train . Market Kansas University Weekly. THE ONLY OFFICIAL AND AUTHORIZED WEEKLY PUBLICATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. VOL. X. All Wool Cheviot Suits, $20 and up Pants, Strictly All Wooll, from $5.00 and up, at DAVIES The Students' Tailor. Cleaning and Repairing a Specialty Students Wanting Bicycles Or Repairing of any Kind done are asked to go to the Lawrence Bicycle Company And consult with them. ALSO Sporting Goods, GUNS AND AMMUNITION. A. BOICOURT, Prop. 905 Mass. St. LAWRENCE, - - KANSAS. SAGURDAY. SEPGEMBER 7.1901. EDWARD BUMGARDNER, M D. D. D. S DENTIST Office 809 Mass. St. Telephone 209 2-rings. LAWRENCE, KANSAS. DR. B. H. LESLIE. Office 802 Mass. St. Office Phone 36; Res. 191 4-rings. LAWRENCE, - - KANSAS. 709 VERMONT STREET. HUTSON'S BAKERY Bread for sale from wagon and at Leading Grocers. Special Delivery to Clubs. STUDENTS TRADE ESPECIALLY SOLICITED. Telephone 260 4-rings. LAWRENCE, - - KANSAS. The Tipton Barber Shop AND ... BATH ROOMS ... BATH PRICES. Single Bath ... 25 7 Baths ... $1 00 15 Baths ... 2 00 24 Baths ... 3 00 Baths, School Year ... 5 00 11:30 A. M. Bath Rooms Open Sunday Until 11:30 A.M. TOWELS FURNISHED EVERYTHING FIRST-CLASS R. H. STEWART, Prop. 838 Mass. Street. LAWRENCE, - - - KANSAS. Wam. Wiedeman, ICE CREAM PARLOR And Manufacturer of Line Confectionery. 726 MASS. STREET. NO.1. LAWRENCE - KANSAS A GOOD YEAR. Is at Hand for the School New Students Throng the Streets. A new man has been secured for the chair of public speaking and debate, and many changes have been made in the faculty. Everything points to progress. True, we are without a chancellor, but last year the school continued its advance under the leadership of Acting Chancellor Spangler and, no doubt, will prosper the coming year. Kansas has suffered a drouth, the corn has been parched and her hay dried up, but the Kansas farmer still has hope. He is sending his sons and daughters to the State University in great numbers, and everything points to a successful year. Many new students are already in town and more are coming. Every day Registrar Foster receives applications for catalogues and questions concerning expenses and opportunities for study. The legislature last year gave to the University a larger amount than ever before, besides providing for a museum building which is now in course of construction. The professors have been working hard during the summer gleaming new facts for the benefit of their classes and rearranging old ones to a better effect. The Y. M. and N. W. C. A. are stronger than ever and better able to aid the student and encourage him to do right. Foot ball prospects are bright and everything points to a winning team, and Manager Harshberger wears a smile of contentment so broad his jaws ache. He feels confident of defeating the Indians, and says if he has the kind of a team he wants he will have eleven scalps for souvenirs when the storm is over. mmm What Sort of Young Men Should Go to College? For the great majority of men, a college course is of inestimable value. For a minority, it is worse than useless. How shall a boy determine to which of these classes he belongs? A good college offers a student three things: theoretical knowledge of principles connected with his business, breadth of general culture, and friendships that are of service to him now and hereafter. If he appreciates these things and can take them seriously, a college is a good place for him. If he cannot thus appreciate at least one of them he would better not go to college at all. None of these things can be played with. They must all be achieved by hard work none the less hard because it is so often pleasurable. If a boy thinks that the study of theory is a short and easy way for the attainment of practical skill, he is gravely mistaken. It is quite apart from practical skill, and its results show themselves more in the later stages of the student's development than they do when he first goes into the office or the shop. The theory of mechanics or of physics is not to be studied by lectures and experiments. It means knowledge of analytical geometry and the differential calculus. The theory of chemistry is not to be learned by amusement in the laboratory, but by attention to dry principles which require the utmost exeuctitude of application. The theory of political economy is not to be learned by the reading of entertaining books and magazine articles. A student who would really master it must understand the principles of law and of ethics which are more difficult than those which he meets in the routine of ordinary business. Those so-called theories which are easily acquired and glibly recited are met, in practice, with a contempt which is well deserved. Arthur Twining Hadley, president of Yale University in "Success" for September. Literary Note. The interesting contention, that the seat of power has forever moved from the East, and that the West is now the theater of the business and the politics of the American people, is made by that gifted young statesman, Senator Jonathan P. Dolliver, in an article in "Success" for September. The intellectual impress of Yale and Harvard Universities on American life is presented in a vigorous way in the same issue, the drawings showing many celebrated graduates of each institution in scenes of historic and characteristic importance. The late Professor John Fiske is given a prominent place in the issue with a special drawing, and a sketch of his tremendously active, prolific life, and an article from his pen, entitled, "Poverty Is No Obstacle to a Public Career." The latter one of the last manuscripts by the professor is a stimulating argument NEWS FROM MANILA. A Former Student of Kansas University Writes an Iteresting Letter From the Far East. ON BOARD TRANSPORT "THOMAS" July 20, 1901 Mr. E. H. McMath, Lawrence, Kan: MY DEAR SIR—I'll write a letter and send it to Lawrence from Honolulu in the hope that it will reach you, though am not certain whether it will or not. Well, we're on the Pacific Ocean, and have been now for nearly a week, as we left San Francisco July 23. I left Kansas City on the 16th, reaching Frisco four days later. I stayed three days and a half in that city and put in the time sightseeing; saw Golden Gate Park, Presidio, Cliff House and Seal Rocks and had a glimpse of Chinatown, also kept an eye out for the pretty girls of California you hear so much about, and as a class they certainly are good looking, especially if you don't look too close. One thing they nearly all do have and that's a pretty form. They're all such buxom, robust-looking girls. 50c We left promptly at noon on the 22d. The sea was quite rough and the vessel rolled considerably that day and the next also. By night about every one was seasick. I had a triple or quadruple dose of it. It took me from Tuesday till Saturday to recover, and for two days was under the doctor's care. Am just getting straightened up now. The K. U. Weekly, 50c OFFICIAL PAPER OF KANSAS UNIVERSITY. Every Student needs it. It will contain all Official Notices. $1.00 A SHARE GOOD FOR TWO YEARS. $1.00 At Check Stand or Registrar's Office. along the line indicated, replete with brilliant examples of Americans who have risen from poverty to commanding stations. Hamilton Wright Mabie, the versatile editor of "The Outlook," is represented by a paper on the remedying of early educational defects; Professor Dudley A. Sargent, of Harvard, describes the physical training which underlies success in life; Cynthia Westover Alden puts in a plea for sensible eating and wholesome exercise for girls, Henrik Ibsen, the noted Norwegian scholar, claims that genius, unexerted, will perish; Congressman Flynn tells the inspiring story of Oklahoma; President Hadley, of Yale University, describes the sort of young man who ought to go to college, and Ferdinand Cowle Iglebart digs up two charming new stories of Abraham Lincoln. It will be difficult to find a greater variety of interesting matter in any of the current issues for September. See Smith for Gymnasium Goods. Wilbur Hawk, of Effingham will be a Junior Law this year. C. A. Gardner is in Chicago this summer working some and having a good time. All the best brands of Cigars at Smith's. Foot ball coach Outland was in town all week looking up foot ball men. He says practice will begin immediately. There are about 150 women on board and of course they have the best quarters, as they occupy all the state rooms. These are quite small and three people are assigned to one room. The men occupy what is called the berth deck. These are large rooms filled with small berths, two rows upper and lower, and two tiers in each row. Guess there are about 300 of these berths in one room. We eat in a large open room, the first floor below the deck. The ladies have a much finer dining room, which is also used as a parlor between meals. I am writing in this last place now. Don't know exactly how many there are on board. Guess about 150 women and between 400 and 500 men. Simpson and myself I guess are the only ones from Lawrence. Glick was to have been here, but for some reason unknown to me, is not aboard. There were also three appointees from Emporia, but if they are on board I have not yet found them. They may be, but I don't know them by sight and the list of passengers is not yet complete. We have been sailing 275 miles per day. At noon today we 1,634 miles from San Francisco and 476 from Honolulu, and expect to reach the latter place Wednesday morning. At this place I'll mail this. There are all kinds of people on board. It is reported that a few of the girls are pretty gay, but I think this is all talk. There are eight or ten newly married people among the passengers and of course they have some rather loving scenes, and I think this is the cause of the reports. Most of the passengers, both men and women, are people who have had more or less experience in teaching, that is, have been engaged in the actual work for the past years, though there are also quite a number who are fresh from college or normal schools, especially the latter. There are of course some sports here too. A poker game was started soon after we sailed and for a few days the chips clinked incessantly, then there was a lull for a day or two for some unknown reasons, but it has begun again today. Some of the good people hold up their hands in holy horror at all this, but guess they'll have to stay in that uncomfortable position, for I don't see what they will do about it. Yesterday was Sunday and services were held in the forenoon, and in the afternoon the Y. M. C. A. had a meeting. I am just beginning to enjoy the trip; was laid up during the time that people was getting acquainted, as a result I do not yet know very many people, but am beginning to mix up. Am sorry I was sick as I missed several chances of grafting. Wanted to help make up a list of the passengers but couldn't do it. There is talk now of getting up some kind of a souvenir paper. Guess I can do some grafting on that if I want to, but don't know yet whether I care to. If I can see as much in that as I did in the "Annual" guess it might be a gretty good thing to show. They say though that there is to be no money made out of this, but simply pay expenses. Are you still selling literature to the good people of Kansas? Making them believe you have the only thing on earth, the very thing they have wanted their entire life. Now I'll tell you why I write at this particular time. When K. U. begins operations again in the fall and the great and only WEEKLY again appears I want a copy sent to Manila. Send it to my address at Manila, care of Prof. Fred W. Atkinson until you receive another address. I appreciate the WEEKLY over there, so please don't neglect this. I'll send this to Lawrence in hopes that it will be forwarded to you wherever you may be. I would send it to your Illinois town but don't remember what it is and have not a catalogue where I can get it at present. Would like to have you write, especially if you are in Lawrence, as I won't have any regular correspondent in K. U. As I promised to write about fifteen letters and mail them from Honolulu and but a couple are written, I'll have to cut this off. Don't forget the WEEKLY. Yours truly, BLAINE F. MOORE, Manila, P. L. Care Prof. Fred. W. Atkinson. Adda Light, who was at K. U. in 98 and 99, will teach this winter at Amago, Calif. Guy Harshberger has been at home all summer planning for the foot ball season. Jesse Hall was in town all week visiting friends. He will teach this winter at Lansing. S. G. Elliott was in Lawrence most of the summer trying to keep cool and hold office at the same time. Frank Post, who has worked all summer on the Winfield Courier, will be in school this winter and work for his master's degree. Kansas University Weekly Editor-in-Chief... GEORGE BARCUS. Associates / C. A. GARDNER. / C. J. HINDMAN. Literary ... E. W. MURRAY. Society Editor... RACHEL PUGH. Athletic Ed.. GUY HARSBIGERGER. Local Edit... WALTER J. MEEK Associates. BLAYNE F. MOORE, FLOYD L. TULFORD, J H. FELGAR, H. P. Fones, J. H. Lang WORTHY, ED. COLEPY, JNO. A. DEVLIN ED. MECKEM, ANNY WARFIELD, CUY WARD AND FLORENCE FOREST. Entered at the Lawrence Postoffice as second-class mail matter. E. H. McMATH, Managing Editor Shares in the WEEKLY $100 each, entitling the holder to the paper two years, may be had of the Secretary and Treasurer, George Foster, the managing editor, or at the WEERLY office. Subscription price, 50 cents per annum in advance. Single copies - 5 cents. Address all communications to E. H. McMath, Business Manager, Lawrence, Kansas. LAWRENCE, KAN. SAT. SEPT. 7. 1901. Next week the grafter will be in his element. He will graft for clubs, laundries and newspapers. He will graft where he has a right to and where he has had no provocation. When an old student first steps from his train on to the depot platform who rushes up and pats him on the back and says "Hello,old fellow"? who fills his pockets with worthless cards he'll never read? who claims to have been his old standby last year? who assists him up town with his grip? who helps him find his rooming place? who helps him in numerous ways his mother never dreamed of? The Grafter Grafting at K. U. has been raised to a scientific basis. There is the professional grafter and the raw amateur. Although the amateur may have first chance at you the professional is not dismayed. He pats your back a little harder, smiles a gladder smile of welcome, finds a better room for you, finds out all your old cronies and brings them around to see you and confidentially tells you he could have been steward where his rival is, but rejected the office to rustle for a better club. The grafter is never out of humor. When jokes are being told he has the latest. If girls are mentioned he can introduce you to the prettiest in town. We, all, abuse the grafter. We cut him, we roast him, we ridicule him behind his back and yet there is no better fellow than the grafter. He has the sterling qualities of manhood. The hard battles he fights here are but the training for sterner ones in later life. When the lazy, easy-going, idle fellow of today who spends his time in the ball room or playing pool, has secured a position in some large establishment and looks around to get his bearings who will be his foreman or perhaps his employer? the grafter. Here's to the grafter. May he live long and prosper. ** Do you think Kansas University should have a good weekly? Would you rather have the Weekly come out on good paper than on cheap, yellow paper? Are you willing to do your part towards publishing a good paper brim full of news and spicy, interesting reading? If you are, read the rest of this article; if not, go home and raise squashes and cucumbers. A college is known abroad largely by the paper its students publish. A good, live paper cannot come from a dead school or from a school which which does not support a student enterprise. There are several ways in which you can help your paper. When you go anywhere or do anything don't stand back bashful and wait for the WEEKLY to find it out, but step up to the editor and tell him all about yourself; he'll be glad to find it out. Then you can subscribe for the paper. That is the part which is hardest for you to do, but the one that helps to keep the paper above ground. But another way you can help the paper and which costs you nothing, is by talking about it. Do you ever buy anything? Would you rather trade with a man who is glad to see you or with one who doesn't care whether you trade with him or not? Why not trade with the men who support the WEEKLY. They are loyal to the school and deserve your support. Tell them you read their advertisement in the paper. It will please the merchant and gladden the heart of the managing editor. For the current issue of the WEEKLY the editor-in-chief is in no way responsible. It is published without his authority and free from his supervision. It is printed a week before school opens and before any students are in town. No reason for its appearance can be found nor can there be any objections offered to its publication save by the managing editor, who has published it simply because he wanted to. He had a little spare time and wanted something to do. He did it, and this week's paper is the result. If you find anything you like, credit the editor for his brilliancy. If something displeases you, blame yourself for being hard to suit. It's your fault if you don't see things as the editor does. If your name is not mentioned, it is your own fault. The editor did his best to find out where you are and what you are doing, but was unable. If you want your name in the paper after this tell a WEEKLY reporter all about yourself. May be he doesn't know who you are. EXCHANGES. * The Daily Californian is the first college paper to reach our desk this fall. It commenced publication for the year two weeks ago and seems to be prosperous. It is the best daily on our exchange list. The progress made by women in photography will be the subject of three articles in The Delineator. The September number contains the first of these and deals with the photographic work of Miss Zaida Ben-Yusuf, Mrs. Gertrude Kasebier, Mrs. Grace Cook and Mrs. Myra A. Wiggins. It is as hard for an editor to run a paper without reading his exchanges as it is for a woman to pass a mirror without looking at herself. A Kausa editor tried it and in a short time had changed his daily to a weekly. The general run of fashion plates are the despair of those women whom nature has decreed for stoutness, or whom time has snowed with gray hair. Many fashion cuts show an impossible sylph-like form of women everlasting youthful. The Delineator whose long career of success shows that it meets the needs of women, contains in the September number a special article, carefully illustrated and devoted to the attire of stout and elderly women. This article, with its practical, useful advice about fabrics and quantities, will be appreciated by those who are neither slim nor under twenty one. The Return of the Students Bring Smiles on Many Faces. LAWRENCE IS GLAD. --- Daring the summer season Lawrence is a dull town, both socially and financially. Aband concert once a week, an occasional church social and a week of quiet are the amusements of him who must spend his summer in Lawrence. Business men send their clerks on enforced vacations, expenses are reduced, and everything creeps along slowly. But with the first of September comes a change. The window decorator begins to plan, the merchant lays in a larger stock, the expressman wears a happy smile of anticipation, the streets are decorated with the old familiar sign, "room for rent." But with the advent of the student comes the real change. The streets are filled with hurrying cabs and express wagons. Depot platforms groan beneath the tread of the omnipresent grafter, merchants gleefully watch their stocks diminish and their bank accounts increase and every one wears a smile of happiness. Occasionally some dyspeptic in a fit of rage denounces the student as an unmitigated nuisance and a being without any excuse for existence, but to the greater part of Lawrence citizens the noise of a student jollification is but a temporary annoyance to be patiently endured. Such people are the true friends of the student and it is to them he will give his trade and his friendship. mmm A start towards professional foot ball has been made. The following is from the Topeka Herald: "Permanent officers of the National Association Foot Ball League, which was launched in Chicago last week, were elected yesterday as follows: President, J. C. Karel, Milwaukee; Vice President, Gus F. Diel, St. Louis; Secretary and Treasurer, T. S. Andrews, Milwaukee. The schedule meeting will be held next week either in Chicago or St. Louis. Eighteen games will be played by each club. The cities in the league are Milwaukee, Chicago, St. Louis and Detroit." California University has been having a series of inter-class base ball games the past few weeks. ASTHMA CURE FREE! Asthmalene Brings Instant Relief and Permanent Cure in All Cases. SENT ABSOLUTELY FREE ON RECEIPT OF POSTAL. Write Your Name and Address Plainly CHAINED FOR TEN YEARS HAY FEVER ASTHMA EVERY BRING RELIEF. There is nothing like Asthmadene. It belongs instant relief, even in the worst cases. It cures when all else falls. The Rev, C. F. WELLS, of Villa Ridge, III, says: "Your trial bottle of AsthmaHone received in good condition, I am not tell you how thankful I feel for the good derived from it, I was a slave, claimed "I hither potid sere throat and Asthma for ten years, I despaired of ever being cured, I saw your advertisement for the cure of this dreadful and tormenting disease, Asthma, and thought you had over-spoken yourself, but resolved to give it a trial. To my astonishment the trial acted like a charm. Send me a full-size bottle." DRS. TAFT PROS' MEDICINE CO. Rev. Dr. Morris Wechsler. Rabbit of the Cong. Brad Israel. New York, Jan 2, 1901. NEW YORK, JAN. 2, 1901 The Tree House' Minecourt Co. DIS, TAPT 1 PROB. SCIENCE 10. Gentleman: Your Asthmata nee is an excellent remedy for Asthma and Hay Fever, and its composition alleviates all troubles which combine with Asthma. Its success is astonishing and wonderful. □ After having it carefully analyzed, we can state that Asthmaticené co stabis morphine, morphine, chloroform or other. Very Trial Yours. REV DR VORGIS WECHLER. AVON SPRINGS, N.Y., February 1, 1901. Gentlemen; I write this testimonial from a sense of duty, having tested the wonderful effect of your Asthmae, for the cure of Asthma. y wife has been affiliated with spasmodic asthma for the past 12 years. Having exhausted my own skill as well as many others I chanced to see your sign upon your windows on 13th Street. New York. I at once obtained a bottle of Asthmae. dy wife commenced taking it about the first of November. I very soon noticed a radical improvement. After using one bottle her Asthma has disappeared and she is entirely free from all symptoms; I feel that I can consistently recommend the medicine to all who are afflicted with this disstress disease. Yours respectfully. O. D PHELPS, M. D. DR. TAFF BROS. MEDICINE CO. Home address, 235 Rivington street. Gentlemen: I was troubled with Asthma for 22 years. I have tried numerous remedies, but they have all failed. I ran across your advertisement and started with a trial bottle. I found relief at once. I have shoe purchased your full-sized bottle, and I am very grateful. I have family of four children, and for six years was unable to work. I am now in the best of health and am doing business every day. This testimony you can make such use of as you see fit. S RAPHAEL Feb. 5, 1961. 