & CO. The Specialty Shop of Ogninghons FIFTH AVENUE AT 38TH STREET NEW YORK "Jeunes Filles" Fashions Exclusive and Un- ual Types in Dress for the College Miss. The modes presented express youth, and its symbol simplicity in every motif and line. Sophistication and maturity are absent, verve and esprit ever present in accord with the ideas and ideals established by the celebrated couturiers to the "Jeune Fille." You are cordially invited to visit the Bognit Teller & Co. shop when in New York and to correspond on matters of fashion Everything in apparel for College, Sports and Formal wear from Hats to boots, from Undergarment to Outergarment. K. U. STUDENT TO BULGARIA MAY DO CO-OP BUYING Peter Yankoff, Medic, Heeds Call of Country—Will Enter Hospital Corps pital Corps Peter Yankhoff, a K. U. medical student, from Bulgaria, will return to his native country immediately, in answer to its call for volunteers. "Bulgaria's greatest need in this war upon which she has embarked, will be recruits for her hospital corps," Mr. Yankoff said last week. "There is only one resident physician for each 200 square miles of territory. All the Bulgarian students in the United States are on a returning home but arrangement was, as yet, decided on a suitable route. The most feasible will be through Holland and along the path of the German invasion of Servia. "All Bulgaria is heartily in favor of this war. It has taken the form of a crusade against Russia, Bulgaria's natural enemy. Contrary to the common opinion, the common people in Bulgaria side with the state, but the hope that the Teutons will stem the Russian advance. "IF Roumania and Greece join the Allies, Bulgaria, I think will probably lose Macedonia, and even its national existence. Since it is in danger of being annihilated, the Russians will not hesitate to annex it in case they are successful." Mr. Yankoff, came to this country to study medicine twelve years ago, believing that he could help his countrymen best as a doctor. He graduated from Columbia University in eight years, and is now a sophomore in the Medical School here. The Sophomores Will Have a Team Under Mentorship of R.E. Smith SOCCER MAKES APPEARANCE R. E. Smith Come out to soccer, come out to soc- ed kick your legs away; and kick it. We're going to hooBS, you wry rubes, Come out and help us play. The sophomore gymnastium class is to have a soccer team with R. E. Smith, a graduate student, for coach and assistant, played with other teams of the state. One division of the sophomore gymnasium class has been practicing soccer since school started but only as gymnasium work. Now, since a soccer team is assured and games are in view, the team will practice five days a week, at half past two, beginning Monday. Some of the possible games are with Kansas City, Ottawa, and Baker teams. Mr. Smith is confident that there will be enough material from which to choose a good team, and a good time is in store for those who make good. Mr. Smith hopes that all sophomores who are interested in soccer will enroll in the two-thirty gymnasium class at once. WHAT DOES K. U. MEAN TO YOU? Y. W. C. A. TO REPLY "What does K, U. mean to you? What can you make it mean to you? What does it mean to your town?" These are some of the questions to be discussed at the regular W. Y. C. A. meeting set for Oct. 12th. The Estes Park committee and the religious committee of the local Y. W. C. A. have set October 19th for a combined meeting. The Estes Park committee will take charge of the talks will be given on the recent conference. Members of the Cabinet met in Miss Gitten's apartments last night. A finance campaign was discussed but no definite action was taken. University friends of Ulysses Allison Gibble and Neva June Foster will be interested to learn of their marriage September 29, at Lewistown, Montana, where Gibble has practiced law for the past two years. Gribble who was graduated in 1913, was a member of the Phi Alpha Delta fraternity and was a track man. Miss Foster, who studied Fine Arts at the University, taught art in the Law Department and received her graduation in 1912. The couple will be at home at 608 Cook Street, Lewistown, Mont. Gribble, '13. Marries Charley Chaplin in Work Varsity, Tuesday, one day only. Also Harold Lockwood in "House of a Thousand Scandles"."