UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BOWERSOCK TO- DAY A Paramount Photo-Play Featuring EDITH WYNNE MATHESON in The Governor's Lady Matinee Daily 2:45 Any Seat 10c Coming Wednesday—MARGUERITE CLARK in GRETNA GREEN Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE 12 W. Ninth Lawrence Pantatorium Phones 506 Students Come in and See our New Spring Fashions Whitehead Millinery 1104 Bell 833 Mass. St. After Graduation— If you are coming to Kansas City to locate, one of the most important considerations is the securing of a congenial home at a reasonable price. You may find it at LAVITA HALL 3409 Wyandotte "The House With an Ideal" A first class residence hotel in the very heart of Kauai City's most fashionable residence district; just off a main boulevard; within two blocks of four car lines. One of the best and most popular priced houses of its kind in the city. Rates by the month only. OSCAR O. RESER, Kansas City, Mo. Home Phone, South 3153 Bell Phone, South 2588 Ladies' Tailoring LADIES to Toile dress mastressing. Mrs. Marcia to dress dressmaking and ladies' tailoring. Also party dresses. Prices very reasonable.1321 Tennessee Phone 1116W. 109-10* Near-sighted Customer "Aren't you making your rolls a little larger these days, Bachman?" "Fuh!' R-r-rolls—them's loaves!"— New York World. The library authorities in Marvin Hall are confronted with the problem of where they will place the magazine file on the south wall, where the bust of Dean F. O. Marvin is installed next June. The entire space along the south wall will be taken up by the bust and Dean Marvin's collection. The areas where are now being made and there is no other place available for the magazine rack. Library a Puzzle Arrange Y W. Apartments Soon Definite plans for a Y W. C. A. apartments will be arranged by the end of this week, according to Miss Ann Gittens, secretary of the apartment will mean that rooms will be controlled by the Association and rented out to girls who want to live in them. Former Medies Were Here J. R. Elliott and Frank Porter Miller, former K. U. medics have returned to Rush Medical College, Chicago after spending the week with Phi Beta Pi. Baker Student Visits Here Miss Ferris Close of Topeka who is a student at Baker visited with Miss Lillian Martin over the week end. Miss Close is an Alpha Co Omega at Baker. Kodakers, we have Cyco and Halioic paper—Squires—Adv. Seniors we have caps and gowns Have your pictures taken at once—Squires.—Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. FRANK KOCH FRANK ROOT "THE TAILOR" Full Line of Spring Suttings STUDENT HEADQUARTERS Jacob's Candies The Easter Wrappings Evans' Drug Store Successors to Raymond's 819 Mass. St. Pleasure of School Life is Doubled SUBSCRIBE NOW If you are acquainted with the current happenings "on the hill". The cheapest and easiest way to get acquainted is through the columns of the $1.00 for the rest of the year University Daily Kansan Impressions of Wall Street on the Blockade by the Allies "ORDERS IN COUNCIL" From the Springfield Republican. When, after long deliberation and delay, the British government's orders blockading trade with Germany were published last week. Wall Street seemed to be purge time as the German market hardly moved. Since people said England was merely evading our government's objections by an adroit use of words; others insisted that the change by the French and English authorities, from their original sweeping veto on all carrying trade with Germany, declaration and regular accession of the German coast, strictly lined to European waters, made all the difference in the world. To American schoolbobs, "Orders in Council" has for generations meant, not as it actually does, a decision on any public question by the British Privy Council, but its decision of 1807 on American orders of that year Europe ordered to legitimate blockade. While Napoleon's ships captured American merchantmen in the West Indies, England's men-of-war seized our vessels even in waters around the United States. England compelled our ships, bound for anywhere on the Continent, to停运, giving port access to license-for which credit dues" in 1807 it charged as much as eighteen cents a pound on cotton carges and three cents a pound on tobacco. Whether even this, without our government's retaliatory prohibition of our own trade with Iran, was the true course of itsitime prosperity after 1807, is an open question. The essential point is, that the Orders in Council of 1915, with their profession of a legal blockade, their conciliatory terms for restoring value of the cargoes, and their tentative exception of cotton from the terms of the blockade, are emanated from the arrogant policy of 1897, under the Exchange's reception of the week's developments, in this regard, did not indicate expectation of