67 East 129th st., City Trial Bottle Sent Absolutely Free on Receipt of Postage. Do not delay. Write at yance, addressing DR. TAFT BEOS.' MEDICINE CO., 70 East 8 St. N., Y. City G. G. WOLF Invites you to his store. We carry a full line of Stationery, Art Novelties and Pictures for your room decorations, LAWKENCE, KANSAS 1. T 908 Mass. St. Phone 383. LAWRENCE, KAN. Thoroughly reified with the latest unchinery. All kinds of washing done in fist- class manner Suite cleaned, pressed and repaired Employees complained skilled labor Students' trade especially Solicited. Bullock & Co., Progressive Printers . . Students see this firm for good printing. V K . University Book Store 803 MASSACHUSETTS ST. L. M. GIBBS, Prop. Kansas State University and The University Book Store are run especially for the Students of Kansas Y Every TEXT BOOK USED is on our shelves, both in new and Second-hand, We Save You Money! Our K. U. Stationery, embossed printed heading, is just what every student is looking for. To the Freshmen. Regents, Faculty and old Students all know the University Book Store Is at 803 Mass. St. WE WANT YOUR TRADE. xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx LOCALS Arthur Bradley has spent his vacation at home. He says all he does is eat and sleep, and he generally tells the truth. Students go to Bullock & Co. for fine calling cards. 50 for 35c. Football Captain Algie was married this summer and will probably not be in the foot ball games this year, at least not until late in the season. C. A. Matson, L. L. B. 301, is in Wichita practicing law with his brother. Matson & Matson are doing well. Foot Ball Goods at Smith's. O. K. Baker, John T. Little, and E. B. Hayes are working in Kansas City. You are invited to visit our store. Pictures and China. Headlsey's, 733 Mass. St. The WEEKLY is obligated to Hon. D.W. Finney for a copy of the official railroad map of Kansas. It is an excellent map, showing all the systems operated in Kansas, each system being distinguishable by the color. Board has been raised almost everywhere from twenty-five to fifty cents per week. You can save money by buying your stationery supplies of J. S Boughton, 69 Mass, St. Geo. O. Foster is receiving so many letters and applications for catalogues he is almost overwhelmed in his office. Several new cement walks have been laid this summer in place of the old board ones and some new plank walks have supplanted the former trails which led from some of the buildings. Many students will be surprised to learn that our genial registrar has taken to himself a wife. A high steam pressure pipe is being put in between Fowler shops to the Chemistry building. It will be used for distilling. A new coal house has been erected south of the old boiler house. Seth Birecock returned to Lawrence, Monday. He has been working in a lumber yard at Minneapolis all summer. If all reports about Beresford and Broadhurst's latest force, "The Wrong Mr. Wright" are true, our city should be renamed "Laughterville" at least during the term of Beresford's stay. From all along the line comes unanimous praise, and as an enjoyable and spirited high-class "frown arrester" Beresford is said to be an immense success." Bowersock opera house, October 10th. Full line of Golf Goods at Smith's. Close readers of newspapers for a few years back will recall that at one time there was in this country a strong sentiment against the Russian government because of the treatment of political convicts in the mines of Siberia. In diplomatic relations the United States and Russia have always been allies to a certain extent, and it looked at that time as though the repugnance of a large section of our people for the penal system of the Czar would operate to produce a rupture of the entente then existing between the two countries. The feeling of dislike for Russia was fostered by the revelations of Wellman and Kennan the lectures. Nobody has forgotten the scenes they described, and a play that with such subject ought to prove of unusual interest. Such a one is FOR HER SAKE, a four act melodrama which will be seen at Bowersock's Opera House. Sept, the 23rd, 01 WEDDINGS ON THE RAGE. Valley Falls girls have a funny idea of the way to treat an engaged man. A Valley Falls dispatch says: "An announcement has been made of the engagement of Prof. W. D. Ross, county superintendent, formerly with the Effingham high school, and a probable candidate for the nomination of state superintendent next year, and Miss Eleanor Gephart, daughter of Dr. J. T. B. Gephart, of this place, the wedding to occur some time next month. I is customary for Mr. Ross to come Many K. U. People Marry. --- lowed by the ladies singing the song. Mr. Ross was superintendent of public schools here last winter and Miss Gephart was principal. ROSS-GEPHART. Mr. Chas, Griffin, son of A. J. Griffin of this city, was married in Tokyo, Japan, July 29, to Miss Mary Green. Mr. Griffin is a Lawrence boy and a graduate of K. U. He spent several years of study in Harvard and Europe. He is now professor of political economy in Tokyo Imperial University. His bride was born in Yokohama but was educated in the United States, graduating from Ratliff University in 1800. She is the daughter of Rev. D.C. Greene, who was the pioneer missionary sent to Japan by the Congregational Church of America. Prof. W. A. Griffith, of the School of Fine Arts of the University of Kansas,was married on the evening of August 28th to Miss Ida Smith at the home of the bride in this city. It was a private home wedding. GRIFFIN-GREEN. THE FOOTBALL OUTLOOK. GRIFFITH-SMITH. Manager Harshberger Throws Out a Few Tips—K. U. will Have a Good Team. mmm With the arrival of Coach Outland and a few players, foot ball at the University has become the most absorbing topic. Games past and gone are being replayed with vigor on the streets, while long runs and phenomenal touch-downs, already familiar in every detail, are being rehearsed by enthusiasts. The conversation, however, always turns to the future, and many are the anxious queries, what of 1891? What old men will return? What new material is in sight? What tactics or system of play will be used? Who will be captain of the team? Why do football captains get married? Who will win the Haskell game? Why do Carlisle Indians come to Haskell, etc. All admit in a general way that [ ] Glad to See You ! Don't forget we are still in business at the same old place. Our stock is larger and better than ever. Of course you know we sell Clothing, Shirts, Neckwear @ Hats All made by the best American producers. What we want is your business. Come and see us and bring your friends. OBER "The Clothier." over from Oskaloosa most every Saturday evening and spend Sunday here. He came up last Saturday as usual and was met at the depot by about twenty-five young ladies of this city and as soon as he stepped off the train they all joined in and sung "Those Wedding Bells". Mr. Ross at once grasped the situation and with a broad smile on his face pushed his way through the crowd on the platform and walked hurriedly up town, only to be fol- We are now located in our new quarters-two doors south of Innes' Dry Goods Store where we are better prepared than ever to serve you. You will find that our prices on all school supplies is the lowest of any house in Lawrence. We have built up our business by giving the best values for your money. See us before you purchase your fall supplies. To Students Haskell is going to have the best team in her foot ball history, yet all are unanimous in the opinion that they must not be allowed to scalp the pale face on the gridiron of old K. U. D. L. ROWLANDS'. 819 Massachusetts Street. Ellick, of Michigan University will coach the Indians again this year, while Outland, the famous exp. Pennsylvania captain will occupy a similar position at KU. In as much As Outland is a Pennsylvania man it is supposed that Pennsylvania foot ball tactics will predominate, interspersed with plays particularly adapted to the individual players. Of the old men, Meehan, Morton and Elder are already returned. Woodard, a new man, is here, Jenkinson-Nofsinger and Vincent will be in the first of next week, and other new material, Hicks and Brummage of Beloit, Blair of Ft. Scott, Corbett of Concordia, will be on hand in a few days. The men already here have begun practice, and by Monday things will begin to warm up in a lively manner. Training quarters will be secured in a private house, which is much more satisfactory than the old pipe house which has been used for the last two years. The management is doing all in its power to make the season successful, and with a hearty co-operation JOHN B. STETSON CO. Fall Styles Now on Display W. BROMELSICK, K Hatter and Furnishers to K. U. Keeler's Book Store Is the best place to buy your stationery supplies of all kinds. Fountain pens from $1.00 up Agency for the "Hammond" the best typewriter. Typewriters to rent. Ribbons and Supplies. J. A. KEELER, 827 Massachusetts Street. of students and faculty there is no doubt about the outcome. --- Everybody who enjoys clever comedians, pretty girls, bright wits, good singers and graceful dancers should see Kearney and Ryan's comedians in their new version of the newest "Finnigan's Ball." Will find us at the head of the procession as usual with correct Styles in new headgear and furnishings. The piece has been entirely rewritten from start to finish, and is a really clever comedy. The story is breczy, moves along merrily, with lots of bright incidents and clever situations. The company is the best that has ever been seen in the piece. Jest, song and dance follow each other in rapid succession, and the captivating girls and clever comedians form a series of entertaining pictures for the eye and ear that are bewildering in their rapidity for two hours and a half. So completely has "Finnigan's Ball" changed this season that it might well have a new name. Inasmuch as music and dancing constitute about three-fourths of any farce comedy, to change all of its music and dancing is equivalent to giving a new piece. Exactly this has been done to "Finnigan's Ball," and when the curtain rises upon Kearney and Ryans, comedians, in that well known farce comedy at Bowersock opera house on Monday, Sept. 9, the audience may be prepared to see something that bears but very little resemblance to last year's "Finnigan's Ball." Theatre goers who have seen the "Finnigan's Ball" five or six times can see it again and go away feeling that they have seen a new show, nothing but the name of the old one remaining. --- That New Building. Work has been begun on the new museum building, a force of about twenty-five men being employed at present. The dirt excavated is being used to block up Mississippi street and the road angles off along the side of the slope reaching the top about where the Chemistry building stands. This will greatly facilitate the hauling of coal up the hill as this has always been a steep climb, but the new road is a long, gentle slope. Students of K. U. mmm Getting Ready for Work. Every one on the hill,from janitor to foot ball manager is on the qui vive. All the buildings have been given a good scrabbing and everything made nice and clean. All the floors and stairs have been oiled and put in readiness for the advent and downfall of the freshman. All the bulletin boards that lined the halls and covered every available space in the main building have been torn down,and it is rumored that they are to remain down. Treasurer Folks has always been opposed to them and those clubs who put up new ones last year had considerable difficulty in obtaining permission to do so. mmm GEORGE F. GODDING Livery, Back and Boarding Stable. 812-14 Vermont St. Telephone 139. BOWERSOCK'S BOWERSOCKS OPERA HOUSE ✩ ✩ Monday, September 9, 1901 That Famous Farce "Finnigan's Ball." WELL! WELL! WELL! ALL SMILES. ON TOUR BIGGEST Force Comedy COMPANY Clever Comedians. Pretty Girls. Unique Specialties. Willis PHOTOGRAPHER. PHOTOGRAPHER. New Studio. 925 Jackson Bldg. CHARLES H. HESS. Meat Market. Telephone 14. 937 Mass. St. Lawrence; Kan. YOUR CLOTHES Are soiled and need cleaning KLENZONA. Will clean them. For sale at the HOME STORE 1105 Mass, Street. F.R. Bartz. West End Meat Market. DEALER IN FRESH AND SALT MEATS Special Rates Given to Clubs. Phone 314. Lawrence, Kan. Amalgam Fillings, 50c, 3 for ... $1.00 Cement Fillings, 50c, 3 for ... 1.00 Gold Fillings ... $1.00 and up Gold Crown ... $5.00 to $7.00 Porcelain Crowns ... $3.50 Extracting, 25e. DR. McCORY, DENTIST. 833 MASS. ST., LAWRENCE, KAN. Eastern Star Bakery Cream Rolls, Doughnuts, Cream Puffs, Maccaroons, Egg Kissies, Bread, Etc. PARTIGS SUPPLIED. J. DONNELLY. N. DONNELLY. Telephone 100. Donnelly Broc. Livery. Boarding and Hack Stables. All Rubber Tire Rigs 700 to 717 N. H. Lawrence, Kan. FURNISHED FOUNTS FOR RENT. 836 Tennessee street; one front room down stairs. 830 Tennessee street; one front room. 833 Kentucky street; two rooms up stairs. 817 Vermont street; two front rooms. 738 Vermont street; one front room. 1237 Tennessee street; three rooms; all modern conveniences. Watkins National Bank Capital, $100,000. Surplus, $20,000 J. B. WATKINS. C. H. TUCKER. DIRECTORS J. A. HILL W. E. HAZEN Vice President Ass't Cashier C B WATKINS, C A HALL, A C H JUCKER, C J HOUSE, J H JUCKER, T J HOKER Savings Department deposits received Tuesdays and Fridays. Exchanges on all the principal cities of the world. GEO. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Physician and Surgeon. OFFICE, 713 MASSACHUSETTS STREET. Residence 901 Ohio St. G. A. HAMMOND, M. D. Practice limited to discourses of the eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. 901 M&SSACHUSETTS STREET. LAWRENCE, KANSAS. Residence, 1041 Tenn. Street. Office over Woodward's Drug Store CHARLES JOSEPH CAHILL, M.T. LAWRENCE, - - - KANSAS Genecology. 883 MASS, STREET. TELEPHONE 101 3rg s. LAWRENCE. . . . KANSAS. J. W. O'BRYON, D. D. S.. DENTIST. 819 Massachusetts Street. LAWRERCE, - - - KANSAS. DR. WHEELER, DENTIST. The first and only dentist in the city to depart from high prices in favor of the masses. Amalgam Fillings, 50 cents. Gold Fillings half the usual price. Extracting teeth each, 25 cents. Office over Howe's Shoe Store, 829 Mass Open from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. % 10 % DISCOUNT ON ALL MILLINERY TO STUDENTS Mrs. Boulton Stone. 841 MASSACHUSETTS STREET. A. E. PROTSCH, ARTISTIC TAILOR, Suit from $20, Pants $5 up. Corner Warren and Mass. Streets. MORRIS, THE Photo Artist. Students work a specialty in technology to be obtained in Lawrence. Students newly enrolled in the program. 829 Mass. St. 'Phone 312. Totten & Forney, Lawrence Steam Laundry. (See adv. on page 2.) Say, fellers, have you heard about our Puntatorium? We will Press your coat, vest and three pairs of pants for ONE DOLLAR Give us a trial. All work guaranteed satisfactory. Laundry Collections: Mondays and Wednesdays. Deliveries: Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays. SPECIAL RATES on students Laundry. E. J. Hirschler has the chair of German at the college at Terre Haute, Ind. Paper agency for sale. See Guy Harshberger. LOCALS C. E. Carpenter and George Stueset are two university students who spent part of their summer in Europe. A man in western Kansas has a house and lot which he wants to sell or will trade for a barrel of potatoes. Go to Lindsay's for Fine shoe repairing, 836 Mass. street. J. P. King, who graduated from the University last spring, will leave for Springfield, Mo., Monday. He is principal of one of their schools for the coming year. Paper agency for sale. See Guy Harshberger. Vincent C. Poor, a member of the class of 01, will be located at Helena, Montana, this winter. He has the chair of mathematics at Montana Wesleyan University. Will Clawson in writing a letter to his best girl the other day called her a potato. He says he used to call her peach, but potatoes are so expensive now it is more of a compliment to call her a potato. Writing Paper by the Pound. Double the quantity for same money than by quire or box, at Hoadley's, 733 Mass. St. A couple of freshmen were looking around the north end of the basement in Frazer hall Monday. Finally when "Nate" asked them what they wanted they acknowledged they were hunting for the registrar. Buy your tobacco at Smith's. Nebraska has begun foot ball practice. Next week the coach with twenty-five players will go into camp out in the country for two weeks and study foot ball to the exclusion of all other subjects. Nebraska had a winning team last year and is anxious to repeat her good record. H. S. McKeever, who has been in Connecticut all summer selling stereoscopic views, returned today. He reports a pleasant summer. He was at Bridgport right in the center of the big strike. STEAM LAUNDRY WILDER BROS. An Old Objection Overthrown. Shirt Waisties and Dresses a Specialty Dresswear Store Delivered Tuesday and Wednesday SMITH & CLARK. University Agents It has been a favorite plea with the sectarian schools of Kansas and of other states that to send a young man to the State University was the same as consigning him to predition. They claimed that the instructors are all atheists and skeptics, and that every obstacle was placed in the way of a student's religious life. In many country districts and in parts of the state where little was known concerning the state schools this rot was accepted as gospel. But the people throughout the state are not to blame for this. The state schools have never felt it necessary or becoming for one school to deride and misrepresent another. But it has been the custom for some of the private and sectarian sxhools to eagerly seize upon any juicy piece of gossip and every rumor of misdeed and each taint of a foul thought coming from a state school and scatters the news of it broadcast throughout the state. While all this was being done to portray the dark side of the public schools the private concerns were pictured as innocent homes where no harm could enter, and where every young man and young woman was safe as at home. Any dirty scrape, any drunken spree, any racy news concerning these garden spots was carefully hidden from the public. But of late years a reaction has come. The people are beginning to realize that there are two sides to every story. They have found out that the two strongest organizations at Kansas University are the Y. M. C. A, and the Y.W.C.A. There are more Methodists attending Kansas University than at Baker. The people have come to believe that a religion which a person accepts voluntarily is better than a collection of forms which he is forced to observe. At the University of Kansas no one is forced to take part in any religious services. As a result only those who are really interested go. It is better for a student to remain away from chapel than to go and scoff. The morals of the students at Kansas University will compare favorably with that of any body of students in the land. And in addition to the lessons in manhood and womanhood the student is taught to rely upon himself,to be good because it is right,and not because he is commanded to observe certain forms while in college. THE STORE THAT SELLS THE BEST WITHOUT THE FANCY PRICES INNES' We have our line complete in New Fall Silks and Dress Goods. The New things in Wash Taffeta Silks New Black Hop Sacking New Tudor Suitings and Golf Skirtings. We made purchases of these goods below value, so we offer them to early buyers at greatly reduced prices. A SPLENDID SHOWING OF NEW FALL TAILOR-MADE SUITS AND WALKING SKIRTS. NEW BLACK TAFETA AND PEAU DU SOEEM SILK WAISTS. NEW AUTOMOBILE TIES. Innes. Bullene & Hackman, NEW BLACK TAFFETA AND 813-815 Massachusetts Street. --hood the student is taught to rely upon himself,to be good because it is right,and not because he is commanded to observe certain forms while in college. Same Location Same business methods. Always striving to furnish more students with Clothing and Furnishings. You will find new Fall Patterns here. W. E. SPALDING BELL BROTHERS. Piaros for rent MUSIC Half Price To Students 925*27 Massachusetts Street. Visit the Business College. National Bank Building, Third Floor. Bookkeeping, Shorthand. Penmanship, Etc., $ ^{4} c $ . Recitations and work to suit University hours. Evening Sessions beginning October 1 t. I. C. STEUENSON, Principal. Personal. E. H. McMath. With this issue the K. U. WEEKLY has made a new departure. It has made the experiment of using good paper, and at the same time of keeping it full size. It is the intention of the management to keep it in this form just as long as the students will maintain it. The manager is also endeavoring to arrange for having the WEEKLY delivered every week by carrier. Would you like to have it that way? If you would, tell the manager so. If you don't want it that way express your opinion. --- Shall a Young Man Study Law? The present scheme of consolidating business interests has lessened the demand for lawyers. One corporation lawyer supplants many lawyers who, in the past, were assured of incomes from numerous small concerns. Commercial law being more remunerative than forensic law, it has attracted the great lights of the bar. The modern corporation counsel seldom or never appears in court. It is not now a common thing; as in the days of DanielWebster or Rufus Chout, for a prominent lawyer to appear in court in a criminal case. Indeed, it is hard for a criminal to secure the services of a high-class man. Corporation law, of course, pays more. A man in general practice is fortunate if he can earn fifteen thousand dollars, while a corporation lawyer's income ranges from twenty-five thousand to one hundred thousand dollars. So, although a lawyer myself, I do not advise a young man to rush blindly into the study and practice of law, for the present supply is greater than the demand. The youth of this country have generally considered law as a stepping-stone to political preferment. This is a mistaken idea under present conditions. Thirty, yes, ten years ago, a lawyer in a community was a man of distinction. The smaller the community, the greater was the power of his word and influence. He was consulted on matters of petty and of national interest. He was the law and the village oracle. His presence was necessary to the success of any public business. Today, lawyers are too numerous for any such individual distinction. Natural gifts determine legal success to a marked degree. The most important are personal magnetism, sympathy, and a capacity for thorough reading. It is wise for one to cultivate such traits, if the law is to be his mistress. The best way to study law is at some recognized law university. An academic education is first necessary. Although a college one is not, the college-educated man makes the better lawyer. I do not wish to discourage, but rather to caution, when I advise young men to pursue at the threshold of the professions before deciding on law. To those who are determined, I advise commercial, or corporation law. Those who follow it will be endowed with more of the world's goods than the old-tiir practitioner. After graduation, o should enter the law offices of a corporation, and work his way Brains and ability are hard to thwart, when coupled with personal magnetism, and a distinct determination to win. Chas. A. Towne in Success. mm From Lawrence Journal News of Athletics. A bowling tournament will be started at the Merchants Athletic association club house early in October. It is the intention to make it a handicap affair, and get as many of the members to take part as possible. Coach John Outland of the football team of the University of Kansas, went to Kansas City this morning to have a conference with Tucker and the Kansas City Dental college. The result of his trip will be awaited with interest. The first call for foot ball men by Coach Outland of the University of Kansas, brought out a half dozen sturdy fellows last evening, and practice on the campus near the gymnasium in handling the ball and kicking was carried on for a couple of hours. On Monday the work will begin in earnest. Among the men out yesterday were Meehan, Worley, McKenna, Woodward, Smith and Morton. The first foot ball practice of the Haskell Indians was held Friday afternoon under the direction of Coach Ellick. A large number of desirable men for places on the elevens were on the field. The work will begin in earnest next week, when the members of the base ball team will be home, and ready to begin work. A State Hunt . Use Kansas University Weekly. THE ONLY OFFICIAL AND AUTHORIZED WEEKLY PUBLICATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. VOL. All Wool Cheviot Suits, $20 and up Pants, Strictly All Wooll, from $5.00 and up, at DAVIES The Students' Tailor. Cleaning and Repairing a Specialty SAGURDAY. SEPGEMBER 14. 