UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN When Dressy Men want to "Dress-Up" this is the time of the year they slip into a classy Top Coat. Nearly every day of the following three months will be Top Coat weather—then next Spring you will wear it again. Our stock is very complete—Coverts, Knitted and Cravenette. See them in our window, then come in and see how well they fit. $15, $17, $20 and $25 Styleplus Clothes Society Brand Clothes Dr. Samuel McChord Crothers THIS IS "DRESS UP" MONTH Dr. Samuel McChord Crother at the UNITARIAN CHURCH TONIGHT 7:30 Subject: The Higher Evangelism No Admission Charged Sharpen Those Razor Blades We have a special Odell sharpening machine 35c for double edge. 25c for double edge Evans Drug Store 829 Massachusetts street SHUBERT Matinees Wed. & Sat. The N. Y. Winter Garden Success "Dancing Around" WITH AL JOSON Next! Soul Talk Thurs., "Maid in America" FLORENCE MOREE AND MILLE DAZIE STUDENTS SHOE SHOP R. O. BURGET Prop. 1107 Mss. st. Lawrence, Kan. Work and Prices Always Right We also Repair and Recover Parasols. KOCH "THE TAILOR" Full Line of Fall Sutings INCULCATION INTERVALS SHORTENED TO ONE WEEK More than fifteen men reported for typhoid vaccination last week. The inoculations will be given at intervals of one week, instead of ten days, as the serum has been recently perfected so as to reduce the time required. Three inoculations must be taken before complete immunity is secured. Doctor Goetz attributes a great many of the lesser ills of the students to the city water. The sediment in it, while not actively dangerous, is nevertheless rather hard on the digestion. Mav Shorten Pledging A plan to shorten the pledging hour for fraternities from midnight Tuesday of registration week to 10 o'clock Tuesday night was advanced at the Pan-Hellenic meeting yesterday, and referred back to the fraternities for consideration. With an exhibit prepared by the agricultural division of the Kansas State Agricultural college, Kansas won the $300 loving cup given as first prize at the International Dry Farming congress at Denver Thursday morning. Second place was won by Nebraska and third by Oklahoma. Ladien' new complexion brush at Dick Bros.—Adv. PATTERSON HAS APPENDICITIS Cross Country Coach Goes to Rose dale for Operation in University Hospital A sudden attack of appendicitis caused O. W. Patterson, cross country coach, to be taken to Rosedale this afternoon where an operation will be performed. The attack came early Sunday morning and was mistaken for acute indigestion in its early stages. While not of a serious nature it is the third attack of the kind Patterson has had within the past year and the physicians advised him to have the operation performed before a more serious trouble sets in. He is under the care of Doctor Sudler, University physician. Patterson had made a good start with his cross country team this fall and expect them to win the Valley championship in spite of his illness. He has had much experience in track athletics at the University, having made his letter for three years and being captain in 1913. "Pat" was a mainstay on the cross country squads and the holder of the University mile record while in school. He is taking post-graduate work this year along with his coaching work. "Pat" expects to be back in Law rence in a couple of weeks but will not be able to run with his men any this fall. However, with Rodkey leading the team he hopes to see Kansas take all the honors in the Missouri Valley meet held here in connection with the Nebraska game. "WAR GETTING TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT" SAYS WIBLE "If the Balkan States go into the world war, England will have to resort to conscription." This opinion was expressed Friday by Elmer T. Wible, K. U. '14, who returned recently from the Balkans, where he has been teaching for the past year. Wible with another Kansas classmate, Alfred Waddell, left New York soon after war was declared for Beitr, Turkey, where they found places as teachers in an American college. Leavenworth county, as shown by the records in the Registrar's office, has fifty-two students enrolled in the different courses this year. Of that number, thirty-two are in College, twelve in engineering, six in law, one in pharmacy and one in journalism. Students of eight or ten nationalities attended this college in peaceful times, but since the war began the enrollment has gone down from 1000 to 600. Most of the