any serious friction between our government and England, even though a planner blockade proclamation may be insisted upon. USE ORGAN WITH SYMPHONY Pipes Lend Finer Shading to Orches tra Music and Increase Volume From the New York Sun the tenderness of symphony orchestra the ability to tone their tone capacity, the organ comes more and more into prominence in concert halls. An inquiry into this tendency reveals at the outset that the orchestra annexes the organ in order to obtain larger quantity of tone, greater capacity, rather than to a broader range of color tones. Those who study the scores of the symphony composers to ascertain the relation of the organ, where its use is prescribed, to the other instruments, so find that it is not the organ of enriched equipment of stops, of enlarged power that is described. Those who listen to the organ when it is played with orchestra, find that the sound is of a plain, old-fashioned quality. Those who look at the specification of the organ find a very simple layout. They discover that scarcely any device of the organ builder that affects the structure of the pipes and that consequently is modified in a symphony auditorium. They find, on the other hand, that every contrivance which helps in the manipulation of the instrument and which regulates its volume, either in the organ or in the instrument, is carried. Contrast of power, in other words, not contrast of color is sought. Marie Tempest at Shubert Playgoers who appreciate the particular charm of that form of comedy that depends on the art of the play, even more than on the play of the character, come the engagement of Marie Tempest at the Shubert Theatre for a week's engagement beginning Monday night, March 29th. While the engagement is limited to one week, this clever comedienne offers two very interesting programs Miss Tempest, one of the personalities of the English speaking stage for a great many years. Maria Tempest, at Shubert For the first half of the week of her Kansas City engagement Miss Tempest will play "The Marriage of Kitty," which was her first success in the league. This was presented at the Criterion Theatre, New York in 1802. For the last half of the week Edgar Swelly's jolly farce, "Nearly Married" will be presented. This will be the first time in Miss Tempest's long and brilliant career to act in an American play. It is not so many years since American actresses were oblited to look to foreign playwrights for their material; but the last few years brought a decided change in this condition, and Miss Tempest is merely a conspicuous example of an English artist who is pleased with a "made in America" product.—Adv. Kodak, finishing, Squires Studio— Adv. What They Sav: John M. Shea; Trees around the memorial bench, huh! Next thing they'll be wanting mistletoe on the evergreens! Leon Harsh: If the Annual pays out I'm going to take Europe's best rest cure. Ralph Murphy; The United States pays out more money for taxes than all the European countries put together. E. J. Sorensen; I hope that we do get to make the trip to the coast next fall. It would be a great experience and it would boost the University. John M. Shea: The students of this University seem possessed with a mania for stealing electric light bulbs. This year many dollars worth of Tungsten have been taken. It wouldn't be so bad if the students took the carbon bulbs but their taste in electricity is too expensive. Alton Gumbiner, (Italian waiter in The Man From Home); We ought to be the Student Council to award "N" for this way Jack Challiss will ever get one Captain DeLongy: We'll have to hurry if we develop a team this year as good as the one last yeah. Frank Beeson: It would be a fine thing for the men that do not go home Easter vacation to get together and go up the river. Subscribe for the Daily Kansan. THEATRE VARSITY TODAY-Shubert presents O.A.C. Laund In His Own Original "When Broadway Was a Trail" Complete in 5 Acts SNAPPY SPRING SUITINGS Schulz 913 MASS. ST. Seniors we have caps and gowns. Have your pictures taken at once— Squires.—Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. Pan-Hellenic Baseball Schedule DIVISION I. DIVISION II. | | Acacia | Σ A E | AT Ω | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Acacia | | | | | Σ A E | April 13 | | | | AT Ω | April 8 | April 27 | | | Σ N | April 29 | May 3 | April 20 | | | $k \Sigma$ | $\Delta T \Delta$ | $\Phi \Delta \theta$ | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | $k \Sigma$ | | | | | $\Delta T \Delta$ | April 14 | | | | $\phi \Delta \theta$ | April 30 | April 9 | | | $H \Theta H$ | April 7 | May 5 | April 26 | DIVISION III.
| Σ X | Φ Γ J | Φ K V | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Σ X | |||
| Φ Γ J | April 19 | ||
| ΠKA | April 10 | May 6 | |
| Φ K V | April 28 | May 4 | April 23 |