1901. Students Wanting Bicycles Or Repairing of any Kind done are asked to go to the Lawrence Bicycle Company And consult with them. —ALSO— Sporting Goods, GUNS AND AMMUNITION A. BOICOURT, Prop. 905 Mass. St. LAWRENCE, - - KANSAS. DR. B. H. LESLIE. Office 802 Mass. St. Office Phone 36; Res. 191 4-rings. LAWRENCE, - - ANSAS. HUTSON'S BAKERY 709 VERMONT STREET. Bread for sale from wagon and at Leading Grocers. Special Delivery to Clubs. STUDENTS TRADE ESPECIALLY SOLICITED. Telephone 260 4-rings. LAWRENCE, - - KANSAS The Tipton Barber Shop AND BATH ROOMS BATH PRICES. Single Bath ... 25 7 Baths ... 81 00 15 Baths ... 2 00 24 Baths ... 3 00 Baths, School Year ... 5 00 Bath Rooms Open Sunday Until 11:30 A.M. OWELS FURNISHED OWES FURNISHED EVERYTHING FIRST-CLASS R. H. STEWART, Prod. Wm. Wiedeman, 838 Mass. Street. LAWRENCE, - - - KANSAS. Line Confectionery. ICE CREAM PARLOR And Manufacturer of 723 M S . STREET. LAWRENCE - KANSAS. ALL K. U. BOYS PROTSCH THE TAILOR. 717 Mass. St. Ground floor. AGAIN IN MOTION. THE KANSAS UNIVERSITY STARTS ITS COG WHEELS OF KNOWLEDGE MOVING FOR THE YEAR 1901..02. Opening Address by Rev. W. G Banker Listened to by a Large and Appreciative Audience of Citizens and Citizens Mr. Chancellor, Members and Friends of the University of Kansas; The opening of the school year has ceased to be an epoema-making event-perhaps the opening address is not expected to be an epoema-making one. One's topic is in a general way, prescribed by the time and place. These suggest something in the nature of a glance at the possible contents of the opening year; while the speaker's angle of vision will give tone and color to what may be said. The University of Kansas exists for the purpose of education. It is in view of that Philosophical, professional and technical definitions of education, no doubt, exist in abundance, and migrate quoted from the books and periodicals; but these are not the conceptions which have most influenced you and your guardians in bringing you here. The popular idea of education, and the one which fills the colleges and the undergraduate rooms of Universities, takes one of two forms. The vocational-Education is the acquisition of knowledge and skill to be used in the performance of the duties in life. It has been called "the trend and butter idea" and too often it is just that. Young men and women seek knowledge and skill purely in view of their commercial value and that education which does not increase one's income-producing capacity by something more than the commercial interest rate of the money invested is counted as a failure. That this is a low and unworthy notion of education, goes without saying. Still it it removes us to hesitate at out too utter condemnation of even this notion. Many tithings which are not ideal are very useful. Bread and butter education has given society a host of desirable things. The education of that primitive move up to the possibility of a trap, was a bread and butter one—how much that trap has conducted to nugget educational notions since who shall say. How much of the actual master of physics forces which makes present-day immunity possible, has been brought about by the bread and butter trained people? How much of the voluntary planned/organized activity or information such is not due to the same kind of training? Much that people learn pricely for the purpose of coming into cash is, in long run, of immense value to society. And a purely bread and butter education is not now, if it ever was, a possibility. The process of learning carries with it a process of psychosexual growth. Increase of knowledge means enlargement of view and almost certainly a supersite and a quicker sympathy, so that move, good may be one's purpose to acquire knowledge and skill simply as commercial commodities, in their acquisition one incidentally, perhaps invovinantly, does acquire other things making for the enlargement of one's own personality, and the treatment of society. And there is a vocational conception of education which is not of the bread and butter variety. There is an acquisition of technical professional knowledge and skill in view of the possibilities of service. Occasionally one becomes a scientist without a taught of whether by it they shall eat or drink or be clothed—only with the hope of extending the bounds of human knowledge. The medical schools are graduating physicians who plan to live and die as poor as they were born, while they vary in fields of science, health, life, culture, for men, and common of varied and profound scholarly attainments, whose reward shall be an opportunity to serve. All of these classes look upon education as chiefly, if not wholly, a preparation for life work. The other form which the education I idea takes in our minds is what we may perhaps call the cultural. The word is somewhat ambiguous and, perhaps it is best so. Those of you who have come here to obtain culture think of it chiefly as the discovery of your powers and faculties, and the training of them into the appreciation and enjoyment of the true and the beautiful. Often, nod ault, the notion of the true and beautiful is conventional, and culture is conceived and accomplished arbitrarily. Certain things we are to admire and enjoy, chiefly because they are to be admired and enjoyed, and any failure of that experience on our part is proof positive of a lack of culture. Notwithstanding, we pretty generally have a quite definite idea of culture as the discovery and development of our capacities. This, it would seem, is elementary. It constitutes the accepted premise of substantially all that we read or hear upon the topic. The ultimate end of the university, its reason for being is the production of men and women who considered as individuals, are complete and self-sta-titude, and as citizens intelligent and faithful. We seek it, however, with various ends in view. One school of culture seeks culture for the felicity of being cultured. Its end seems to be a serene consciousness of superiority. Perhaps I misunderstand the doctrines of this group, but take them to be a sort of scholastic quietism. The mystic temper made dominant in the intellectual life/Culture because a cult with its own stylistic and contemplation of Its own habitualities its sacrament. Its legitimate end would be a race of literary stylites, who, in self-satisfaction and in public officiousness would put the ancient Simon to the blush. And the later phase of the matter seems now the prominent one. Civic responsibility has been something like a bad in the schools for more than a decade. No doubt the fact has been, and still is justified by conditions. The awakening of educated people to civic duties—the arising within them of a sense of civic responsibility is a demand of the condition that life live. The need for political intelligence and thickening of a political conscience are functions of a State University not to lightly set aside. Still it is submitted that the civic character is not the most important character, or the civic virtues the capital virtues to be exploited; that there is one relation of life which, because The majority of those who seek culture, lo it with sainer purpose and more real clews. To them culture implies not only pleasures but potencies. Not only consciousness, but character. True education, to that end, discovers all of one's possibilities, possibly alienizes all that is good in them, and curbs saludes, eliminates all that is bad. True, this recognizes character as an end in education. NOT THE end, but AN end. Probably we "benevolent notabilities" have gone too far in insisting that character is the only end, but perhaps our notion is not more extreme or more harmful in the one direction than that of some our critics in the other. When Prof. Johnson of The University of Pennsylvania, said "The University is not responsible for the character, in orals, the vices or anything else of its graduates," he said whist, in a narrow case, is true. Because of its broad implication is all true. Men are native stuff plus education; and the educational process must, by its very terms, modify at least the form of the native stuff. Both the body of knowledge acquired and the effort put forth in its acquisition tend to throw all parts of the psychical mature into new shapes. Students can not pass through the experience of a university course with out modifications of character. However good may be the intent of the university to do nothing in the way of character formation, that intent must, in the very nature of the case fail. Give to the university the very narrowest possible functions, make it but a center for the exhibition of knowledge to the eyes of its students—a sort of Scandinavian ending home on a variety of vials and set f' ith on a variety of vials are set f' ith on a variety of tables and the student passenger pays his money and helps himself—it is yet responsible for the effect of its commodities upon his psychical digest—at least in so far as the natural effect of those commodities is known. Something like this will, perhaps, be recognized and acknowledged by the average university management and student body alike. And if University life is bound to modify character, it is certainly desirable that the modification shall be in the right direction, because it is evolved by university training should be those capacities and dispositions which make for individual happiness and social wellbeing. The educational conception dominant in average people is a compound of these two—the vocational and the cultural. It is an unwarrantable assumption that this is your conception? You have come up here to be educated, and by education you mean the acquisition of such knowledge and skill as shall fit you for life's duties, and such culture as shall bring into conscious and dominant activity all that is best in your initial possibilities, while repressing and eliminating that which is not necessary to be the ordinary situation. And it is the ordinary—the commonplace, if you please, which interests us because it is the ordinary, the commonplace whica is world substance. We are ordinary people and must conform ourselves to ordinary conditions. it is fundamental while others are secondary; because it is universal, while other relations are sporadic; because it is constant, while other relations are periodical is a relation more vital, and therefore defending that greater attention be given to the production and development of those virtues which make for it—than for any other. I refer to the Domestic Relation is the function of formal education to develop competence to a satisfying and helpful life then the domestic virtues should occupy a capital place in the list, for the Domestic Relation is the capital one. And how much attention is now, or for that matter ever was given by the schools, to the fitting of men and women for that relation. They must be trained for the individual mental life. They must be instructed and cultivated for the professional life. They must be trained and quizzed for their civic life, but the desire to be an ancestor who went a wooing with a club and brought his bride home by her hair obtained his domestic talents from nature and his descendants may do the same. Consider if you please the capital importance of this relation. Individualism is of course, in this sense, an impossibility. No man liveth to himself. The most isolated individual is yet part of a family. That early theory was sound which held the family to be a corporation of which, particular individuals were the temporary existence form. It is the center of all the best affections and most potent emotions. In teaching its meaning of effort and sphere of greatest influence. And it exists for all of us. A few of us will be lawyers, a few physicians, a few teachers, a few engineers, but all will be, may already are, parts of families. And what we shall be in other aspects will be determined in a large measure by the completeness of our adjustment in this one. An unhappy home may give opportunity for the culture of many graces, practically it produces everything but graces. There are few Richters and still less like Socrates. Fact accomplishments in all relations, of culture, of profession, of attainment, of civic duties, of domestic relations, and the domestic relations are determined by the character for domestic virtues possessed by members of the family. At the very bottom of our fitness for life's our fitness for home nearest mass in life lies our fitness for home. *Citing to thy home; if there the nearest air* Yield there a hearth and shelter for thy head, And some poor plot, with vegetables scarf Be all that heaven allots then for thy board, Unsavory bread, and herbs that scattered grow Wild on the river's brink or mountain brow, Yet cen this cheerless mansion shall More hearts cease than all the world provide Mortality repose than all the world beside." NO.2. And it is the life of the heart which is the real life. High or humble, servant or savant, not all the possible relations of life contain for you a suggestion of the realfulness of blessing to be found in a good home. The thrill of achievement, the delirium of public applause are insignificant in comparison with the sustained and endearing joys which center at the hearth stone, while whatever in them is normal, permanent and satisfying, comes from their bearing upon the home relations. Oh, these homes of earth! But humbler tho they are, no sculptured marble or massive brass, no palace of knight or lord or king can ever compensate for the lack of the rich affections and the holy calm that center in them. There are other knights who treat him as trusted and baby links chainbacks about the soul beseeching it to virtue. There manhood gathers purpose, and finds tense nerves of steel to do or die for the good and beautiful, and there womanhood wears a crown whose jewels glow more brightly as glossy ringlets change to grey, and the firm curves of youth become the softer ones of age, the jewels of her wife and motherhood. What I hearing then shall our University training have upon those virtues which conduce to the activity of the home? That has been a very interesting discussion in the periodicals as to whether collegebred women marry and what kind of wives they make. I confess to the possession of nothing to contribute to it, save the remark that from my professional experience during the last ten days, it is my conviction that K. U. women, at least, do marry. But our question has no special application with sexes alike, for the domestic virtues are the domestic virtues, whether in man or woman. It may fairly be assumed that the sexes will mate as long as the world stands, but shall they so mate as to bring the best results to themselves and to society? This is the domestic question upon which collegiate training ought directly to bear. That thus far it has thusorne with any appreciable results is open to question, perhaps for the reason that University training has all been in view of the fact that young men and women are to be individuals and citizens, but seldom in view of the fact that they are to be husbands and wives and fathers and mothers. There are certain particulars in which such a training tends to work against the home. It tends unduly to emphasize the purely intellectual as against the affectional nature. The whole psychical apparatus of men and women of college age is in a state of unstable equilibrium, and the persistent activity of the intellectual faculties, together with the fact that the personal touch of their instructors upon them, sets the attitude of intellect, tends to give them an angle of importance of pure intellect, and the importance of affection, and they enter upon life with characters fixed to find the secret of life in brains, when it isn't there but in the heart. A successful college experience tends to lead people to seek satisfaction in public rather than private relations. To substantiate the profession, the office, the purpose, for the home, if not in fact still in feeling, And it tends to elevate the standard of living without proportionately increasing the income, so that the disproportion between income and standard of living becomes a source of lifelong poverty, worry, harassment, and not seldom domestic bickering and discord. Some things may be said upon the other side. In particular cases University culture produces a lightened refinement of living when without it existence would have been upon almost the animal plane. In other cases it produces a beautiful boncomprairie which transforms the home. While in the vast majority of cases it inhabits an home-producing capacity, and an enlarged domestic administration, tending in high degree to the production of a successful home. All these things are I believe true. What then? Why evidently, they are the mere by-products, so to speak of the University process. Not one is the direct result of an intelligently addressed purpose, where such a purpose is not only possible but highly important. College training should have certain bearings upon the home life, not incidentally, and fortuitously, but directly and intentionally. I shall not attempt a catalogue of domestic virtues to be brought into prominent activity by a University training; but there are three particulars which are so fundamentally important and which so obviously can be gained from no other source save education that to fail to mention them would be unpardonable. 1. University training ought to give a proper conception of the place of the domestic affections in an ideal life. We need not forget that the emotions of the young are forward, and that the reason is backward. It is not to be doubted that the University process demands a high notion of the importance of scholarship, as a spur to that untiring industry without which nothing worth while can be accomplished. But the idea that intellectual attainment, is in itself a means of personal happiness, or the mainspring of social betterment is so wholly false as to be without excuse. Feeling, not knowledge is. Hard work, not knowledge is energy. Love, strong and it is the force of all true beatitude, and the dynamic of all worthy conduct, and the natural social human center of that love is the home. If, when you leave these walls you leave them with ideals, dispositions and habits which make a true domestic relation impossible to you, it matters not what else you may have or be, you will enter upon life incapacitated for its one real joy, and its one real power. 2. University training ought to prepare men and women for intelligent mating. Mating as the birds mate ought to be impossible among educated people. With all the wealth of light thrown upon this subject by both the physical and social sciences, it is a matter of reproach that college trained people should marry from mere propinquity. One is astonished that any of them should fail to apply the knowledge gained in the class room, the library and the laboratory to their own cases. They would not thus fail in their conduct of their farms or their banks, but in this, the most vital of all matters, college and University people seem as absurdly foolish as the common herd. Invalids and degenerates seem to marry as willingly as the Continued on Second Page. Kansas University Weekly. Editor-in-Chief... RACHEL PUGH Associates / H. H. TANGEMAN, / A. H. SEDDON. Literary ... C. A. GARDNER. Society Editor... ANNA WARFIELD. Athletic Editor... E. E. SALEE. Local Editor... WALTER J. MEEK. Associates. J, M. RAIDER, J. SCHRODER, F. L. THI, FORD, WILLR, K Murphy, MYRON L. HUM PIREY, WALTER J. MEER, JOIN A. DV LIN, J. H. LUQWORTHY, E. W. MURRAY E. H. MoMATH, Managing Editor. Entered at the Lawrence Postoffice as second-class mail matter. Shares in the WEEKLY $1.99 each, entitles the holder to the paper two years, may be had of the Secretary and Treasurer, George Foster, the managing editor, or at the WEEKLY office. Subscription price, 50 cents per annum in advance. Single copies 5 cents. Address all communications to E. H. McMata, Business Manager, Lawrence, Kansas. LAWRENCE, KAN., SAT. SEPT. 65. 1901. It is a pleasure to note the honors that have come during the summer to some of the faculty members of the scientific department. Captain Algie's failure to return, due to a fair maiden in Utah, causes a much desired office to be open. It is hoped that a man as efficient as Algie can be found for the place. All of the old students learn with regret that Tucker will be unable to be with the football team this year. Being one of K. U's oldest and ablest players, he will be sorcelly missed. Prof. Blackmar's article in the September Review of Reviews, "Kansas After the Drouth," is an interesting one. It will give people out of the state, an idea of the true condition of things in the state at the present time. The WEEKLY, under new management, bidse everyone welcome old professors,new professors old students,new students seniors,juniors,sophomores and especially the freshmen. It is bad if the rain dampened the spirits of the freshmen,but the farmers needed the rain. Coach John Outland is working hard with the foot ball team. He hopes to find a number of strong, sturdy men in the Freshmen class. If any new man unknown to Mr. Outland, has tendencies toward foot ball, he should go out on the field and volunteer his service. The WEEKLY this term will follow the policy of the WEEKLY last term, in that it will try to be fair and just to all. It does not boast that it will treat all alike for it will not. It will laud the worthy and condemn the unworthy. It will encourage the freshmen and hold down the senior. And it will do all in its power to promote class and college spirits, enthusiasm for athletics and friendliness among the students. sound and well balanced, indeed, sometimes more so. Continued From First Page. That a reform in marriage customs upon this question of mating is imperative, seems to me clear. There are some of us who for reasons within ourselves, hereditary or acquired, should never marry. Education should enable us to discover this fact, and then to be true to ourselves. True, it means deliberate self separation from what we have strenuously insisted is the supreme joy and the supreme motive. But it is choosing the loss of two evils. For such, the marriage relation contains nothing but the bitterness of death, while it means a distinct wrong to all coming ages. The best, the only right thing, is by a large love of the race, and a nobly unselfish service, to fill as well as may be, the void in the soul, left by the self-destil. The rest of us should mate upon sound physical and psychological principles. Mark you, this is a reform which can come only by the voluntary activity of young men and women, and who shall set the example, if not the University bred. Who else so competent by knowledge ge to determine the facts in the case? Who else so strong by culture to conform their conduct to their intelligence? Who else so sustained, so enlightened, so trained by society for its service as the university man and woman? Upon whom has society the just claim for intelligent and righteous conduct in this respect, if not upon the men and women who possess the knowledge and the strength required for right action? 