students are Americans. Wiley obtained his position in the American College soon after he was graduated and was put in charge of the psychology and English literature classes. "I left," said Wible, "because I thought the war would come too close for comfort." James Arnold, a sophomore in the College, has withdrawn from the University. Mr. and Mrs. S. Katzenberg of Kansas City were the guests of their daughter, Sallie, freshman College, Sunday. A joint special meeting of the men's and women's Pan-Hellenic associations will be held at the Phi Kappa Psi house Sunday morning to consider the advisability of adopting the Cornell system of co-operative buving. GREEKS WILL CONSIDER CORNELL BUYING SYSTEM Chancellor Frank Strong has taken a considerable interest in the plan, and it is largely through his efforts that the matter will be taken up for consideration. The Chancellor has been invited to attend the meeting Sunday. FEMININE VOICES WARBLE Thirty-four try out for Womens' Glee Club—Appointments not Awarded Awarded Thirty-four girls of the University tried out for the Women's Guest Club last Wednesday night and ten others again Saturday. As yet, no decisions have been announced other than the appointment of Edna Davis as business manager and Helen Jenkins as pianist. "Nothing definite can be announced until the latter part of the week," said Professor Downing this morning. "A few good voices have been found and I believe there is an abundance of good material at K. U. if we can just find it. Special care is being taken this year in the selection of voices. "We want about twenty-four good singers, and, as a special inducement to those who wish to join, we intend to give an Operaetta at intervals of a few weeks. This plan will make the Glee Club more really worth while, and I think it will work out to perfection." PRIZE OF $100 OFFERED FOR ARBITRATION ESSAY A hundred dollarrp size is offered by the Lake Mohokn Conference on International Arbitration for the best essay written by any undergraduate man student of any college or university in the United States or Canada on the subject of "International Arbitration." Essays must not exceed 5,000 words and all manuscripts must be typewritten. The contest closes March 15, 1916. Manuscripts should be in the hands of H. C. Phillips, 3631 Fourth street, Washington, D. C., before that date. The award of the prize will be made at the Conference in May, 1916, to which the winner will be invited. Chester DeWitt Puglesy of New York City is donor of the prize. John Bassett Moore, professor of international law and diplomacy at Columbia University, French E. Chadwick, rear admiral of the United States navy, retired, and William H. Hull, professor of history and international relations, at Swathmore College are to be the judges of the contest. Word was received from Ross Keeling that he would be out in suit for tonight's practice. Ross will fill the weak place in the Jayhawk line that. Olcott has been trying to strengthen for the past week. Keeling Comes Into Camp Wood, the Jayahawkers' fighting quarter, and Keeling, veteran center, who appears in uniform this evening for the first time since last year. AS GEORGE FITCH SAW K. U. Supposed to be the last Written Work of the Famous The following "Vest Pocket Essay" is one of the last written for the press syndicate service by George Fitch, who was married to a Kansas University girl. Mr. Fitch told Professor Thorpe in San Francisco, August 8th that he contemplated a "piece" on K. U. and it seems likely this was hi slate work. He died August 15th of acute appendicitis. Humorist the University of Kansas is located at Lawrence, which was once a peaceful, happy village with nothing worse than Quantrell's raiders to contend with. Now the Greek letter fraternities barbecue freshmen all over the city and the old inhabitants who remember the massacre shake their heads and declare the world is growing steadily worse. The University is located on a high hill from which $1,000,000 worth of wheat can be viewed in season and has a campus so large that the professors play golf on it. It was founded about 50 years ago, has over 2600 students and gets as much money from the state each year as it would get from a $15,000,000 endowment fund put out at interest. Part of this money is spent in building stone buildings of large acreage and part of it goes in the production of lawyers, engineers, doctors, poets and newspaper men. The Kansas