-Adv. Charley Chaplin at the Varsity Tuesday--one day only in addition to an extra good program-Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home Greeks Decide to Thoroughly Investigate Cornell System—Chancellor Favors Plan That the Cornell system of cooperative buying for fraternities and sororites should be given a thorough investigation by the Greek letter societies of K. U. was decided upon Sunday morning at a joint conference of the women's and men's Phi Hai. The meeting was held at the Phi Pi house and was well attended by the delegates of the interested societies. Favors Plan Chancellor Strong was present at the meeting and he outlined the plan of cooperative buying as it is practised in the East, showing how the entire control of the table expenditures of the different societies is shared with one or more officers with complete authority to regulate their expenses as a unit. After the Chancellor's explanation of the system, the conference decided, that in order to make a thorough investigation of the plan, each fraternity or sorority here should at once get in touch with its chapter at Cornell and secure all the data possible before taking further action. Plain Tales from the Hill Nell Hohn, freshman College, has returned from St. Joseph, where she spent the week-end visiting friends. The Association of Collegiate Alumnae met Saturday, October 9 with Miss Alice Winston. Committees were appointed to formulate plans for the winter's work, and to report at the next meeting. Josephine Jaqua attended the wedding of Miss Helen Stout Saturday evening at Oswego. Walter L. Shively, a freshman Engineer, spent Saturday and Sunday with his parents in Kansas City. Harry Gilkie, prep-medic from Richmond, Kansas, is another student who forsook his old school so as to enter the University this fall. Gilkie has attended Ottawa University the past three years. The State Board of Administration hold no formal meeting when it wits here Saturday, owing to the absence of Mrs. Cora G. Lewis. However President E. T. Hackey and vicepresident E. W. Hoch met with the Chancellor for a short consultation. Of the twenty-five or thirty athletes who go on out their five mile jaunt every night, the majority are freshmen. Some of them have not missed a night since track work was started the second week of College. While the great world's series is being played between Boston and Philadelphia, the clerks in the registrar's office report a bumper crop of absence marks from the 1:30 and 2:30 classes. And It Has No Early Classes "I envy Potter Lake." "Why?" "It lies on its bed all day long." David Browne, of Norton, has pledged to Phi Kappa. George Hilton, a member of the Washington Club at 1447 Vermont went home-Sunday morning, where he will work in his father's grocery store. Linus Fitzgerald, president of the sophomore class, will pass out plums tomorrow. He intended to have had the lists today but questions arising from the irregularities in the election has delayed him. Frances Sawyer and Louise Hedrick spent the week-end in Kansas City. The members of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority gave an informal dance Saturday for their new freshman pledges. Dolores Keeling, a freshman in the College, spent the week-end in Kansas City with her family who has recently moved there. Flanuel shirts were adopted as the distinctive wearing apparel during the coming year by the juniors of the University of Illinois. The women of the class will wear mildly blouses. "General information and Reference," a course offered this semester at the University of Oklahoma by Prof. H. H. Herbert of the department of journalism, is a unique addition to the curriculum provided for the coming journalists. Similar courses are offered in only two other universities in the country. Call Fein's for any kind of plumbing.-Adv STUDENTS AND FACULTY MEMBERS Carter has established a free type-writing bureau at 1025 Mass. He will see that your work is given to capable persons and that their charges are reasonable. He charges nothing for putting you in touch with them. Call and seehim. Athletic Supplies of All Kinds FOOTBALL GOODS KENNEDY and ERNST 826 Mass. St. Phones 314 Sharpen Those Razor Blades We have a special Odel sharpening machine 35c for double edge. 25c for double edge Evans Drug Store 829 Massachusetts street Mary Pickford IN Bowersock Theatre Tonight Doors open 7:30 - Show begins 8:15 A Girl of Yesterday Admission 10c. Music by Weinstein and Findlay THE FLOWER SHOP Has a nice line of ferns as well as cut flowers 825 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. St. Phones 621 FOR TAXICAB Call Either PHONE 100 PEERLESS GARAGE Clark Will Press Three Suits Free One for Bernard Gillespie, Bonnie Reber, and one for Jick Fast; because they made the touchdowns in the game against the Normals last Saturday. Note the job they get. CLARK CLEANS CLOTHES PHONES 355 730 MASS. ST. The UNIVERSITY HEADQUARTERS For all Newspapers, Magazines and Stationery University Club magazine subscription order is but proof of this. CARROLL'S PHONE 608 709 MASS. PHONE 608 709 MASS The Oldest Magazine Shop in Kansas