3 University training ought to give such balance, such poise of character as should make the stability and the joy of the house comparatively independent of economic conditions. We are not unmindful of a fact so strenously urged by the economist that domestic character is vastly dependent upon economic conditions. "If ones children are crying for bread and he sits shivering by a cold chimney, the endurance of his domestic virtues is probable natual." There is a certain inconvenience of material comfort without which domestic happiness is scarcely possible. But it is not the lack of that nuisance which afflicts the majority of our unhappy homes. It is the disparity between the standard of living and the income. The income may be amply sufficient for all the real necessities and many of the comforts of a family, yet if that family insists upon living or craving to live at a standard beyond the income, the conditions exist for all unhappy homes. What are the facts? Why, with us Americans, especially of the class from which most University people come, the standard of living is away above the incomes. And why, pray? Our incomes are sufficient for real needs. Because we are so ruled and tyranized over by conventional ideas. We are so subject to whims and fashions; we are so overpowered by the horror of what other people will think, that we drive ourselves until, in the endeavor to live up to the standard of luxury set by our more worthy or less honest neighbors, we either succeed in doing it by straining after a larger income, and by a hidden economy which galls and frets or we give up the effort in dispair, and hate ourselves into the horrors because it is impossible. University training ought to reduce us from all that. It ought to give us a large and intelligent capacity in domestic administration to get all possible comfort out of our incomes whatever they may be. And a strength and poise of character which will enable us to use what we have and be happy. Having food, raiment and shelter, a few books, a few friends, a concert occasionally and our loved ones at home, we ought to be happy. There is no sound reason for us worrying ourselves and our families into untimely graves, because our acquaintances have more. There is no reason why a man receiving forty dollars a month and a millionaire should not be chums, or why the poor man should envy the rich one. Enjoy what you have and be happy. If your university training does not help you to do it, it fails in one thing which it ought to do. Ladies and gentlemen. The speech is finished. The year is before you. As a whole you are a Kansas product. Children of these broad prairies and thriving towns. Standing upon a virgin soil you today come into the importance of all the ages. How much of it shall be actually yours—you alone will say. The limits of your requirements here, yourselves will set, for no objective limits have ever been found. True the university is always calling for larger equipment and wider opportunity--it always will be. But here, right here, any man or woman will find a stream of learning, which, after you have drunk from it four years, will flow just as full and just as fee as before you tasted, for its fountain is eternal truth. Drink your fill and may it be in you a fountain of truth flowing out in noble living and large and loving service. Shelley PHOTOGRAPHER. 719 Massachusetts Street. DENTIST EDWARD BUMGARDNER, M. D. D. D. S. Office 809 Mass. St. Telephone 209 2-rings, LAWRENCE, KANSAS. K. U. PENDANTS. 50 CENTS EACH AT Sol Marks' 817 Massachusetts Street. Mrs. E. E. Mendenhall Mrs. E. E. Mendenhall Has bought the Millinery Stock formerly owned by the Mrs. Gardner, and will continue the business at the old stand, 823 Mass. St., where you will find everything in up-to-date Millinery. Home-Made Cakes STUDENTS' SUPPLIES AT THE Home Store 1105 Massachusetts Street. ASTHMA CURE FREE! Asthmalene Brings Instant Relief and Permanent Cure in All Cases SENT ABSOLUTELY FREE ON RECEIPT OF POSTAL. Write Your Name and Address Plainly. Write Your Name and Address Plainly. CHAINED FOR TEN YEARS HAY FEVER ASHWA EVERY BRIKES RELIEF. There is nothing like Asthmalene. 'it brings lostant relief, even in the worst cases. It cures when all else fails. The Rev. C, F. WELLS, of Villa Ridge, Ill., says: "Your trial bottle of Asthmalene received in good condition. I can not tell you how thankful I feel for the good derived from it, I was a slave, chained with patrid sere throat and Asthma for ten years, I despaired of ever being cured. I saw your advertisement for the cure of this dreadful and tormenting disease, Asthma, and thought you had overspoken yourselves, but resolved to give it a trial. To my astonishment the trial acted like a charm. Send me a full-size bottle." Rev. Dr. Morris Wechsler. Rabbi of the Cong. Bnd Israel. NEW YORK, Jan. 2, 1901. DR. TAFT BROS. MEDICINE CO. DRS, LAFT PROS' MEDICINE CO. Gentlemen: Your Asthmale is an excellent remedy for Asthma and Hay Fever, and its composition alleviates all troubles which combine with Asthma. Its success is astonishing and wonderful. □ After having it carefully analyzed, we can state that Asthmaleum contains no opium, morphine, chloroform or ether. Very Tryly Yours, REV. DR. MORRIS WECHSLER. AVON SPRINGS, N. Y., February 1, 1901. Gentlemen: I write this testimonial from a sense of duty, having tested the wonderful effect of your Asthmaleme, for the cure of Asthma. My wife has been afflicted with spasmodic asthma for the past 12 years. Having exhausted my own skill as well as many others I changed to see your sign upon your windows on E10th street New York, I at once obtained a bottle of Asthmaleme. My wife commenced taking it about the first of November. I very soon noticed a radical improvement. After using one bottle her Asthma has disappeared and she is entirely free from all symptoms! I feel that I can consistently recommend the medicine to all who are afflicted with this distressing disease. Yours respectfully, Gentlemen: I was troubled with Asthma for 22 years. I have tried numerous remedies, but they all failed. I ran across your advertisement and started with a trial bottle. I found relief at once. I have since purchased your full-sized bottle, and I am very grateful. I have family of four children, and for six years was unable to work. I am now in the best of health and am doing business every day. This testimony you can make such use of as you see it. S RAPHAEL DR. TAFT BROS. MEDICINE CO. O, D PHELPS, M. D. Feb. 5.1901. Home address, 235 Rivington street. 67 East 129th st., City Trial Bottle Sent Absolutely Free on Receipt of Postage. Do not delay. Write at ynce, addressing DR. TAFT BEOS.' MEDICINE CO., 79 East 130th St. N. Y., ity G. C. WOLF Invites you to his store. We carry a full line of Stationery, Art Novelties and Pictures for your room decorations, 917 Mass. St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS. T ne Lawrence Steam Laundry. COL. JAMES BECK, PROP. 908 Mass. St. Phone 383. LAWRENCE, KAN. Thoroughly refitted with the latest machinery. All kinds of washing done in first- class manner. Suits cleaned, pressed and repaired Employs competent skilled labor. Students' trade especially Solicited. Bullock & Co., Progressive Printers . . Students see this firm for good printing. ! brings cures ellent scom- mbline t won- e can mor-ours, R. $x$ dry. P. 383. atest first. aired labor. ly University Book Store 803 MASSACHUSETTS ST. L. M. GIBBS, Prop. Kansas State University and The University Book Store are run especially for the Students of Kansas Every TEXT BOOK USED is on our shelves, both in new and Second-hand, We Save You Money! Our K. U. Stationery, embossed printed heading, is just what every student is looking for. To the Freshmen. Regents, Faculty and old Students all know the University Book Store. Is at 303 Mass. St. WE WANT YOUR TRADE. LOCALS Mr. Tucker was on the hill Monday. Buy your tobacco at Smith's. The Y. M. C. A hold open house Saturday night to new students. Good Stationery—Cheap at Houdley's. The Phi Psi gave a smoker Thursday night at their chapter house. Foot ball goods at Smith's. The Sigma Chis gave a hop Saturday night in the I. O. O. F. hall Buy pour New Hat at Ober's. Mr. Sheffield Ingalls spent a few days with the Phi Gams this weeks. For good fitting clothes go to Ober's. All the best brands of cigars at Smith's. Minnie L. Leach has a position as teacher in Cripple Creek. John Hall and Alfred Barnett will attend Harvard this year. Frank Glick and Hoch Simpson teach in the Phillippines. Neckwear of all styles at Ober's. Herman Von Unworth is foreman of the Witte Iron works. Candles and Shades at Hoadley's. The Pi Phis are wearing colors for Miss Leslie Hill of Lawrence and Kittle Plumb, of Long. The Pi Phis gave a chocolate at Mrs. Weaver's on Thursday morning. Friday night the Y.M.C.A. held a reception to all new men, at their house on Ohio St. Lion Brand Shirts at Ober's, $1.00. Mrs. Taking who was here with her son Floyd, returned to Ft. Scott Thursday. See Smith for Gymnasium Goods Dr. Ida Hyde arrived Wednesday from Chicago where she has been spending the summer. To be well dressed wear Ober's Clothing. Wednesday afternoon from three to five the PiPhis receive at Mrs. Robinsons in West Lawrence. Hats that are proper and good at Ober's. Mrs Dunbar of K. C. who came to place her daughter in school, returned home Friday. A number of the senior engineers will not return until late, on account of the positions they have. Among those enrolling who were here formerly, are John Harrison of Topeka and John Sheridan of Paola. K. U. Views-10 cents, at Hoadley's. Monday evening the men of the Sigma Chi fraternity will give a dance at the Bowersock pavilion. The Sigma Chis gave smokers Tuesday and Wednesday evenings at their fraternity house 933 Ohio St. Gertrude Becker has a position as assistant teacher in Elocution and physical training at the University. Go to Lindsay's for Fine Shoe repairing. 836 Mass. St. Nettie Manley teaches Elocution and German in Clay Co. High School, with T.B.Hanna as principal. Gussie Hall teaches at Valley Falls, Edith Irwin at Blue Rapids, Eleanor T. Miller at Hiawatha and Lucile Carruth at Arkansas City. On Tuesday evening the Kappas gave a fudge party at their fraternity house on 1029 Kentucky street, for some of the Freshmen girls. Neckwear that is new and up-to-date at Ober's. Thursday evening the Phi Delta entertained at their house in honor of their new men and others. Cards and dancing were the amusements, Remember, we sell clothing at Ober's. George McGraw of K. C. Kansas and Sydney Linscott of Holton have pledged themselves to the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. The girls of Kappa Kappa Gamma had a fortune telling party at Esther Wilsons, Wednesday evening instead of the tallyho which had been planned. Ray Sexton of Minneapolis, Marian Russell of Great Bend, Winnie Heinecke of Jewel City and Floyd Taken of Fort Scott have donned the blue and white of the Phi delts. Guyer, Stetson and Hawes Hats at Ober's. The hop given by the Betas Wednesday night was a most enjoyable one. It was the first affair given at the Beta house this year. Music was furnished by Sommers and Newhouse. Professor Newson has been elected to the Deutsche Mathematiker Vereinigung. Also to the Cercolo Matematico Di Palermo. This is an honor, for there are of the former only twelve Americ in members and of the latter only six. Headquarters for "Manhattan Shirts" at Ober's. A Number of old students are back to take part in fraternity work. Among whom are Marie Morris of Hawthaw, Bob Bradford of Elidorado, Frank Puiert and John Kane of We sell Stein Block's" fine clothing at Ober's. We are now located in our new quarters-two doors south of Innes' Dry Goods Store—where we are better prepared than ever to serve you. You will find that our prices on all school supplies is the lowest of any house in Lawrence. We have built up our business by giving the best values for your money. See us before you purchase your fall supplies. To Students D. L. ROWLANDS', 819 Massachusetts Street. K. C. and Lou Kemply of Paola. There is a certain magic in the very name Siberia and when it figures in a play the theater goer is assured at least of thrilling situations and picturesque scenical effects FOR HER SAKE, the play which comes to Bowersocks' Opera House Monday September 23rd, is an attraction of this sort, and the promise is for one of the genuine novelties of the season at this popular theater. Full line of Golf Goods at Smith's. The Y. W. C. A. gave a reception to all the new girls yesterday afternoon from 3 to 5 at the Y. W. C. A. house, 1312 Vermont St. There was a delightful musical program given by members of the music school, and the hours passed pleasantly. Cravenette and Macintoshes at Ober's. "The Village Parson" certainly contains all the elements of success. The piece is well a told story wherein human emotions and sympathies are strongly portrayed and has a high moral tone. The play has been approved by both press and public and the story is good and pure, leaving a lasting and favorable impression everywhere presented. The mounting is new and beautiful and thoroughly refreshing throughout. The company will be found a most capable one in every respect, each member being especially selected for his or her part. The Village Parson will be seen at the Bowersock Opera House. Sept. 19. Professors E. Miller, F. W. Blackmar, H. B. Newson and S. J. Hunter were elected Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, which was held in August at Denver. At this time Professor Williston was chosen President of the Sigma Xi. Honorary Scientific Society. If you don't know us come and get acquainted. We sell Clothing at Ober's. The students are back again and once more society has commenced on the hill. Receptions are being held by old students to the new ones and most of the fraternities are busy rushing. For a week or two everything will be more or less excitement but soon thilgs will quiet down and studying will commence in earnest. --mmm THE VILLAGE PARSON. One of the present successes in a dramatic way is the new and beautiful melodrama entitled "The Village Parson," which will be presented at the Bowersock Opera House, Sept. 19. The play deals with the affections of the heart, and the cardinal virtue of truth and strongly portrays intense human emotions and arouses keen interest. Splendid scenic environment is used and a full acting company has been intrusted with the various roles. Few Old Players, But Prospect is Good. FOOT BALL One of the foremost questions in the minds of the athletically inclined students of K. U. is "what kind of foot ball team are we going to have this year." Our experience of last year has engendered a feeling of doubt as to whether we are going to do better this year. K. U. feels keenly the effect of last years defeats and is going to do her best to resume her leadership in foot ball among western colleges. It is too early yet to tell exactly what our prospects are. We are certainly at a disadvantage in not having as many old players of assured ability as we have had heretofore. While there are only three or four of last season's players here now, there are many new men who give promise of developing rapidly. The fact that there have been many new Why Not Let D. H. ROSE Send your dirty clothes to Jackson's Steam Laundry, KANSAS CITY, MO. All work gauranteed. Prices: Shirts, 10c; Cuffs, 4c per pair Collars, 2c each. Shirt Waists a Specialty men out for practice, is very encouraging. There is undoubtedly just as good foot ball material at K. U. this year as there ever has been. What it needs is development. Let every man lend support and encouragement to the coach and manager. There are many ways to do this. A WORD TO NEW MEN. If you are physically able and have the faintest hope that you might develop into a foot ball player, put on a suit and come out. You will get due recognition and your efforts will be highly appreciated by the student body. K. U. has always had a generous and enthusiastic regard for the men who have represented her in athletic contests. Don't feel hopeless about getting on the team. There are many men in the University today who commenced work in athletics under most unfavorable coefditions. They passed unnoticed for a year or two but undiscouraged by lack of attention or praise they have by hard work won a place in Athletics. The chances for new men are unusually good this year. None of the positions are filled yet. All will have on equal chance and the success of a candidate will depend en, tirely upon his merit. The second eleventh is the stepping stone to the first. Several good games are scheduled for it. Those who succeed in getting on the second team will be well rewarded for their work Come out and fight for a place. Whether you get one or not you will be doing a great service to the University, to the foot ball manager and coach. As for the man who is not a player his support is none the less valuable. Enthusiasm and encouragement will aid greatly in developing a successful team. After much hard work by the management, a schedule of games has been arranged. This schedule contains games with Texas State University and with Vanderbuilt University of Nashville Tenn. It will cost a great deal to bring these teams here. Our team must have suits. The training table must be supplied. Therefore, hunt up the man who has tickets for sale and busy one or more at once. Held K. U. to take a brace in foot ball. While the prospect is not brilliant it is at least good. We have a thorough, hard working coach in Mr. Outland. He deserves the support of every student of this institution, and if he gets it we will have a successful team. mmm BASE BALL. Base ball has taken a firm hold on the Unversity. The success of the team last year and also in 1900 made base bail very popular. It is no expensive sport. Besides being financially successful the eastern trips which the team made in 1900 1901 gave us a reputation for playing good base ball and promoting intercollegiate athletics. Let us look back on our base ball record of the last two years for an inspiration in the coming foot ball campaign. Phone 347. RIVERSIDE BOAT HOUSE KEENEY, Proprietor. The Best Dramatic Production of the Year. W. E. NANKEVILLE'S The Village Parson. The Most Natural Play of the Age Lines that are pure and natural. Seenic environments new and novel The seal of approval stamped upon it by the press, public and clergy. Grandly pure and truthful in its Construction. GEORGE F. GODDING, Livery, Back and Boarding Stable. 812-14 Vermont St. Telephone 139 Willis PHOTOGRAPHER. New Studio. 925 Jackson Bldg. Phone 411 white CHARLES H. HESS. Meat Market. Telephone 14. F. R. Bartz. West End Meat Market. DEALER IN 937 Mass. St. Lawrence; Kan. FRESH AND SALT MEATS Special Rates Given to Clubs. Phone 314. Lawrence, Kan. Amalgam Fillings, 50c, 3 for ... $1.00 Cement Fillings, 50c, 3 for ... 1.00 Gold Fillings ... $1.00 and up Crown Fillers ... $5.00 to $10.00 Porcelain Crownes ... $5.00 Extracting, 25e. DR. McCORRY, DENTIST. 833 MASS. ST., LAWRENCE, KAN. Eastern Star Bakery HENRY GERHARD, Prop. Cream Rolls, Doughnuts, Cream Puffs, Maccaroons, Egg Kissies, Bread, Etc. PARTIGS SUPPLIED. J. DONNELLY. N. DONNELLY. Telephone 100. Donnelly Broc. Livery. Boarding and Hack Stables. All Rubber Tire Rigs 700 to 717 N. H. Lawrence, Kan. 120 Y. M. C. A. BUILDING. K. U Y. W. C. A. The Young Womens' Christian association maintained in the University of Kansas, is composed of about 250 Christian women united for the attainment o: the most perfect development of Christian character among the young women of the institution. With this purpose in view during the year now opening, a religious service will be held every Wednesday afternoon at 5 o'clock, in the chapel, led by able speakers. The subjects discussed will be of practical interest and value to all young women. Special services will often be held on Sunday afternoon, sometimes conjointly with the young men. During the year the Missionary committee will conduct several classes for the study of foreign missions, also taking charge once a month, of the midweeks meeting. The association will aid, to the amount of one hundred dollars in the support of one of its former members who is now in India as a Y, W.C.A. secretary. They believe no education is complete without a thorough knowledge of the Bible, therefore the Bible Study committee will offer several courses in systematic Bible study, both in the Old and the New Testament. The classes will be divided into circles of twelve and will be conducted by competent students or members of the faculty. The circles will meet once a week at an hour most convenient to the members. Dr. Wallace Payne will conduct a normal class in Sharman's Study in the Life of Christ. In a college where study is the pre-eminent occupation of the young women, the social life should not be neglected, and it is the aim of the Y. W. C. A. to furnish healthy, happy entertainment for all. At the opening of the school year a general reception will be given by the Christian associations to all students of the University and the faculty. During the year many smaller receptions, class parties and picnics will be given to the young women of the association. The members of the calling committee and the general secretary will call two or three times upon every girl of the institution. The Young Womens' Christian association will maintain its headquarters at 1314 Vermont street. Eight of the leading members of the association including the general secretary and president will room in this house and will be glad at all times to receive there any of the girls who desire aid or information. It is hoped that the young women will make this house a general resort. Many committee meetings, Bible classes and receptions will be held there. The association will employ a general secretary who will devote at least one-half of her time to the work of the organization. She is a young woman who has had extended experience in Y.W. C.A.work. She will prove a valuable friend to every girl she meets, and will be glad to help them in any way possible. She can be found at all hours at the Y.W.C.A.house. The budget of the association for this year is seven hundred dollars, most of which will be raised from the dues, which are one dollar a year, the remainder to be received in gifts from friends of the University. This money will be expended in the following way: General secretary, $400; foreign missions, $100; social work, $50; state work of Y. W. C. A., $50; delegates to conference and incidentals, $100. The young women of the association will gladly help new students to find rooms and to register in the University. Any young woman desiring such aid will be cordially received at the Y. W. C. A. house. All young women of the University are invited to become members of this organization and to give it their active aid and sympathy. --work a specialty. Y. M C. A. During the first week of school the Y. M. C. A. representatives are always the busiest boys on the hill, and this year is no exception. The employment bureau, or which Mr. Reynolds is the chairman, is doing more than twice as much work as was ever done before. At the present rate the value of the work done will aggregate $5,000 before the season is over. The new secretary, Richard Williamson, of Wisconsin University, arrived the latter part of August, and has been at the center of the work ever since. The hand book was published about the first of August and is accomplishing its mission. Any student may secure a copy by applying to the president or the general secretary. A hearty attempt has been made to meet the new students at the trains. A free wagon carried the newcomers from the depots to the association headquarters on Ohio street, where efficient guides assisted in finding suitable rooms. A continual reception has been held since Monday morning. Especial pains are taken to entertain the boys in the evening and on Friday evening a "Knockdown Social" will be held. All of the University men are welcome. The prospects are very encouraging for a prosperous year, and with God's help we expect great results. --work a specialty. Lost-An envelope addressed to Miss Louise Smith, containing papers and certificate. Finder return to treasurer's office. 814 Massachusetts, Our New LOCATION. Fischer's BELL BROTHERS. Innes alone, of the stores, has Built up and Developed a worthy Business in Dry Goods. Popular FOOTWEAR. Popular PRICES. 925=27 Massachusetts Street. INNES, BULLENE & HACKMAN. Pianos for rent For what you need in the way of Dry Goods and Carpets is a Habit worth cultivating, for you're sure to find just what you want at the price you want to pay; or less than you expect to pay. Those with an eye to Economy are quick to See the Advantage of buying New Fall Silks, Dress Goods, Hosiery, Corsets, Underwear and Gloves. Lawrence Business College. --work a specialty. Shorthand. Twowriting. Bookkeeping. Etc. Coming Regularly TO INNES --work a specialty. In Dry and Night Sessions. 1. C. STEVENSON, Principal. --work a specialty. 836 Tennessee street; one front room down stairs. FURNISHED ROOMS FOR RENT. 830 Tennessee street; one front room. 833 Kentucky street; two rooms up stairs. 817 Vermont street; two front rooms. 