school of journalism is very enterprising and no student will hesitate to burn a barn to provide news on a dull day. Kansas students are very lively and do not depend on traditions for amusement. They think nothing of getting up an entirely new set of traditions each fall. Their only permanent ambition is to beat Missouri each year in football and when an alumnus does not turn up at a real game with their resolutions to the widow. Twisting the Missouri Tiger's tail and teasing the Wyoming dinosaur in the museum are the two great Kansas advantages. The students of Kansas have none of the advantages of the great eastern schools. The state is totally dry and the only way for a student to become nobly wicked is to drink buttermilk with red pepper in it. However, this does not seem to have undermined the constitutions of Kansas graduates. They are an unusually successful bunch, and when old Bill White and Bill Borah and Herb Hadley and Freddie Funston and other are lights of the present get toogether, they give the famous "Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk" yell with a skill produced by many years of practice. K, U. DEBATERS BELIEVE BRYAN WAS JUSTIFIED The affirmative won in a lively debate held Thursday night by the K. U. Debating Society in Room 313 Fraser Hall. The question for debate was, “Resolved: That Secretary Bryan was justified in resigning the cubicle and that he was defeated by Henry Shinn and Blaine Ramsey against the attacks of O. H. Burns and Rayner McQuiston. The vote of the judges stood two to one. The German Verein will meet on Tuesday evening at 7:15 in Fraser 313. As Prof. W. F. Hawkins puts it "Musik, debatte, und conversation," will be the order of the evening. Verein to Meet the purpose of the club is to make possible a free and easy use of German. All who are interested in German conversation are urged to attend the meeting. Lucius Perkins has pledged Phi Gamma Delta. Send the Daily Kansan home RECORDS SHOW SEPTEMBER WEATHER NEARLY NORMAL The University weather report issued for last month, shows September to have been very little different from the usual, despite the popular idea that this fall is somewhat out of the ordinary. The greatest difference was in the rainfall, 8.82 inches having fallen on ten days, which is 4.33 inches above the general average. There were four thunder storms during the month. The temperature was a fraction of a degree above the September average with a slight per cent greater humidity. The hottest day was the 5th of September, the coolest , the 23rd. It was less windy than the average month of September. Only one earthquake was reported by the University seismography; this occurred on the 6th of September in Guatemala. Guatemala was ruined by the shock. From two freshmen: Not-so-green: "Have you heard that big pipe organ at chapel yet?" Green: "No, I haven't. Everytime I have been there they played that little organ down in front." This Folding Typewriter IS SO SIMPLE That it can be operated by the most inexperienced engineer. Delicate complicated mechanism; brittle parts; cheap castings; are absent in the CORONA Only the best materials—regardless of price, are used in its construction. It costs less than most machines, because it is simple. Nevertheless it embodies all the latest up-to-the-minute features of the finest office machine. For personal use, at home or in the office, and for students the Corona is the ideal typewriter. Phone or call for a Corona booklet Morrison & Bliesner 701 Mass. Street. What housewife has not racked her brain in an effort to decide what to have on the table. 3 lb can Hawaiian Pine- 3 ib can Hawaiian Pine apple, 15c each, doz. .1.55 Something a little different. No necessity for perplexity any longer—let us solve the problem something like this: *if a = b, then c = d; if b = c, then a = d.* For any meal? 18 lbs. Sugar...$1.00 1 doz cans Peas...75 1 doz cans Corn...75 1 doz cans Good Peaches...1.55 1 doz cans Apricots...1.55 and Peaches. . . . . . . . 3.65 2 cans Asparagus. . . . . . 27 2 lbs best peanut Butter . . . 25 17 lbs Berry Cane Sugar . . . 1.00 8 bars Pearl White Soup . . . 25 6 bars Naptha Soap . . . 25 1 qt best Grape Juice . . . 35 25c Blue Label Catupu . . . 25 1 lb, Cocoa . . . 30 Also new Cranberries, Pancake Flour, Maple Syrup and new Shelled Nuts. Phones 58 DUNMIRE'S New shipment just arrived. 35c each. 3 for $1.00 CARROLL'S TENNIS BALLS PIPES CIGARS TOBACCOS MAGAZINES GRIGGS