738 Vermont street; one front room. 1237 Tennessee street; three rooms; all modern conveniences. Watkins National Bank J. B. WATKINS, C. H. TUCKER, President. Custaser J.A.HILL. W.E.HAZEN J. A. HILL. W. E. HAZEN Vice President Ass't Cashier Vice President. Ass't Cashier. IMBECTORS DIRECTORS. C. B. WATKINS, C. A. HALL, A. C. Savings Department deposits received Tuesdays and Fridays MITCHEL, W. E. HAZEN, J. HOUSE, C. H. TUCKER, J. C. MOORE. Exchanges on all the principal cities of the world. GEO. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Physician and Surgeon. Practice limited to diseases of the eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. OFFICE, 713 MASSACHUSETTS STREET, Residence 901 Ohio St. G. A. HAMMOND, M. D. TELEPHONE, Residence or Office, No. $5. 901M&SSACHUSETTS STREET LAWRENCE. . . KANSAS. 10 % DISCOUNT ON ALL MILLINERY TO STUDENTS 841 MASSACHUSETTS STREET. Mrs. Boulton Stone. A. E. PROTSCH, :== ARTISTIC TAILOR, Suit from $20, Pants $5 up. Corner Warren and Mass. Streets. MORRIS, THE Photo Artist. 829 Mass. St. 'Phone 312. Students work a specialty *Art Studio* to be trained in lawrence. *Studio newly *建新工作室* Totten & Forney, K. U. AGENTS FOR Lawrence Steam Laundry. (See adv. on page 2.) ay, fellers, have you heard about our Pantatiorum? We will Press your coat, vest and three pairs of pants for ONE DOLLAR. Give us a trial. All work guaranteed satisfactory. Laundry Collections: Mondays and Wednesdays. Deliveries: Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays. SPECIAL RATES on students Laundry. SMITH & CLARK. University Agents. STEAM LAUNDRY WILDER BROS. Shirt Waists and Dresses a Specialty. Calls made Monday and Friday. Delivered Tuesday and Wednesday. SMITH & CLARK University Agents J. W. O'BRYON, D. D. S.. DENTIST. TELEPHONE 250 4-rings. 819 Massachusetts Street. LAWRERCE, . . . KANSAS DR. WHEELER, DENTIST. The first and only dentist in the city to outfrom high prices in favor of the insures Amalgam Fillings, 50 cents, Gold Fillings, Bifl the usual price. Extracting teeth, toothpaste. CHARLES JOSEPH CAHILL, M. D Gynecology. 843 MASS, STREET. TELEPHONE 401 3-rgs. LAWRENCE. . . . KANSAS. C SPALDING'S FOOT BALL SHOES. Finest Kangaroo Leather, with circular reinforce on sides New Style Cleats on heel and sole, and hand-sewed throughout. Our highest quality shoe and every pair warranted. Foot Ball Pants. Conibear Hesd Harness, Murphy Ankle Brace, Shin Guards, Belts, Nose Masks, And Everything Necessary for the Game. Spalding's Official Foot Ball Guide for 1901, ed. by Walter Camy Price, 10 Cents. A. G. SPALDING & BROS NEW YORK. INCORPORATED NEW YORK. CHICAGO. DENVER Handsome Catalogue of Foot Ball and all Athletic Sports Free to any Ad NEW YORK, NY 10027 Kansas University Weekly. THE ONLY OFFICIAL AND AUTHORIZED WEEKLY PUBLICATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. VOL. X. All Wool Cheviot Suits, $20 and up Pants, Strictly All Wool, from $5.00 and up, at DAVIES The Students' Tailor. Cleaning and Repairing a Specialty Students Wanting Bicycles Or Repairing of any Kind done are asked to go to the Lawrence Bicycle Company And consult with them. —ALSO— Sporting Goods, GUNS AND AMMUNITION. A. BOICOURT, Prop. 905 Mass. St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS DR. B. H. LESLIE. Office 802 Mass. St. Office Phone 36; Res.191 4-rings, LAWRENCE, - - ANSAS. HUTSON'S BAKERY 709 VERMONT STREET. Bread for sale from wagon and at Leading Grocers. Special Delivery to Clubs. STUDENTS TRADES ESPECIALLY SOLICITED. Telephone 260 4-rings. LAWRENCE, - KANSAS AND The Tipton Barber Shop BATH ROOMS BATH PRICES. Single Bath ... 25 7 Baths ... $1 00 15 Baths ... 2 00 24 Baths ... 3 00 Baths, School Year ... 5 00 Bath Rooms Open Sunday Until 11:30 A.M. 11:30 A.M. TOWE'S FURNISHED EVERYTHING FIRST-CLASS R. H. STEWART, Prop. 838 Mass. Street. LAWRENCE, - - - - KANSAS. Uam. Wiedeman, Line Confectionery. ICE CREAM PARLOR And Manufacturer of 723 M S STREET. SAGURDAY. SEPGEMBER 21.1901. LAWRENCE - KANSAS 717 Mass. St. Ground floor. ALL K. U. BOYS Get their best Clothes of PROTSCCH THE TAILOR. FOOT BALL SEASON OPENS NEXT FRIDAY. ATHLETICS. The sale of tickets for the foot ball season is unusually large. Students of the University are evidently beginning to realize that a large sale of season tickets means good foot ball. As for the schedule it is the best we have ever had. Games were arranged with the State Normal, Ottawa and with Haskell because those teams gave promise of being the strongest teams in the state. From all reports there can be no doubt about their having very strong teams. The games with Texas University and with Vanderbilt University will bring as good teams to Lawrence as has ever been on McCook field. Those games alone will be worth the price of a season ticket. Conditions are favorable for our developing one of the strongest Let every student who can, buy a season sicket and buy it early. The $2.00 that he will pay for it can be justly figured as a necessary expense of college life. At the Top of Many Triumphs. E. J. CARPENTER'S STUPENDOUS SPECTACULAR ENSATION For Her Sake A DRAMA DEALING WTIT DESPOTIC Life Scenes Of Palaces and prisons, and revelations of mysterious realms. For the first time magnetically mirroring the mysteries reclaims of the Czar, its Profligate Nobility, Political Proscriptions, Powerful Police, Tranit Tools, Heartless Jailers, Patient, Peasantry, Hopeless Exile Powerfully Portrayed By a Cast and Company of Conspicu ous Merit Prices $1.90, 75.50 and 25c. Seats on Sale at Dick Bros.' Drug Store. ONE NIGHT ONLY THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 Fifth Season. First Time Here. The Favorite of all Southern Romances. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26. E. P. STAIR and G. H. NICOLAI A PLAY LIKE THE SONG, WHICH WILL LIVE FOREVER. "On the SWANEE RIVER." PRESENT The Original Big Company including STELLA MAYHEW. Prices, 25.50 and 75c. Seats on sale at Dick Bros.' Drug Store. All the Beautiful Special Scenery as used in New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, St. Louis and Kansas City. New and up-date Specialties by Miss Mayhew, Mr. Truesdell and the Clover Leaf Quartette. teams in years. Many new men have appeared within the last week and the coach is highly elated at the showing made by some of them. Now we say again, the only way to make foot ball prosper at K. U. is to give it your earnest support. You owe it to your institution to bring it up to the athletic standand which other western universities maintain. The first big game will be with The first big game will be with Ottawa. Don't fail to buy a season ticket before that time, and to turn out with a strong voice to help the boys on to victory. --and has held later a similar position in the Michigan State Agricultural college. LITERARY SOCIETIES. The largest reception ever given in Library Hall took place Friday evening. Fully five hundred students and members of the faculty were the guests of the Y.W. and Y.M.C.A. Besides the usual social evening the guests were favored by with two selections by the Jayhawker quartet and two readings by Miss Gertrude Becker. The hall was beautifully decorated with University colors and goldenrods. Punch was served during the entire evening. During the latter part of the evening ice cream and wafers were served. After the hustle and bustle of opening school the literary societies are quietly collecting their forces for organization and work of the coming season. Some little disturbance is caused by the ruling of the faculty, that all societies shall meet on the same evening in different rooms of Frazier. The Cooley Club held its first meeting and program last evening. The subject for debate was "Resolved that an Attempt Upon the Life of the President of the United States is an Act of Treason." Public sentiment favored the affirmative. The club will meet as formerly in the east law room in Frazier Hall The Snow will hold a business meeting tonight to perfect the organization for the year. The subject of selecting their room for the year will also be discussed. All desire the old hall, but in case this cannot be secured some will favor taking a room in Frazier, while others prefer taking a room down town. The Burke and the X. Y. Z. clubs will meet for the first business session next week. --and has held later a similar position in the Michigan State Agricultural college. The Kent and Adeliph have not determined dates of their meetings. --and has held later a similar position in the Michigan State Agricultural college. Mr. Long's Gift. Dr. John H. Long, professor of Chemistry in Northwestern University Medical School at Chicago, sent to the Library the Illinois State Board of Health for 1901, in which he has valuable articles on chemie and hydrocarbons. He waters of the Illinois River and its principiaturies, Mr. Long is a K. U. Graduate of the class of 187. m m m m Senior Class Meeting will be held Mon day noon in Room 18. Notice. WE wish to announce the Arrival of our Manhattan Shirts for Fall and Winter, 1901-'02. WA Come in and make your Selection. OBER'S LEADING CLOTHIERS AND FURNISHERS. One of the first things that we noticed when we returned to our work this year was the unusually large number of changes in the personnel of the faculty. Not only do we miss some of the old familiar faces, but there are so many new professors in the classrooms that even the wise Sophomore is liable to make the mistake of asking one of his future teachers if he is going to take work on the hill this year. OUR NEW PROFESSORS. The greatest changes have occurred in the department of English. Professor Hopkins is away on leave of absence studying at Oxford. To take his place and relieve the extra load that has been piling up against the department for the past few years we have two new assistant professors. Mr. Fred Raymond, one of our own graduates, who, since taking his degree here, has spent several years at Columbia; and Miss Margaret Lynn, a graduof the University of Nebraska and a post-graduate of Chicago, occupy these two new positions. Since her graduation Miss Lynn has taught at Hastings College and at her Alma Mater. There is also a new associate professor in mathematics, Mr. John Van der Vries, a Ph.D., of Clark University. Mr. Van der Vries comes to us highly recommended by some of the best mathematicians of the country. Aside from his high standing in the line of his chosen study our new instructor is said to be an athlete of no mean ability. It is with pleasure that the students welcome another addition to the too small number of our faculty members who take an active interest in college sports. In the department of German Miss Alberta Corbin, another of our K. U. graduates has taken the position left vacant by the marriage of Miss Parrott to professor Barber. Miss Corbin is a Yale Ph. D. and comes to us with a broad experience as a teacher, having taught mathematics in the Lawrence High School, and since taking her degree at Yale, having been instructor in German in both the New Haven High School and the Topeka High School. During the past summer Miss Corbin has been studying abroad in "Der Vaterland." Prof.Walter K. Palmer, who resigned during the summer to open an office in Kansas City, has been succeeded by Hugo Diemer, a graduate of the Ohio State University. Professor Diemer is a practical as well as a theoretical engineer, having been employed by the Bullock and Westinghouse Co., after the completion of hiscollege course. He has also been at the head of the mechanical engineering department of the agricultural and mechanical collegeof North Carolina NO. 3. Prof. Vickerey's place has been filled by Mr. Edgar Frazier, a graduate of the University of Chicago, who comes to us not as the professor of oratory but as professor of public speaking and debate. N.X. SUMMER WORK. Those who think all work at the University ceased with the last examination in May, should have visited Mt. Oread during the summer. The sun beat down until the campus was like a shortgrass prairie and the evergreens were scorched brown, but still forty or fifty faithful ones climbed the hill each day. For all practical purposes it was a summer school. The tutors and a few professors made up a respectable faculty, and many who were either behind or desired advanced credits availed themselves of the opportunity. Snow Hall was the busiest place. Arthur Harris had a class of ten in Botany and a number were also taking Entomology. Prof Engle had two German classes in the main building and Mr. Krause gave a full course in Physics at Blake Hall. Mr. McFarland did work in the Chemistry building and Mr. Blackman offered work in Zoology. Apart from the regular undergraduate courses some original work was carried on by Mr C. E. Johnson who is working for his doctor's degree. He spent the summer here investigating the water lily. Mr Sellards carried on his work in Paleontology. He spent considerable time in collecting fossil insect wings which are to be found southeast of Lawrence. He was also for tunate enough to find a fossil insect body, a very rare specimen. The heat was terrific but the work went merrily on. The students were punctual and did honest work. It seems almost advisable for the University to offer a regular summer course. SOCIETY. The Betas gave a hop Saturday evening at their house. Among the guests were Misses Warfield, Moore, Plumb, Dunham, Graham, Armsby, Lehman, Pugb, Lehnd, Earnhardt, Lombard and Mose Miller, Oatlie, and Messers, John Kane and Frank Parent, of Kansas City. At their house Friday evening the Phi Pals gave a very delightful dancing party Paley gave a very delightful dancing party. Mrs J. B. Shearer entertained on Wednes day evening in honor of Miss Marie Morris, who has been visiting in Lawrence the past week. A hat trimming contest caused much amusement. The first prize was won by Miss Edith Johnson, who received a nobbly trimmed hat, while the booby prize was given to Vivian Springer. It was a paper hat of the Kappa colors. After this contest the guests played whist Mrs. Martin making the highest score, wan a pretty burn木 nut bowl, while she danced with her hair in points with a bunch of La France roses, Dainty refreshments were served during the evening. The Sigma Chi's entertained for their new men in New Eldridge hall Monday evening, Kansas University Weekly. Editor-in-Chief...RACHEL PUGH. Associates \ H. H. TANGENAM. \ A. H. SEDON. Literary...C. A. GARDNER. Society Editor...ANNA WARFIELD. Athletic Editor...E. E. SALLEE. Associates. J. M. RADER, J. SCHROEDER, F. L, TILFORD, WILL K. MURPHY, MYRN L. HUMPREY, WALTER J. MEKE, JOHN A. DREVLIN, J. H. LANGWORTH, E.W. MURRAY E. H. McMATH, Managing Editor. Entered at the Lawrence Postoffice as second-class mail matter. Shares in the WEEKLY $100 each, entitling the holder to the paper two years, may be had of the Secretary and Treasurer, George Foster, the managing editor, or at the WEEKLY office. Subscription price, 50 cents per annum in advance. Single copies 5 cents. Address all communications to E. H. McMath, Business Manager, Lawrence, Kansas. LAWRENCE, KAN., SAT. SEPT. 21. 1901. Mr. C. A Smith of the basketball team is the third of the athletic captains failing to return. Being a good player he will be missed as a valuable member of the team. Already great interest is shown in the foot ball team. There are good strong men for Coach Outland to work on and they are showing rapid improvement under his skillful training. The registration at this time is nearly one hundred higher than it was on the corresponding date last year. Whether it will continue higher all the year is a matter of conjecture. Expectations were, when the school year opened, that the attendance would hardly be so high this year as last, for the hard summer in all probability reduced the possibilities for students. Few of the schools of the state are keeping up to their last year's record in attendance. It will be nothing surprising if the University suffers with the others from the long drought. Whatever the number, at any rate the University has certainly not suffered in the kind of students that have entered this year. Quality, if not quantity, can be said to be her strong point this year. Seldom has an incoming set of students appeared more worthy of admiration than these that K.U. welcomes this fall. The tone of the student body as a whole seems to have risen this fall. Men and girls of earnestness, high ambition and of good ability, seem to abound. As a general rule, the new students seem to be older in appearance, more practical and experienced than those who often come to us. The average atmosphere is more dignified, more sound and healthful and more cool, calm and collected. The extremely rash and youthful sort of individual seems to have decamped to other climes, for as a whole the University has assumed a better tone. There are a number of very young boys entering the University, but fewer girls who exhibit so clearly that characteristic. We have gained a set of self-reliant and independent young men and women, who will help to raise the standard of the college. The paving of Tennessee street seems to have attracted a great many of the students upon that street. Never before was every house on that street so crowded. For blocks there is hardly a house that has not some student roomers or boarders. They seem to have crowded to this end of the town with great persistence. The twelve and thirteen hundred blocks especially are overcrowded. Ohio street, too, and Kentucky, are more crowded in these two blocks than ever before. Every one seems to move toward the center of interest—the University. Club life is more in favor than ever among the students. All the good clubs are filled, and others are being formed as the students come in. The Bingler Club, the Rench Club, the Street, O'Bryon and the men's German Clubs, are very popular this year. The new German club, called the "Allemania," is much the same as last year, and holds forth at the old stand on Vermont street. In the same block (1300), the Utopia Club is located, with twenty-four members. The college club, under Mr. Foster's direction is rapidly assuming proportions as great as those of last year. A new club of ten has been formed at Mrs. McCrory's on Tennessee street. All the clubs are charging higher rates this year. Food is higher than last year, and in order to keep up to the average, it is necessary to do this. From three dollars to three and a half is the average price this year. Several of the fraternities have formed clubs of their own This is easy in the case of those which have fraternity houses. The Phi Pi's, located at their new quarters on Louisiana street, are very comfortably situated. The Sigma Chi house has been remodelled and added to, so as to make a very commodious fraternity dwelling. The Betas are at the old stand, Away down in the 600 block on Tennessee the Phi Delt boys are stationed, in an exceedingly pretty and convenient home- The Pi Phi house, on Tennessee street, will be finished early in October, and will accommodate twelve girls. The Kappa house is at 1029 Kentucky. There are nine girls rooming there this year. The hurry, the worry, the hustle and bustle attendant upon the opening of the University year is, in every point, marked by general good will and bon-comradrie. The spirit of college friendliness is at no time more noticeable than just at the first of the year, when all old students are returning, all new students receiving welcome, and no one has quite settled into routine work. The little flurries of social exuberance add much to the genial feeling that abounds, and this season opens with the usual effervescence of social pleasuring. The fraternity hops and rushing parties given during the past week have formed the nucleus for the customary friendly contests that prove so much of happiness to the new student and of interest to the old. It is a noticeable fact, however, that the rushing this year has evinced less intensity than is usual, and for the most part has been less prolonged than in former years. This is more true among the girls'fraternities than the men's, though perhaps that is only natural on account of the larger number of men's fraternities. At the present time the most violent rushing may be said to be practically over. In fact, the larger numbers of the fraternities seem to have relinquished the campaign, and have relapsed into semi-quietude, though here and there a straggling rush is visible from time to time. Among the men's fraternities the Phi Psi's and Sigma Chi's seem to have fought the most vigorous fight, and each has emerged with honors, though they seem not yet quite ready to call a truce. One or two stubborn rushees still hesitate and prolong the season of anxiety, The Betas, with more than usual conservatism, even for Betas, have pledged fewer men than either of their two rivals. For it is to be remarked that the three fraternities mentioned seem to rush much along the same line this fall. This has hardly been the case for several years, but conditions seem to change as the swift seasons roll. The Phi Delta's this fall have done nothing contrary to their usual tactics. Much as of old they have rushed and won their own particular men, and have added to their roll quite the average number of freshmen. Very quiet rushing is being done by the Sigma Nus, though they have been wearing colors since the first of the week. They have not entered the general contest, but choose, as their customs, on an independent basis. A notable departure from recent custom has been the activity of Phi Gamma Delta. Usually reticent and desirous of only a small chapter, they have this year pledged a larger number of men—new and old alike in college life, and they are building up a larger chapter than they have had for several years. They seem to be not yet fully satisfied with their number, and prediction has said that they will rise to more active life in the college world. Kappa Kappa Gamma and Pi Beta Phi are the women's fraternities which have entered the rushing this season as heretofor. For a few days the game was last and furious, and the pretty Freshmen were delightfully entertained, petted and feasted. But it was for a short time only. By the first of this week the contest was over, and while Pi Phi has still been resting on her laurels, Kappa has been left to pursue her more quiet way undisturbed. Kappa Alpha Theta has withdrawn from the contest and so far in the term refuses to rush. No girls have been pledged by the Thetas, and as yet no parties have been given by them for new students. The Y. M. C. A. and the Y. W. C. A. have adopted new measures this season also. The attitude taken by the Associations toward new students is less like the attitude of the fraternities than it was last year. No open rushing is being done, but in a quiet and dignified manner the Associations are welcoming new students and entertaining them in a cordial way that is entirely without hint of pledging. Association receptions and at homes are being given as formerly, and in this particular the Association homes are a great aid. The new note of conservatism that is creeping into college affairs, is very creditable to the University. Dignity and coolness, at every time desirable, are never more admirable than in the attitude of the college student. These qualities, so dependable upon the class of students comprised among fraternity people, can be so abused as to be little recognizable among the follies and fancies of the rushing season. There is no doubt—and this is conceded by fraternity and non-fraternity alike—that the violent and unthinking rushing indulged in at the opening of every school year, is a detriment to the college, the fraternity and the rushee alike. If rushing could be done away with—say they all—fraternities would be more desirable. There never was yet an evil that could not be overcome. The same way, by some method, new or old, convenient or inconvenient, every wrong can be suppressed. Why not then the fraternity rush? In the beginning the basic idea of the fraternity was that of an honor conferred upon the student worthy of receiving it. In theory that is today the fundamental idea of the fraternity, yet to the outsider, who can judge by appearances only, how could that idea be apparent? The tables are turned in the modern fraternity, and as long as they remain so the fraternity will retrograde from its high estate, carrying with it to their ruin those high ideals which must be the foundation of fraternity nobility. If the Greek Letter Society would hold a high and lasting place in the college world, it must uphold standards of dignity and honor. The idea of true brotherhood is beautiful, but this idea is too much hidden by unworthy considerations. By lowering the dignity of the Society in the eyes of the student whom it seeks, its best aims are frustrated. To the thoughtful Freshman it will be a greater honor to receive an invitation from a society whose standards of self-respect and cool judgment are high, than from one which seeks by cajolery to induce new students to enter its ranks from reasons of mere vanity and fancy. The right kind of Freshman enters school for study and with a determination to get from his college course all that it is possible to obtain. How can this be done, when the first few weeks, so important when entering on new work, are consumed by useless trifling and frivolity? Asthmalene Brings Instant Relief and Permanent Cure in All Cases. SENT ABSOLUTELY FREE ON RECEIPT OF POSTAL. ASTHMA CURE FREE! There is nothing like Asthmalene. It brings instant relief, even in the worst cases. It cures when all else fails. The Rev, C. O., F. WELLS, of Villa Ridge, Ill., says: "Your trial bottle of Asthmalene received in good condition. I can not tell you how thankful I feel for the good derived from it. I was a slave, chained with putrid seros, throat and Asthma for ten years. I despaired of ever being cured. I saw your advertisement for the cure of this dreadful and tormenting disease, Asthma, and thought you had overspoken yourself, but resolved to give it a trial. To my astonishment the trial acted like a charm. Send me a full-size bottle." Write Your Name and Address Plainly. 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My wife commenced taking it about the first of November. I very soon noticed a radical improvement. After using one bottle her Asthma has disappeared and she is entirely free from all symptoms; I feel that I can consistently recommend the medicine to all who are afflicted with this distressing disease. Yours respectfully, DR. TAFT BROS. MEDICINE CO. O, D. PHELPS, M. D. Feb. 5, 1901. Gentlemen: I have troubled with Asthma for 22 years. I have tried numerous remedies, but they have all failed. I can across your advertisement and started with a trial bottle. I found relief at once. I have since purchased your full-sized bottle, and I am very grateful. I have family of four children, and for six years was unable to work. I am now in the best of health and am doing business every day. This testimony you can make such use of as you see fit. S RAPHAELL Home address, 235 Rivington street 67 East 129th st., City Trial Bottle Sent Absolutely Free on Receipt of Postage. Do not delay. Write at ynce, addressing DR. TAFT BEOS.' MEDICINE CO., 79 East 130th St. N, Y. City. . the bidder, names the app- armed and as frazen in its vitto to which water- Let high college cards idea tiful, adden s. By Soci- ident are rightful eater tution hards ment which new from fancy. en with in his possissiis be weeks, ing on yuse- Cases. AL. illence,dl.1). idgele ree you how come it,l. arrot and ever be ver being a cure of Asthma, selves,but enforcement a fuli- It brings It cures K. U. FOOT BALL SCHEDULE: excellent and its com- bine and won- 1. 2. 1501. l, we can um, mory Yours, SLER. For the Season of 1901. 1. 1901. wonderful\ with spas- any others obtained a er. I very peard and the medi- S, M, D, 1, 5911 remedies, bottle. I. grateful. in the best of as you ON McCOOK FIELD. age. D., 79 East City. MCCELLO Sept. 21.-Lawrence High School. 27.-Ottawa University Oct. 5.-Kansas State Normal, 12.-2nd Eleven Ottawa University. Nov. 4.-Vanderbilt University. 9.-Haskell Indians. 16.-2nd Eleven Washburn College. 23.-Texas State University, ELSEWHERE. Oct. 12.-Kirksville, Mo. 19.-Washburn College, Topeka. 19.-2nd Eleven, Haskell Indians. 26.-Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. 28.-Beloit College, Beloit, Wis. Nov. 16.-Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. 28.-Missouri, Kansas City, Mo. John H. Outland, Coach, will be in law season September I, to begin practice. Season Tickets for local games will be placed on sale on that date. Price, $2.00 Single games, 50c. m m m Following is a tabulated form of the registration for 1900 and 1901: YEAR 1900. YEAR 1901. Sep. 5, 1st day ... 258 Sept. 11, 1st day ... 303 " 6, 2nd day ... 385 " 12, 2nd day ... 426 " 7, 3rd day ... 514 " 13, 3rd day ... 438 " 8, 4th day ... 584 " 14, 4th day ... 655 " 10, 5th day ... 752 " 16, 5th day ... 804 " 11, 6th day ... 809 " 17, 6th day ... 805 " 12, 7th day ... 840 " 18, 7th日 ... 947 --- LOCALS There are eight men living in the new Phi Psi house. Full line of Golf Goods at Smith's. J. Graham Campbell is visiting Phi Gam brothers here. Arthur Jones put on the Phi Delt colors Tuesday evening. Buy your tobacco at Smith's. Ed. Zimmerman, of Lawrence put on Sigma Chi colors Tuesday. Edith Luvan is reporting society news for the Lawrence Daily World The Y, W. C. hold their first meeting Wednesday at 5 o'clock in the chapel. K. U. Views—10 cents, at Hoadley's. Walter Heineche, a Phi Delt of some years ago, is in the University again. Miss Scammon,01.is here for a few days with her sister who has entered school. The Y. W. C. A. house is located this year at 1314 Vermont street, at Mrs. Leslie's. Good Stationery-Cheap at Hoadley's. Another new student in the University is Mr. Woodbury, from Missouri University. Tiger! John Harrison of Topeka, Phi Psi, 97, is in Lawrence again to enter the Engineering school. Go to Lindsay's for Fine Shoe repairing 836 Mass. St. Porter Fones was on the hill this week. He will return in a few weeks and complete his law work. Foot ball goods at Smith's. Milo Jones has been very ill this summer and returns to University work after six weeks in hospital. Carol McMath came over from Kansas City to spend Saturday and Sunday last with his Phi Delt brothers. The Betas are wearing colors for Richard Meath, of Lawrence; Orrie Scott, of Paris, Ill., and Bert Beach, of Olathe. Jack Sheridan, a former K. U. man and a Phi Psi, has re-entered school this fall, after an absence of three years. All the best brands of cigars at Smith's. If your subscription has not expired and you want your WEEKLY sent to you, leave your address with E. H. McMath or at the WEEKLY office. A new club of ten has been formed at the house of Mrs. McCrory, on Tennessee. The members are principally Freshmen. Dr. Blair, Messrs. Lindsey and Schott, all of Kansas City, were here the earlier part of the week with Phi Gam friends. Candles and Shades at Hoadley's. Mr. L. M. Moody, of La Cygne, was the guest of Charles Trinkle this week. Mr. Moody will return soon to enter the University. Tommy Kingsley left Sunday afternoon after a visit of several days with Sigma Chi brothers. He enters Ann Arbor this week. Burns Williams, who has been in Lawrence for the past few days with his friend, Will Edwards, left today for his home in Topeka. See Smith for Gymnasium Goods Charley Arnold of Kansas City a Beta from De Pauw University, was in Lawrence a few days early in the week, visiting Betas here. The Phi Psi's have put colors on George McGrew, of Kansas City, Sidney Linscott, of Holton, and George Loomis, of Kansas City. Ed Edson is spending a month with Phi Psi friends before his departure for Cornell University, where he begins work this fall. All the clubs have raised their prices for board this year. Two-fifty was the regular price last year but the majority charge $3.00 now. Mr. Sanford, a former student at Ann Arbor, has entered the University for special work. He is a member of the Sigma Alpha fraternity. The Pi Phi house will be completed the first week in October, and will accommodate fourteen girls. It is on the corner of Tennessee and Hancock streets. The Sigma Chi house has been remodelled during the summer and three rooms were added They will have fourteen men resident in the house this winter. The Phi Delt boys are in new quarters this year in the 700 block on Tennessee. They have a club of their own, and about twelve men rooming in their house. The pledged men of the Sigma Chi fraternity are Earl Riley, of Paola; Ralph E. Morrison, of Kansas City; Tom Strichler, of Topeka, and Ed Zimmerman, of Lawrence. E. H. Sellards will spend his next year at Harvard and continue his work in Raleo botany. Mr. Sellards has been doing post graduate work here the past winter and summer. The pledges won by the Pi Phi girls are Misses Nellie Taylor and Ida Dunham, of Kansas City, Ella Nye and Sarah Wilder, of Hiawatha, Leslie Hill, of Lawrence, and Kitty Plumb, of Long, Kan. Phi Delta Theta has pledged Rob Brooks, of Emporia. E. Blake Heineche, of Jewell, Reid Byers, of Kansas City, Mo., Ray Sexton, of Minneapolis; Marion Russell, of Great Bend, and Arthur Jones. The Kappa pledgelings up to date are Miss Eva Mitchell of Hiawatha, Miss Hammond of Olathe, Misses May Kanaga, Edith Suran and Hortense Street, of Lawrence, and Pearl Tricket, Eva Hirst and Marie Darrough of Kansas City, Kansas. Among students returning for graduate work in the University are Miss Marie Morris, Miss Ethel Luther, Miss Gardner, George Barcus, Guy V. Bennett, Miss Estella Riddle Miss Helen Blain and Miss Esther Wilson. Walter Renn,who has been visiting his sister, Dora Renn, here, left today for Kansas City, from which place he will go on to Cambridge, Mass., to resume his studies at Harvard. Mr. Renn is a former University student. The training table for the athletic men has been set up at 1300 Massachusetts. There are fourteen men taking meals there; Louthan, Outland, Jenkinson, Quigley, Elder, Nofinger, Lovelace, Woodward, Hicks, Brummage, McKenna, Dodd, Emery and Morrison. Phi Gamma Delta has pledged Ray Campbell, of Wichita; Arthur Simms, Messrs, Briggs and Behrens of Hutchinson; Otis Perkins, of Lawrence; Lewis Bitting, of Wichita; Mr. Pierce, of Leavenworth, and John Little, of Olathe. Walter Lutson left to-day for his home in Kansas City. After a week there he goes to Columbia University, where he was awarded a fellowship in science last spring. Here he will take special work leading to the degree in medicine. Ralph E. Morrison, one of the newly pledged Sigma Chi's, is reporting for the Kansas City Star this winter. By a strange coincidence this young man bears the name of the Kansas City Times reporter, who is also a Sigma Chi. John Merrill, a former University man, has been made head of the music department of Oklahoma University in Norman, O. T. Mr. Merrill has been studying in Berlin for the past two years. He was married this month to Miss Nina E. Crawford, of Girard, also a former K. U. student. The Phi Psi's have their headquarters this year at Mrs. Smith's, on the corner of Louisiana and Hancock. The boys occupy the upper floor of the house, which was remodelled during the summer to accommodate them, and they have eight men living there. The attention of the faculty and students is called to the following rule adopted by the council May 30, 1901. "That it is the duty of the registrar to report to instructors the names of students who are shown by the Dean's records to be dilinquent in the return of enrollment cards, with notice that such be excluded from class until such duty be performed. Arthur Harris '01 who has been assistant in botany, has left for St. Louis. He has secured a position in Missouri Botanical Gardens. These gardens are only exceeded in size and equipment by the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard. Mr. Harris' position gives him opportunity to carry on several lines of original work in which he has been interested while at K. U, We are now located in our new quarters—two doors south of Innes' Dry Goods Store—where we are better prepared than ever to serve you. You will find that our prices on all school supplies is the lowest of any house in Lawrence. We have built up our business by giving the best values for your money. See us before you purchase your fall supplies. D. L. ROWLANDS'. To Students DISCOUNT 819 Massachusetts Street. % 10 % ON ALL MILLINERY TO STUDENTS Mrs. Boulton Stone, 841 MASSACHUSETTS STREET. STEAM LAUNDRY WILDER BROS. WILDER BROS. Shirt Waisties and Dresses a Specialty Delivered Tuesday and Wednesday --- SMITN & CLARK, University Agents. Why Not Let D. H. ROSE Send your dirty clothes to Jackson's Steam Laundry, KANSAS CITY, MO. All work gauranteed. Prices: Shirts, 10c; Cuffs, 4c per pair; Collars, 2c each. Shirt Waists a Specialty. --- G. G. WOLF Invites you to his store. We carry a full line of Stationery, Art Novelties and Pictures for your room decorations, 017 Mass. St. LAWRENCE, KANSA T HE LAWRENCE Steam Laundry. COL. JAMES BECK, Prop. 908 Mass St. Phone 383 DEALER IN- F.R.Bartz. West End Meat Market LAWRENCE, KAN. 908 Mass. St. Phone 383. FRESH AND SALT MEATS Special Rates Given to Clubs. Thoroughly reftited with the latest machinery. Extracting, 25e. Phone 314. Lawrence, Kan. All kinds of washing done in first-class manner. Suits cleaned, pressed and repaired Employs competent skilled labor. Amalgam Filling, 50c, 3 for ... $1.00 Cement Filling, 50c, 3 for ... 1.00 Gold Filling ... $1.00 more or $5.00 less Porcelain Crown ... $5.00 DR. McCORRY, DENTIST 833 MASS. ST., LAWRENCE, KAN All Rubber Tire Rigs Eastern Star Bakery Cream Rolls, Doughnuts, Cream Puffs, Maccarooons, Egg Kissies, Bread, Etc. Telephone 100. HENRY GERHARD, Prop Students' trade especially J. DONNELLY. N. DONNELLY PARTIES SUPPLIED. Donnelly Broc. Libery. Boarding and Hack Stables. 700 to 717 N. H. Lawrence, Kan. Home-Made Cakes STUDENTS' SUPPLIES AT THE F. D. MORSE, A. M., M. D., Home Store 1105 Massachusetts Street. Residence, 1041 Tenn. Street. Office over Woodward's Drug Store. Solicited. LAWRENCE, . . . . KANSAS Suit from $20, Pants $5 up. :: ARTISTIC TAILOR, Corner Warren and Mass. Streets. A. E. PROTSCH, Shelley PHOTOGRAPHER. EDWARD BUMGARDNER, M. D. D. D. S DENTIST 719 Massachusetts Street. Office 809 Mass. St. Telephone 209 2-rings. LAWRENCE, - - KANSAS. 50 CENTS EACH AT Sol Marks' K. U. PENDANTS, Sol Marks' 817 Massachusetts Street. Mrs. E. E. Mendenhall Has bought the Millinery Stock formerly owned by the Mrs. Gardner, and will continue the business at the old stand, 823 Mass. St., where you will find everything in up-to-date Millinery. RIVERSIDE BOAT HOUSE Phone 347. KEENEY, Proprietor. GEORGE F.GODDING, Livery, back and Boarding Stable. 812-14 Vermont St. Telephone 139 Willis PHOTOGRAPHER. New Studio. 925 Jackson Bldg. Phone 411 white CHARLES H. HESS. Meat Market. Telephone 14. 937 Mass. St. Lawrence; Kan. William McKinley, like all the other Presidents who inspired great popular affection, was thoroughly and intensely American. Like Lincoln and Grant and Garfield, he was a splendid example of the possibilities held out by American politics even to those who are not born to material fortune. He was a typical son of the free republic, whose lot was cast and whose race was run with many others of similar surroundings and like advantages. The processes of his development are thoroughly representative of political achievement in this country in the last half century. McKinley's early education was not secured without some sacrifices. His college course was cut short for lack of funds. His first public service was rendered as a teacher of a country school. He left the school room to enter the Union army of the Civil war. He participated in many battles and rose to the rank of major. The war over he began the study of law. In time he was elected Prosecuting Attorney. He was sent to Congress. He was appointed to important committee work. He was re-elected for seven terms and then defeated through the operations of a gerrymander of his district. This single defeat made him candidate for Governor of Ohio. He was elected and at the end of his term re-elected by a tremendous majority. In the meantime he had been "mentioned" in two Republican national conventions. In 1896 his nomination had become so logical that the action of the St. Louis convention was a foregone conclusion. How characteristic of American possibilities and records these various stages are! Most of the statesmen who have achieved great distinction in the last fifty years have risen by similar steps. But in one respect the life of President McKinley differed from all others. That was in the early manifestations of great ambition and in the careful planning of his life career. Intimates of the late President say that the hope of becoming the head of the republic entered the heart of young McKinley before he left his native town of Niles, and that his private thought and public policy were constantly centered on this ambition- It is true that good fortune attended him, but no man knew better than he how to take advantage of propitious circumstances. He was in no sense the product of accident. There is probably not another great career in American history so largely the result of self-help and unswerving purpose. In the main, ambition is closely allied with selfishness. It is possible, however, to harmonize public good and personal ambition. McKinley believed that his own interest would be best promoted by the best possible public service. Early in life he was impressed with the importance of industrial development. His native town and neighboring cities were alive with mills. He studied the relations of these creative agencies to the production of raw material in his own agricultural state. He became a firm believer in the theory that prosperity could be compelled by legislation. There is no reason to discredit McKinley's absolute honesty in espousing the cause of protection. He was a natural product of his surroundings. It was on this theory of legislative prosperity that he laid out his career, and he adhered to it and won. President McKinley studied the people more closely than any other politician of his time. He always took his soundings through the Republican party, to be sure, but he sincerely and honestly tried to obey the will of the majority. He was a skillful conciliator. He could be admirable firm, in spite of his seeming indecision at times. His forbearance under political criticism was almost sublime. He not only refused to make personal answer, not even to misrepresentations, but he had such control of his mind and heart that he could be happy always so long as he was successful. No man ever bore the burdens of great responsibilities with finer equanimity or more cheerfulness. His personal characteristics were magnetic to a degree. Fortune smiled on President McKinley at many times in his public life, notably in the reaction that followed the depression preceding his first administration. The coincidence between his coming into office and the revival of industries made him an invincible candidate for a second term. But no man without great ability, both as a politician and as a statesman could mould such a career, even if most favored by conditions and circumstances. —K. C. Star. m m m v = v Prof. Higgins initiated the unshorn Juniors in the mysteries of the law, last Monday. WWW.WWW.WWW. Innes, Bullene & backman. WE OFFER SPLENDID --playwright has grouped together a big array of characters, embracing soldiers, sonvicts, people of fashion, travelers, nihilists, and a half dozen other sorts of people. The company playing the piece, as may be inferred, is an unusually large one. BARGAINS In NEW FALL MERCHANDISE. Among the Many Special Values not Likely to be Approached by Other Stores are NEW TAILOR SUITINGS that are Unspottable. NEW BLUETT, CHEVIOTS, PRUNELLAS, HOP SACKINGS and NEW FALL SILKS. INNES, BULLENE & HACKMAN JUST ARRIVED-NEW FALL CARPETS Department of English. The first of the Junior forensic lectures will be given at 4 o'clock Thursday, Sept. 6 in Room 14. This course is open to all Juniors who have not had Advanced English Composition and are not now taking it. Attendance at all the lectures excuses the student from the first Junior forensic. Bring your note books. R. D. O'LEARY. The first Soph, Assembly will be held at 4 o'clock Thursday, Sept. 26, in the Snow Hall lecture room. Attendance at the sessions of this Assembly throughout the year excuses the student from the last sophomore theme of the year. E. PENDLETON. Pictures Framed at Hoadley's. Poorman, Pease and Filkin 31 have enrolled as Junior laws. The Junior laws will be called upon to elect an associate editor for the Lawyer, soon who will it be? BELL BROS. Pictures Framed at Hoadley's. Sam Jackman of Minneapolis spent Thursday with his Phi Delt brothers. The Junior laws will take up the biology as a study as soon as they can be paired off. This is a full course one night in the week. Miss Eleanor T. Miller was on the hill Friday. The Middlers have about all returned and are busy with Crim. law and Torts. Among the late arrivals are Cassity, Louthan, Doolittle and Prey. Each year quite a number of the Law students desire to do extra work in the Art school, but owing to conflict of class hours in the two schools the number of laws doing Art work is necessarily limited. MUSIC, HALF PRICE TO STUDENTS. PIANOS FOR RENT Pictures Framed at Hoadley's. 925-27 Massachusetts Street. PIANOS FOR RENT. --playwright has grouped together a big array of characters, embracing soldiers, sonvicts, people of fashion, travelers, nihilists, and a half dozen other sorts of people. The company playing the piece, as may be inferred, is an unusually large one. Lawrence Business College. Shorthand, Typewriting, Boekkeeping, Etc. I. C. STEVENSON, Principal. --playwright has grouped together a big array of characters, embracing soldiers, sonvicts, people of fashion, travelers, nihilists, and a half dozen other sorts of people. The company playing the piece, as may be inferred, is an unusually large one. --playwright has grouped together a big array of characters, embracing soldiers, sonvicts, people of fashion, travelers, nihilists, and a half dozen other sorts of people. The company playing the piece, as may be inferred, is an unusually large one. SPALDING'S FOOT BALL SHOES. WILLIAMS & CO. OF LONDON JOHN Finest Kangaroo Leather, with circular reinforce on sides New Style Cleats on heel and sole, and hand-sewed throughout. Our highest quality slice and every pair warranted. Foot Ball Pants, Conibear Hesd Harness, Murphy Ankle Brace, Shin Guards, Belts, Nose Masks, And Everything Necessary for the Game. Spalding's Official Foot Ball Guide for 1901, ed. by Walter Camy Price, 19 Cents. A G SPALDING & BROS CHICAGO. NEW YORK. INCORPORATED. --playwright has grouped together a big array of characters, embracing soldiers, sonvicts, people of fashion, travelers, nihilists, and a half dozen other sorts of people. The company playing the piece, as may be inferred, is an unusually large one. The pattern is so cut as to make sagging impossible, so that the skirts hang evenly. We shall be pleased to have you call and examine these skirts. Especially adapted for wearing on THE HILL. The Senior laws will demonstrate on the foot ball field this fall, that they are as proficient in the rules of the "pig skin" as they are in the technicalities of the "sheep skin." Handsome Catalogue of Foot Ball and all Athletic Sports Free to any Ad Pictures Framed at Hoadley's. A. D. WEAVER. ATTENTION WE WISH TO CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR NEW Wooltex Walking Skirt, Down south when the papers announce the appearance of an "Uncle Tom's Cabin" Co., they usually preface the announcement with something like this: "That Libel of the South," or something equally effective, for the southerner does not like to see himself so distorted and abused as to be unrecognizable. "On the Suwanee River," which made such a successful tour last season, is offering at the Bowersock Opera House Sept. 23. As may be inferred from the title, it is a story of life in the southland, but it is promised that this presentation has not so distorted and erased the true southerner as to make him unrecognizable. With the instinct of genuine dramatic genius; the author of the play, FOR HER SAKE, the new Russo-Siberian melodrama which is to be presented at the Bowersock Opera House Sept. 23. appears to have drawn from the uttermost extremes of society for the characters whom he purposed to involve in intrigue. The hero of the play is a Russian nobleman and army officer; the heroine is a Russian serf girl. With these for the central figures, the Totten & Forney, K. U. AGENTS FOR Lawrence Steam Laundry. (See adv. on page 2.) Say, fellers, have you heard about our Panatorium? We will Press your coat, vest and three pairs of pants for ONE DOLLAR. Give us a trial. All work guaranteed satisfactory. Laundry Collections: Mondays and Wednesdays. Deliveries: Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays. SPECIAL RATES on students Laundry. CHARLES JOSEPH CAHILL, M. D Gynecology. 843 MASS. STREET. TELEPHONE 401 3-rgs. LAWRENCE, - - - KANSAS. MORRIS, THE Photo Artist. Students work a specialty *Students work in specialty* *Theatre, film, music, statutes to be* *obtained in Lawrence.*** Studio newly 829 Mass. St. 'Phone 312. FURNISHED ROOMS FOR RENT 836 Tennessee street; one front room down stairs. 830 Tennessee street ; one front room. 833 Kentucky street; two rooms up stairs. 817 Vermont street; two front rooms. 1237 Tennessee street; three rooms; all modern conveniences. 738 Vermont street; one front room. Watkins National Bank President. Capital, $100,000. Surplus, $20,000. Vice President. Ass't Cashier DIRECTORS. Savings Department deposits received Tuesdays and Fridays. J. A. HILL, W. E. HAZEN J. B. WATKINS, C. H. TUCKER, HALL, A MITCHELL, W. E. HAZEN, J. HOUSE, C. H. TUCKER, J. C. MOORE Exchanges on all the principal cities of the world. GEO. W. IONES. A. M. M. D. Physician and Surgeon. OFFICE, 743 MASSACHUSETTS STREET Residence 901 Ohio St. TELEPHONE, Residence or Office, No. 35. Practice limited to diseases of the eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. G. A. HAMMOND, M. D. 901 MASSACHUSETTS STREET LAWRENCE. . . . KANSAS. DR. WHEELER, DENTIST. [the first and only dentist in the city to depart from high prices in favor of the Amalgam Fillingss 50 cents. Gold Fillingss half the usual price. Extracting teeth BAPHAMIC FREEMASLAND over Howe's Shoe Store, 829 Mass Open from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. J. W. O'BRYON, D. D. S.. DENTIST. TELEPHONE 259 4-rings. 819 Massachusetts Street. LAWRERCE. KANSAS Lee Davies, Beta 3 ER. Ad. ENT. e front e front two front front Kansas University Weekly. three biences. Bank 20,000. BER. Cashier. ZEN Cashier A. C USES. C I. D. • REET. No. 35. received cities of d. eye eye. titted. r. ANSAS. IST. city to or of the Fillings. g teeth. 29 Mass. et. ANSAS THE ONLY OFFICIAL AND AUTHORIZED WEEKLY PUBLICATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. VOL. X. All Wool Cheviot Suits, $20 and up Pants, Strictly All Wool, from $5.00 and up, at DAVIES The Students' Tailor. Cleaning and Repairing a Specialty Willey PHOTOGRAPHER. New Studio. 925 Jackson Bldg. Phone 411 white PA— WHO PAYS THE BILL~ Will be Glad THAT LAWRENCE HAS THE To Know . . . Finest Shoe House IN KANSAS. That's Us! SWELL, PARTY SHOES and HEAVY, DURABLE SHAPELY ONE also Howe-Starkweather 829 Mass. Street. Students Employed Here The Tipton Barber Shop AND BATH ROOMS ... BATH PRICES. Single Bath ... 25 7 Baths ... $1 00 15 Baths ... 2 00 24 Baths ... 3 00 Baths, School Year ... 5 00 Bath Rooms Open Sunday Until 11:30 A.M. TOWE'S FURNISHED TOWE S FURNISHED EVERYTHING FIRST-CLASS R. H. STEWART, Prop 838 Mass. Street. LAWRENCE, - - - KANSAS Wm. Wiedeman, ICE CREAM PARLOR And Manufacturer of 723 M S . STREET. Line Confectionery. LAWRENCE - KANSAS SAGURDAY. SEPGEMBER 28.1901. ALL K. U.BOYS 717 Mass. St. Ground floor. ALL K. U. BOYS Get their best Clothes of PROTSCH THE TAILOR. A K. U. CLUB. Brown County to the Front An Or_anization Formed at Sun Springs Known as the Brown County K. U. Students' Association. A short time ago there was an organization formed at Sun Springs to be known as the Brown County K. U. Students Association. Any student of the K. U. past, present or prospective was eligible to become a member. The following officers were elected. President, G. N. Harrington, '87; Secretary, Edith Johnson. '03; Treasurer, Stella Aten, 01. To retain interest and to become better acquainted the association will have an annual picnic each summer and a banquet during the holidays. The association intends to establish a Brown county scholarship very soon. It has prepared a lecture course. Prof. Templin will be the first one to address the organization. There are about one hundred students in Brown County and all are very much interested in their new work. m m m Class Politics. The Freshmen attempted to hold a class meeting Monday evening in Snow hall, but owing to the presence of one ever-watchful Sophomores, the meeting was never called. A few of the more valiant Freshmen kept the Sophs out of the lecture room for a time, but finally gave up in dispair, and going out through the windows sadly betook themselves home. Another meeting was held Wednesday afternoon, which was unmolested, owing perhaps to the presence of the disciplinary committee. Cook was elected temporary chairman, to act in that capacity for a month, when a president will be elected. The Senior class is the only one which has perfected its organization for the year. At a meeting held Monday noon, the following officers were elected without a dissenting vote: Walter Meek, president; Fred Nichols, vice president; Martha Pittinger, secretary; Clyde Nichols treasurer. Prof. T.M. Iden who has the chair of Physics and Chemistry in the State Normal visited the University Tuesday and Wednesday. Junior Laws - President, J.C. Gaw; Vice President, R. H. Wilson; Sec. F. M. Gold; Treas, S. S. Linscott; Junior Arts - Pres., E. Shephard; Vice Pres., T. Shafer; Sec., Jessie Parker; Treas., Gould; Sophomeres - Pres., J.Groves; Vice Pres., G.Nhitting; Sec., Miss Forrest; Treas., Steiner. Bowersock Opera House Denver Express. MONDAY, SEPT. 30, HOLDEN BROS' The Acme of Stage Realism The Most Powerful Melodrama of the Century. A Company of Unusual Merit. Prices 25c, 50c, 7c. Seat sale at Dick Bros' The engineering school starts the year of 1901-02 with every prospect for a most prosperous year. The attendance in every class from Senior to Freshman is twenty per cent, higher than the classes last year. The success attained by the school in placing the 1901 graduates has been a source of great satisfaction to faculty and students alike. Not one member in that class is now lacking a position, from Ruth with the New Jersey Steel company to Walking at Maco, Arizona, and word received from them all conveys the pleasant news that all are doing well and are proud of the fact that they can call K.U. their alma mater. The reputation that the Engineering school has made since its establishment for turning out men, year after year, who are well versed in their profession, capable of fulfilling the duties their diplomas designate, has become so widely and favorably known that a K. U. diploma is now recognized as a positive guarantee of the holder's worth as an engineer. The list of undergraduates who secured places to work for experience during the summer vacation, was very large, especially among the civil engineers. The railway companies are beginning to recognize year by year, the advantage of taking students from K. U. during the summer in preference to green hands, and giving them the experience that is necessary to the engineer, and then taking them into their employ upon graduation, knowing, as they do, that the young engineer is fully versed in their methods, familiar with their tracks and very well developed. The only change in the faculty of the school was caused by the resignation of Prof. W.H. Palmer from the associate professorship of mechanical engineering, which, however, has been filled by the selection of Prof. Diemer of Ohio University, more recently of Michigan Agricultural college, a man who comes highly recommended as an educator, and who promises to add very materially to the strength of the faculty. Guy Wardand Milton Blanchard, both civil engineers of 102, were employed on the maintenance corps of the Central division of the Santa Fe during the summer. Herman Von Unwerth, mechanical engineer, 01 is foreman of the Witte Iron works at Kansas City during the summer. B. J. Bernhard; electrical engineer '02; C. A. Smith, civil engineer, '03, and Wm. Edwards, civil engineer, '03, were with the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient railroad. Smith will not return. J. R. McKnight, civil engineer, '02, Ed. Linton, civil engineer, '03, and Earnest Barkman, civil engineer, '03, were with the Union Pacific in Western Kansas during vacation. Lenton will not return. Ray Haines and John Harrison, both civil engineers of 1901, have good positions with the Santa Fe. Paul Anderson, civil engineer, $ \circled{10} $ and Clay Anderson, civil engineer, $ \circled{4} $ are in Mexico with the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient. Norman McGillivray of 1902,has a position as draftsman with the Belt Line in Kansas City. J. F. Beaman has returned to school after a year with the Kansas City & Southern railroad in Louisiana. Baker is with the J. A. Strait Manufacturing company of Kansas City, Mo. Will Murphy, civil engineer, 72, was with the Fort Lyon Canal com pany during the summer. Prof. W. K. Palmer and Walter Hall, mechanical engineer, 01, have formed a partnership and opened an office in the N.Y.Life building in Kansas City, as consulting engineers. Dean Marvin has lost his beard during the vacation, and appears like a stranger to old students. Prof. W. C. Hoad was married to Miss Louise Greer of Whitting, Kan., on August 7th, and are living in the 1400 block on Kentucky street. The summer surveying corps of the civil engineers camped at Duffee's farm in Kanwaka township, from June 6th to June 29th, under the direction of Prof. W. C. Hoad. The attendance was somewhat smaller than the year before. Those who attended were: Bradley, Blanchard and Murphy of 1902; Stacey, Barkman, Smith, Flanders, Chapin, Rhea, Mrs. Wolfe, of 1903, and Anderson of 1904. Carl Sturgis, special civil engineer, is with Burns & McDonald at Ossawattown. Kan. Victor Walling, civil engineer,'01 is with the Cannea Copper company at Waco, Arizona. A. J. Ruth, civil engineer, accepted a position with the New Jersey Steel company at Patterson, N. J., immediately upon graduation. Loyal Crawford, electrical engineer '01, has a lucrative position with the Neosho, Mo., Electric Light & Telephone company. Fred Johnson, civil engineer, is with the railroad company with headquarters at Kansas City. John Wakly, civil engineer, 03, was lythographer with the St. Louis & Northern Arkansas railroad during the summer. Pat McCarthy W. A. Wheeler and Floyd Bushby, all civil engineers, 92, who left May 1st and entered the employ of the St. Louis, Kansas & Colorado railroad as rodmen, have returned to school to graduate with their class. Clyde Wilson, mechanical engineer, 72 is in the mechanical engineering department of Armour Packing company at Kansas City. John Algie, football captain for 1901, resigned his position and is with a mining company at Helper, Utah. He was married during the summer. James Edson, electrical engineer. '01, is with an electrical firm at Kansas City, Kan. SOCIETY. Monday evening the Sigma Chis have their first initiation. At Pythian hall on Thursday evening the Sigma Nus entertained most delightfully with a dancing party in honor of their new men. The Betas gave one of their impromptu hops at their house on Tuesday evening. About sixteen girls were invited and all had a most delightful time. The Kappas pledged Miss May Smith of Cincinnati, Ohio, last Thursday evening. After the pledging they all went down to Wiedeman's for a spread. The Betas had initiation last Friday night and Earl King, Frank Kaul, Orvin Scott, Richard Meith and Bert Beach were taken into the fraternity. Saturday night was the opening of the dancing school in NO.4. enarge of Russell and Reynolds. The music was good and a large crowd enjoyed it. These dancing parties will be given every Saturday night throughout the winter in Pythian hall. A fudge party was enjoyed by the Kappa girls at their chapter house on Kentucky street a week ago last night. The affair was given for Miss May Smith who has just enrolled in the University. About twenty-five girls enjoyed the hospitality of the Phi Delts last Monday night at their chapter house on North Tennessee. Cards and dancing made the time pass most pleasantly. Ices and cake were served throughout the evening. Saturday afternoon at 5 o'clock a crowd of Phi Delts with their girl friends, rowed up the river and ate their suppers on one of the islands. They returned home by moonlight. Several of the boys took their guitars and mandolins and the crowd played and sang on their way back. Among the guests were Misses Dunham, Evans, Taylor, Hawk, Sellers, Hirst,Hammond,Trickett,Smith, Mitchell, Spaulding, Armsby, Spencer, Kellogg, Bangs, Dudley, Leslie, Levant and Plumb. Friday night the Sigma Chis entertained their girl friends with a hop in Pythian hall. Saunders' orchestra furnished music. The boys and their guests were: Misses Williams, Richardson, Boaz, Warfield, Sellers, Schneider, Burwell, Mitchell, Morrison, Trickett,Lewelling, Hurst,Axtell, Brown,Hall,Luther,Barnett, Levan,Searles,Barber,McGrath, Kanaga and Hammond. Messrs. Henley, Milo Jones, Thompson, Bradley, Tilford, Neal Jones, Clifford, Feitshans, Edwards, Winton, Morrison, Doolittle, Cowley, Hegler, Hewey, Tangeman, Blanchard, Quigley, Faust, Riley, Klise, Strickler, Zimmerman, R. E. Morrison, Sanford, Worley, Chambers, Anderson, Cater and Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Williams and Me. and Mrs. Schall. At the Rudiger home in West Lawrence, the Pi Phi's held their first initiation on Friday evening. The mock ininitiation really began in the afternoon, when the poor pledglings were put through all sorts of torture, and it was not until the real initiation services at night that they were allowed any peace. The farce usually given by the old girls on such occasions was done away with on account of the lack of time for preparation. But there was the "cookey-shine" late in the evening, to which all the alumni were present. The girls taken in were Ida Dunham, Will Taylor, Leslie Hill, Maud Rush, Sarah Wilder, Ella Nye and Kittie Plumb. STOCKS AND TRADING K. U. FOOT BALL SCHEDULE. For the Season of 1901. ON MCCOOK FIELD. Sept. 21.-Lawrence High School. 27.-Ottawa University. Oct. 1.-Kansas State Normal. 12. -2nd Eleven on University. Nov. 4.-Vanderbilt University. 9.-Haskell Indians. 16.-2nd Eleven Washburn College. 23.-Texas State University, ELSEWHERE. Oct. 12—Kirksville, Mo. 19—Washburn College, Topeka. 19—2nd Eleven, Haskell Indians. 26—Winsconsin, Madison, Wis. 28—Beloit College, Beloit, Wis. Nov. 16—Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. Nov. 16 — Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. 28 — Missouri, Kansas City, Mo. John H. Outland, Coach, will be in Lawrence September 1 to begin practice. John H. Outland or for local games will be placed on sale on that date. Price $2.00. Single games, 50c. LOCALS Full line of Golf Goods at Smith's. Roy Cross will spend Sunday in Lawrence. Marshal Johnston is here visiting Phi Psi brothers. Electric Light Shades at Hoadley's. Lon Silven was here this week vis- Lon Silven was here this week visiting the Beta boys. Buy your tobacco at Smith's. Mr. B. Tucker, 01, is professor of chemistry in a military school at Kirkwood, Mo. George Trombold has returned to school in order to graduate with this year's class. Foot ball goods at Smith's. Helen Whitehead, of Chicago, was the guest of Miss Watson, Wednesday and Thursday. K. U. Views-10 cents at Hoadley's. C. R. Spain spent Tuesday visiting K. U. friends on his way to Chicago. Mr. Spain has a scholarship in Rush Medical college. Mr. C. S. Cole,'01, professor of bacteriology in Kansas Medical school and city bacteriologist of Topeka, spent Wednesday here on business. Lucius Van Druff, who was in school two years with class of '02, visited friends on the hill this week. He is on his way to Chicago University. For Sale—Coat and vest of dress suit. Size 36. Call evenings; 9:05 Mass, street, up stairs. Charles Fisher and Fred Lyon, two Medics of last year's class, have been here since Thursday. Both of them will study medicine in the east this year. Roy Mains, Medic, 01, has been visiting friends here. Mr. Mains leaves soon for Chicago to take the position as dispensing clerk in the Santa Fe hospital. Barnum Brown, '91, is here on his way to New York. He is associated with the American Museum of Natural History. Since leaving here Mr. Brown has collected specimens for this museum in Patagonia and Tiera del Fuego. Basket Ball. Basket Ball is yet an unknown quantity, but prospects for a very successful season were never better. Through the efforts of Dr. Naismith, basket ball has gained a firm hold as adrominent feature of University athletics. Other western colleges and university are taking much interest in the game. Let the same be said of K. U. Before many years we may expect to see basket ball become an important inter-collegiate sport. We trust that the managers will secure a good schedule this year and hope that the game will get the support and patronage that it deserves. Of last season's team Gould, Fred Owens, Joe Alvared, Don Alvord, Shipman and Quigley are back, and are eager for practice to commence. Roy Hamilton, a star The interest in this game need not be confined to the men of the University. The young women also are interested, interested, interested in opportunity to show their enthusiasm. done in these class games and upon the support they receive. Therefore give them a share of your patronage and to try make Basket Ball a popular sport. mmm The school of Fine Arts opened with a remarkable enrollment, more than doubling that of last year, up to the present time. While all the departments of the school feel the increase, that of Drawing and Painting is the chief gainer-more students having begun their work in the studio this week than comprised the total enrollment for last year. Specials in Wearing Apparel For MEN! 'VARSITY SWEATERS and JERSEYS. Manhattan Soft and Stiff Shirts. HOWE'S and STETSON'S HATS. New and Natty Neckwear. STEIN BLOGK'S Fine Clothing, SUITS & OVERCOATS If you need CLOTHES we want your business. TRY US. OBER'S The Clothing MAN! The work of the department has been increased by the addition of a class in portrait painting for a model will pose every day throughout the year. There will be several interesting exhibitions during the year that will be of value to all University students, and Prof. Griffith will continue his lectures upon modern art. All the best brands of cigars at Smith's. D. Morton Snow,a graduate of the Philadelphia Medical school, is at K. U. working for his A. B. Miss Scammon has returned to her home at Cherokee after spending a week aisiting in K. U. Winslow Hutchinson is spending Sunday in Lawrence. Miss Hutchinson is teaching this year at Oskaloosa. Lelia Stackhouse, '01, was married during the summer to Mr. Munsell, a prominent banker of Herrington, Kans. See Smith for Gymnasium Goods Dr. E. E. Evans who was demonstrator in anatomy last year, has been advanced to assistant in that department. Go to Lindsay's for Fine Shoe repairing: 836 Mass. St. Porter Fones returned to his home in Lyons, Kans., Wednesday. He took with him Mr. Dietes, a freshman arts from the same place, who has been ill with typhoid fever since entering school. Pictures Framed at Hoadley's. The team will suffer from the loss of four good men. Smith, who was captain last year, will not be here, having gone south with the K. C. M. & O. Railway, H. Owens, center, graduated last spring, and the sub-center, E. K. Smith is also out. Shrimp forward, will not be here this year. He is married and has gone to Arkansas. of the '89-90 time, is in school again and promises to be in his old-time place. Among the large number of Freshman there will be, no doubt, many good men who will, with good coaching and hard practice, develop info first-class players. Williams, Husbush and Atkinson, of the Lawrence, M. C. A. team are among the new men. Dr. Nalsmith will continue to coach the team and, judging by his past efforts, we are assured that that part of the work will be thoroughly done. The schedule is not yet complete. Games will be played with Lawrence, Haskell, Topeka, K.C.Tigers, William Jewell College, St.Joseph, Nebraska University, M, S.U. and Iowa University. If enough games can be secured the team will take an eastern trip during the Christmas vacation. The lectures upon The History of the Fine Arts, by Dean Penny, began this week. This year they will cover the art and archaeology of Assyria, Egypt, Greece and Rome Prof. Penny purchased in New York this summer a large collection of lantern slides, formerly belonging to the well known lecturer Mr. Stoddard whose words upon foreign travel are in the library. Many of these slides are beautifully colored, and they will be used in the illustrated art lectures every Thursday at 2 o'clock in the Physics building. These lectures are open to all students in the Arts as well as the Fine Arts and count as a Junior optional! The manager wants at least thirty men from whom to choose a team. Let us urge you to come out and work for a place. All will have a fair chance. A schedule of inter-class games will be arranged in order to see how well you out the best material there is among the students. The success of the University team will depend largely upon the work A position on the Basket Ball Team is an honor well worth the best efforts of the athlete. The game requires strength, a quick eye and great physical endurance. Mr. Edgar G. Frazier who comes here from the University of Chicago is Assistant Professor of Public Speaking and Debate, offers training in the fundamentals of vocal expression. This training consists of the analysis and careful study of types of the best literature as a means of appreciation and vocal interpretation. Without literary appreciation there can be no literary interpretation through the voice. The experiencing again of the authors thought arouses in the reader some lofty emotions which moved him to write, and consequently the study of such literature for purposes of vocal expression cannot but make for culture. But whatever the study of such literature from being carried from the speaker over to the hearer through the spoken word is a defect—a defect however, which may be overcome by training adopted to individual needs. With a harsh, rasping voice, for instance it is practically impossible to reproduce the tenderness, the gentleness or the pathos found in literature. Nor can the uninflected, monotonous voice portray the noble and sublime passages of the epic. The voice then should be trained to respond to the spiritual significance of the poem—to express fully the appreciation. The readers art can go no further than to set forth his or her appreciation and understanding of the author's thought. The aim of this department, therefore, will be to stimulate appreciation on the one hand and to train how to best express this appreciation on the other. In the Music Departments Prof. Pryor, who has been spending the summer in Michigan, and likewise preparing a concert program, finds his time completely filled. Prof. Penney will continue the work in voice culture and singing which he so successfully conducted last year and will offer special courses in vocal elocution and a vocal seminary for teachers. In this work he will be assisted by Mrs. Smith, whose time for private pupils in elocution is already nearly filled. Mrs. Smith has Miss Gertrude Becker for her assistant this year in both elocution and physical training. Jackson's Steam Laundry, KANSAS CITY, MO. Why Not Let D. H. ROSE Send your dirty clothes to Prices: Shirts, 10c; Cuffs, 4c per pair; Collars, 2c each. Shirt Waists a Specialty. All work gauranteed. --i = x_i n = n G. C. WOLF 深 深 Invites you to his store. We carry a full line of Stationery, Art Novelties and Pictures for your room decorations LAWRENCE, KANSAS. LAWRENCE, KANSAS. F.R.Bartz. West End Meat Market. DEALER IN FRESH AND SALT MEATS Special Rates Given to Clubs. Special Rates Given to Chu- Phone 314. Lawrence, Kan. Annalagm Fillings, 50c, 3 for ... $1.00 Cement Fillings, 50c, 3 for ... $1.00 Gold Fillings ... $1.00 Gold Crown ... $5.00 to $7.00 Porcelain Crown ... $5.50 DR. MCCORKY, DENTIST 833 MASS. ST. LAWRENCE, KAN. Extracting, 25e. Eastern Star Bakery HENRY GERHARD, Prop Cream Rolls, Doughnuts, Cream Puffs, Maccaroons, Egg Kissies, Bread, Etc. PARTIES SUPPLIED. J. DONNELLY. N. DONNELLY Telephone 100. Donnally Broc. Livery, Boarding and Hack Stables. All Rubber Tire Rigs 700 to 717 N.H. Lawrence, Kana. Home-Made Cakes Residence, 1041 Tenn. Street. Home Store 1105 Massachusetts Street. STUDENTS' SUPPLIES AT THE F. D. MORSE, A. M., M. D., Office over Woodward's Drug Store. LAWRENCE. . . . KANSAS Shelley A. E. PROTSCH, PHOTOGRAPHER. 719 Massachusetts Street. ::= ARTISTIC TAILOR. Suit from $20, Pants $5 up. FURNISHEDROOMS FOR RENT. Corner Warren and Mass. Streets. 836 Tennessee street; one front room down stairs. 830 Tennessee street; one front room. 833 Kentucky street; two rooms up stairs. DENTIST EDWARD BUMGARDNER, M. D. D. D. S. 817 Vermont street; two front rooms. 738 Vermont street; one front room. 1237 Tennessee street; three rooms; all modern conveniences. Office 809 Mass. St. Telephone 209 2-rings. LAWRENCE, - - KANSAS. K. U. PENDANTS. 50 CENTS EACH AT Sol Marks' Massachusetts Street. 817 Massachusetts Street. Mrs. E. E. Mendenhall Has bought the Millinery Stock formerly owned by the Mrs. Gardner, and will continue the business at the old stand, 823 Mass. St., where you will find everything in up-to-date Millinery. RIVERSIDE BOAT HOUSE Phone 347. KEENEY, Proprietor. GEORGE F. GODDING, Livery, back and Boarding Stable. 812-44 Vermont St. Telephone 139 PHOTOGRAPHER. Willis Kar 925 Jackson Bldg, Phone 411 white CHARLES H. HESS. Edi Meat Market Telephone 14. 937 Mass. St. Lawrence; Kan. --i = x_i n = n Watkins National Bank Capital, $100,000. Surplus, $20,000 J. B. WATKINS, C. H. TUCKER. J. A. HILL W. E. HAZEN Vice President. Ass't Cashier Vice President. Ass't Cashier DIRECTORS C. B. WATKINS, C. A. HALL, A. C. MERRICK, W. E. HALL, L. C. H. TUCKER, J. C. MOORE. C. MAPRINS, HALL, A C C. MITCHET, HAVEN, J HOUSE, H TUCKER J C MOORE Savings Department deposits received Tuesdays and Fridays. Exchanges on all the principal cities of the world. rings. NSSAS. Kansas University Weekly Stock Gard- business St., ing in USE ble. one 139' Editor-in-Chief...RACHEL PUGH Associates ( H. H. TANGEMAN, A. H. SEDDON. Literary C. A. GARDNER. Society Editor...ANNA WARFIELD. Athletic Editor...E. E. SALLEE ank 0,000 ER, hushier. EN hushier A. C. USE, C. ceiv Associates. ties of J. M. KADER, J. SCHROEDER, F. L, TILHORN, WILLK, WILLK, MURPHY, MIRSON L, HUMPHREY, WALTER J, MEKE JOHN A, DEVLIN, J. H. LANGWORTHY, E. W. MURRAY, E. H. McMATH, Managing Editor Entered at the Lawrence Postoffice as second-class mail matter. Shares in the WEEKLY $1.00 each, entitling the holder to the paper two years, may be bad of the Secretary and Treasurer, George Foster, the managing editor, or at the WEEKLY office. Subscription price, 50 cents per annum in advance. Single copies 5 cents. Address all communications to E. H. McMath, Business Manager, Lawrence, Kansas. LAWRENCE, KAN. SAT. SEPT. 18. 1901. THERE really is a foot-ball team at the University of Kansas! Do you know it? Can you name any of the men who will play this year? Are you aware of the fact that Quigley is not playing? And that Johnny Outland is bringing the men up in fine shape? Have you ever been near McCook's field when the team was practicing? Ask yourselves these things, Freshman, Soph, Junior, Senior, and then judge your own college patriotism. We have a foot-ball team. And it is doing fine work. Wake up and give the men some encouragement! Every student in the University owes his college something in the way of loyalty. If he can't show it by standing by the foot-ball team, it must be a pretty poor sort of loyalty. Any one ought to realize that the name and reputation of the University depend largely upon the success of its athletic ventures, and that every individual in the University can assist in their success by showing his colors, not only on the decisive day but all the time. There is one notable way just now in which your patriotism is to be shown. That is in buying of season tickets for the game. The chronic knockers of the college have searched out a flaw in the system of ticket-selling this year, and have made themselves conspicuous thus early in the game by asserting that two of the games included on the ticket are second team games. Two dollars, they declare, is too much to pay for only seven games, when two of those games are to be played by serrabs. Did you ever stop to figure up just what the season ticket saves you, counting fifty cents for the regular price of a game? The managers are giving you the two scrub games. Some people do very little good in this world except as knockers. To be sure, knockers serve their purpose, but it might possibly prove agreeable, both for the knocker, and the miscellaneous public, just for a change to try omitting the knocking for a while. If they would be satisfied to even choose a single line along which they preach, but this indiscriminateness is the fault most apparent in their criticisms. There are to be found people who knock on the WEEKLY, on the Athletics, on the weather, the University buildings and the club in which they board. These knock on the fraternities, on the chapel exercises, and the Literary Societies. In fact, nothing is free from the dissatisfied comments of the chronic fault finder. Yet the University struggles along in its same old way and may continue to do so. And after all the team may live along, but you might try a little encouragement, and see how it works. ATHLETICS is taking a firmer hold in the University every year. This year, like a reaction from the depression of last year, new life sprang forth in every branch of athletics. In spite of the pessimistic, the new rule regarding pure athletics is not proving itself forever a detriment to the school. You watch the foot ball team this year and see. With Outland at their back, and a lot of fine new men. See how they march to victory. With the Athletic Association on a more business-like basis than it has ever been before, there are prospects of opportunities greater than were possible last year. The possibilities ahead of our athletes this year are opening up a wide field of advertisement for the University. And there is no doubt the business manager of the Athletic Association is one who can make the most of every possibility. It might be a good plan for every student of the University to inform himself concerning the Athletic Association and its methods of working. If some of the other counties that have a large K. U. attendance or alumni, would follow the example of Brown county it would be a very good thing. In this way the University would become more popular with the people of the State, thus securing direct benefit. Nothing can be of greater advantage to an institution than the hearty support of its members. The University is held in disrepute in some small locations because some student going there spread a bad report both by his actions and his words. Because one boy did not do well while here, should the whole college be censured? It ought not, but very frequently is. The forming of their associations over the State would do away with the bad impressions given by a few and show the people what our Alma Mater really does in the moulding of its men and women. Lonj Session of the Board Transacts but Little Business of Moment. The special session of the board of regents of the University of Kansas, called for the purpose of approving the bond and contract of Contractor Beunett, of the new museum building, was in session until midnight, but there was little business transacted at the meeting. THE BOARD OF REGENTS. The bond and contract of Mr Bennett were approved. Some repairs and changes were ordered in the gymnasium. The salary of the guide was raised from $200 to $350 a year. Sherman Walker was appointed janitor for the chemistry building; There was little discussion of the chancellorship question, because of lack of time, and no action whatever was taken in reference to it. The following was adopted in regard to the retirement of Dr. F.H. Snow from the chancellorship; The first day of September, 1901. marked the close of II years service of Dr.F.H. Snow as chancellor of the University of Kansas a period of marked progress in the history of this institution not only in material things but in the growth and development of University spirit and methods. Dr. Snow gave the best years of his life to this work and we feel that the success which the University has attained is largely due to his tireless energy, his devotion to duty, his wisdom and foresight and to his liberal and generous management of University affairs and the members of the board of regents desire to place on record their high appreciation or his services as chancellor and to express their pleasure and satisfaction in that they are still able to retain him in the service of the University as professor of natural history, the place which for so many years he honored and adorned. On motion the following resolution was adopted; In the untimley death of Regent Ernest L. Ackley, the University of Kansas lost one of its staunchest friends, the Board of Regents a wise and safe counsellor and the state of Kansas one of its best citizens. Regent Ackley was stricken down in the prime of life, when by his industry intergrity and zeal he had won a large place in the hearts of the people of this state.His life was full of promise; he stood at threshold of a useful and honorable career. Active, intelligent and honest, a loyal friend and companion, he seemed destined to take a large and wholesome part in shaping the affairs of the state. To the members of this board with whom he was so closely associated during the past year, his death comes as as a personal loss and we desire to place on record our appreciation of his many, Christian character, his loyalty to this institution, and his valuable and able services as a member of the board. L. D. L. September 4, 1991. Golf. Golf continues to gain in popularity at K. U. The club was very successful last year and this year gives promise of bringing more players and more interest in the game than ever before. Owing to the rapid growth of the club last year and to the importance of the tournament held, it was found necessary to enlarge the grounds The extension as planned, was completed this summer. The links need only to be mowed to put them in first class condition. Mr. Smethers, an engineering student has been employed as green keeper. He will be at work nearly every day keeping the grounds in good condition. Much interest is evident among the golfers who are only waiting for more favorable weather before going to work. Several players of ability have entered school this year. The Seaver brothers of Ellsworth show some proficiency in the game. Mr. Dobson of Kansas City is also an experienced player. The club is in good financial condition and is looking forward to an unusually successful year. ASTHMA CURE FREE! Asthmalene Brings Instant Relief and Permanent Cure in All Cases. SENT ABSOLUTELY FREE ON RECEIPT OF POSTAL. Write Your Name and Address Plainly. CHAINED FOR TEN YEARS HAY FEVER ASTHMA EVERY BRINGO RELIEF. There is nothing like Asthmalene. it brings instant relief, even in the worst cases. It cures when all else fails. The Rev, C. F. WELLS, of Villa Ridge, Ill., says: "Your trial bottle of Asthmaalme received in good condition. I cannot tell you how thankful I feel for the good derived from it, I was a slave, chained with patridr sore throat and Asthma or ten years, I despaired of ever being cured. I saw your advertisement for the cure of this dreadful and tormenting disease, Asthma, and thought you had overspoken yourselves, but resolved to give it a trial. To my astonishment the trial acted like a charm. Send me a full-size bottle." Rev. Dr. Morris Wechsler. Rabbit of the Cong. Bnal Israel. NEW YORK, Jan. 2, 1601. MEDICINE CO. After having it carefully analyzed, we can state that Asthmateine coatings no ophum, morbine chloroform or either. Very Truly Yours. PEY DE MODES WEISHLER OUS, TAFT BROS' MEDICINE CO. gentlemen. Your Asthmatic is an excellent remedy for Asthma and Hay Fever, and its composition alleviates all trubles which combine with asthma. Its success is astonishing and wonderful. DR. TAFT BROS.MEDICINE CO. AVON SPRINGS, N. Y., February 1, 1901. Gentlemen; I write this testimonial from a sense of duty, having tested the wonderful effect of your Asthmalene, for the cure of Asthma. y wife has been afflicted with spasmodic asthma for the past 12 years. Having calculated my own skill as well as many others I changed to see your sign upon your windows on 13th street. New York. I at once obtained a bottle of Asthmalene. My wife commenced taking it about the first of November. I very soon noticed a radical improvement. After using one bottle her Asthma has disappeared and she is entirely free from all symptoms: I feel that I can consistently recommend the medicine to all who are afflicted with this distressing disease. Yours respectfully. DR. TAFT BROS. MEDICINE CO. O, D. PHELPS, M. D. Feb. 5, 1901. Gentleman: I was troubled with Asthma for 22 years. I have tried numerous remedies, but they have all failed. I ran across your advertisement and started with a trial bottle. I found relief at once. I have since purchased your full-size bottle, and I am very grateful. I have family of four children, and for six years was unable to work. I am now in the best of health and am doing business every day. This testimony you can make such use ol as you see fit. 8. RAPHAEL Home address, 235 Rivington rtreet. 67 East 129th st., City. Trial Bottle Sent Absolutely Free on Receipt of Postage. Do not delay. Write at yne, addressing DR, TAFT BEOS; MEDICINE CO., 79 East 130th St., N.Y. City T HE LAWRENCE Steam Laundry. LAWRENCE, NAN. Thoroughly refted with the latest machinery. All kinds of washing done in first-class manner. Suits cleaned, pressed and repaired. Employs competent skilled labor. Student's trade generally. COL. JAMES BECK, PROP. 908 Mass. St. Phone 383. Students' trade especially Solicited. 长跃激激激激 SPALDING'S FOOT BALL SHOES. Finest Kangaroo Leather, with circular reinforce on sides New Style Cleats on heel and sole, and hand-sewed throughout. Our highest quality shoe and every pair warranted. Foot Ball Pants. Conibear Hesd Harness, Murphy Ankle Brace, Shin Guards, Belts, Nose Masks, And Everything Necessary for the Game. Spalding's Official Foot Ball Guide for 1901, ed. by Walter Camp Price, 10 Cents. A G SPALDING & BROS NEW YORK. CHICAGO. DENVER Hardcover Catalogue of Foot Ball and all Athletic Sports Free to any Ad. CHICAGO. DENVER. --- 8. HISTORY CLUB. Last year an organization was started in the University under the name of the "History Club" and dedicated to the work of investigation of historical subjects. K.U. offers large opportunities for research work in both European and American history, and the library contains stacks of manuscripts as yet untouched by the students. To avail themselves of these resources, several students specializing in history and political science organized this club. The members desire to bring together all the men doing special work in anA period of history. The work planned for this year is a study of some short period of European history, probably the French revolution, which will be corulated with the saue period in the United States and in the colonial empires of Asia and South America. While the work will be carried on entirely by the student members, the lines of study will be directed somewhat by the department professors. It is not intended that this shall be a society of large membership and omniverous study, but confined to a few earnest students and to one short period. At present the club requires a written thesis on some historical subject as an evidence of the applicant's ability to pursue the course. This paper will be read by the society and a written report given to the applicant, whether he be elected to membership or not. --- H. Valentine was down from Topека Friday. Regent Scott Hopkins was on the hill Friday. Mr. Runnebaum '00 visited the University Friday. John McFarland of Topeka will enter the University Monday. Lawrence Chamberlain came down from Topeka Friday to attend the Phi Gam initiation. For outline and material for essays and orations address Colchester, Roberts & Co., Tiffin, O. Miss Edith Davis '97 who has been teaching in the Tapeka High School resigned her position and has gone to New Mexico where she will teach in the Mesilla Park Agricultural College. WALTER M. DUNK COPYRIGHT 1977 The Phi Psis' were visited Thursday and Friday by John Hayden. Mr. Hayden is a student in Rush Medical College. The vacancies in the Y. M. C. A. cabinet, caused by the absence of Harry Braden and J. Homer Burris, have been filled. Rufus Emery will take Braden's place as recording secretary, and John C. Moore will have charge of the "personal work." The office of corresponding secretary, which John Algie held, will be filled later. The Denver Express. INNES, BULLENE & HACKMAN. A singularly effective melodrama containing many novel features is promised in the coming production of Holden Bros., great sensational scenic play Denver Express, which will be at the Bowersock Opera House Monday, Sept. 30. The train scene is most effective, the distant rumble and whistle, the increasing volume of sound as the train approaches rises to a clash and din that leaves the beholder to wonder how it is done as the engine dashes past with bell clanging, whistle shrieking and is gone as rapidly as a real 40 mile an hour train. This is however only one of the strong sensational scenes of the play. The attack of the emigrant train by a band of Indians in the first act and the fight for life in the last are both features seldom seen in melodrama while the funny pranks of Tommy Tucker and the quaint doings of Old Hi Garvy and his wife, furnish a comedy element equal to the average farce comedy. Y. W. C. A. Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock in North College Dr. P. H. Sarrigo will address the Y. W. C. A. Dr. Sarrigo is a graduate of a New York musical school and has been for some time in missionary work in Alaska. He is an interesting speaker and full of his subject. At the close of the address the plans of the missionary department of the association will be presented. Will consider it an Honor if You will Visit their New Cloak, Suit and Fur Department Ladies' Tailored Suits, ON FIRST FLOOR. OCTOBER SECOND TO FIFTH. Furs and Jackets. The Occasion Being an Opening Commencing WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2,and continuing throughout the week A Splendid Assortment of Misses and Children's Jackets and Coats from the Leading Manufacturing Tailors of the East. Now Ready for Your Inspection SUITS $12.50. . . TROWSERS $4.00 INNES, BULLENE & HACKMAN Fall Suitings Every Garment Backed by OUR GUARANTEE. AND UPWARDS. Absolutely Guaranteed in every particular PREMIUM ENTRY SHIPPING NEW HATS. NEW SHIRTS. W. BROMELSICK. The Y. M. C. A. employment bureau has furnished about 35 needy students with permanent positions and a much larger number with odd jobs. Students are still applying for work but there are not enough jobs to go round. Any vacancies should be reported at once to the bureau. Y. M. C. A. Saturday evening the cabinets of the two association will hold a joint meeting in the interest of association work. The social feature of this meeting will be emphasized and an enjoyable evening is anticipated. The address of Professor Iden of the state normal, last Sunday afternoon, was listened to by over one hundred men. Many of those present signified their intention of taking Bible study work the coming year. Two special year Bible classes and five first-year classes have been organized for the year, others will be formed later in the year. Professor Pavne will teach a sec 814 Massachusetts, Our New LOCATION. Popular FOOTWEAR. Popular PRICES. Fischer's --- Lawrence Business College. Shorthand, Typewriting, Bookkeeping, Etc. Evening school begins Sept. 30. I. C.STEVENON, Principal. BELL BELL BROS. BROS. MUSIC, HALF PRICE TO STUDENTS. PIANOS FOR RENT. 925-27 Massachusetts Street. 925=27 Massachusetts Street. Students Wanting Bicycles Or Repairing of any Kind done are asked to go to the Lawrence Bicycle Company And consult with them. —ALSO— Sporting Goods, Sporting Goods, GUNS AND AMMUNITION. 'A. BOICOURT, Prop. 905 Mass. St. LAWRENCE, - - kANSAS. | | | | | Where! ATWEAVER'S What! Sale of Kid Gloves When! Right Now! A. D. WEAVER. The Athletic board at its last meeting awarded University K's to Delano, Tobey and Owens. These three men have been prominent in track athletics for the past two years and have established good records for the University in pole vaulting,jumping and running. It Will Pay You to Attend. The RUPERT in all shades,$1.25 value; Sale Price $1.00. The NEWPORT, $1.50 value, $1.25. The HELLMONT, $1.75 value, $1.50. ond year class for the association this year. --- The team starts out well in electing Jenkinson, who is familiarly known to K. U. rooters, as "Jenks," captain for the coming season. He has been here since '98, and has won a place in the hearts of K. U. students as one of the most reliable and unassuming athletes in the institution. His base ball and foot ball honors are well deserved and it is apparent that the action of the team in electing him captain meets with the earnest approval of the student body. Give the team your hearty support and help Jenkinson and Outland to make it a winner. Capt. J.G. Haskell will be with the training class in about a month. To Students We are now located in our new quarters-two doors south of Innes' Dry Goods Store—where we are better prepared than ever to serve you. You will find that our prices on all school supplies is the lowest of any house in Lawrence. We have built up our business by giving the best values for your money. See us before you purchase your fall supplies. D. L. ROWLANDS' Many were disappointed last Sunday in not hearing Coach Outland sing. He was absent on account of sickness. 819 Massachusetts Street. OMAR F. HARSHMAN Practical Shoemaker. Repairing Neatly and Cheaply Done Second-Hound Shoes Bought and Sold. 1017 Mass st. Lawrence, Kan 819 Massachusetts Street. 1017 Mass. st., Lawrence, Kan. % DISCOUNT ON ALL MILLINERY TO STUDENTS 841 MASSACHUSETTS STREET. Mrs. Boulton Stone, STEAM LAUNDRY WILDER BROS. WILDER BAY Shirt Size: Dress Size Speciality. Calls up Monday and Friday. Delivered Tuesday and Wednesday. SMITH & CLARK, University Agents. DR. B. H. LESLIE. Physician and Surgeon. Office 802 Mass. St. Office Phone 36; Res. 191 4-rings. LAWRENCE, - - ANSAS. G. A. HAMMOND, M. D. Practice limited to diseases of the eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. 901 M&SSACHUSETTS STREET. LAWRENCE. KANSAS. GEO. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Physician and Burgerm OFFICE, 743 MASSACHUSETTS STREET. Residence 901 Ohio St. TELEPHONE, Residence or Office, No. 35. The first and only dentist in the city to depart from high prices in favor of the masses. Amalgam Fillings, 50 cents. Gold Fillings, half the usual price. Extracting teeth, each, 25 cents. Office over Howe's Shoe Store. 829 Mass. Open from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. DR. WHEELER, DENTIST. LAWRERCE. . . . KANSAS J. W. O'BRYON, D. D. S. TELEPHONE 259 4-rings. DENTIST. 819 Massachusetts Street. K. U. AGENTS FOR Lawrence Steam Laundry. Totten & Forney, (See adv. on page 2.) Say, fellers, have you heard about our Pantatorium? We will Press your coat, vest and three pairs of pants for ONE DOLLAR. Give us a trial. All work guaranteed satisfactory. Laundry Collections: Mondays and Wednesdays. Deliveries: Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays. SPECIAL RATES on students Laundry. CHARLES JOSEPH CAHILL, M.D Gynecology. 813 MASS, STREET, TELEPHONE 401 3-65, LAWRENCE, , KANSAS. MORRIS, THE Photo Artist. rk a specialty Students work a specialty The only Imported Novelties to be obtained in Lawrence. Studio newly fitted throughout 829 Mass. St. 'Phone 312. HUTSON'S BAKERY 709 VERMONT STREET. Bread for sale from wagon and at Leading Grocers. Special Delivery to Clubs. STUDENTS TRADE STUDENTS TRADE EPECIALLY SOLICITED ESPECIALLY SOLICITED. Telephone 260 4-rings. LAWRENCE, - - KANSAS. .