called turned TK OF HER. اولى HOUSE . the year of WARDE stupend of the Great 1 Collin y Normer Wads- summer, James. Kansas University Weekly. day. 5. side t success ng. ient Gor- Boxes 1.50 & Co's. --has received a new line of fine spring goods. He will run a SUITITORIUM in connection with his tailor shop. Clothes cleaned, pressed and kept in perfect order for $1.50 per month. f S THE ONLY OFFICIAL AND AUTHORIZED WEEKLY PUBLICATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. VOL. XII. Geo. Davies, the Student's Tailor. The Excelsior Pantatorium. WatkinsNationalBank Capital $100,000. Hurplus $20,000. J. B. Watkins, Pres C. A. Hill, V. Pres. C. I. Tucker, Cash W. E. Hazen, Asst. Cr DONNELLY BROS., DONNELLY BROS., LIVERY, BOARDING, and HACK STABLES. All Rubber Tire Rigs. 30th and New Hampshire. Phone 100 EASTERN STAR BAKERY Fine Pastries and Buns. Sweet Cakes a Specialty. Parties supplied. Best Candy & Ice Cream Parlor. J. Contrakon. Agent for Douglas' Choc Bonbons WHOLESALE and REFAIL. 713 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kan MRS. PREN'TISS at THE HOME STORE Toilet requisites, Sempre Giove ine, Jennesse St. Beaute, Kan 8as Toilet Cream, Curodor, Ag naline; Tooth paste, Perfume, etc 1105 Mass. St. F. A. EWING Pure Mexican Chili and Hot Tamales. Hot Chocolates. Tomato Boulion, Beef Tea, etc. Also a line of good Cigars. 1027 MASS. ST. McKINZIE GROCERY Our method of buying and selling will save you 10 per cent. 189 KY Sr TEL 6018 WHITE 1301 KY. ST. TEL. 618 WHITE J. W. O'BRYON, DENTIST, kson Bldg. Phone 517 Gray EdAnderson's Restaurant and Confectionery. Student's Headquarters. J. A. NICOLSON, Successor to Geo. F. Godding. LIVERY, HACK, and BOARDING STABLE. Reasonable Charges. Phone 13 J. A. NICOLSON, RUBBER TIRED RIGS. Lawrence, . . . Kansas. Chas. L. Hess. A. P HULTS, DENTIST, lo. 735 Massachusetts Street. Meat Market. 941 Mass. St. Telephone 14 40 Our new spring goods are in. Protsch THE TAILOR 717.Mass. St. Ground Floor ATHLETICS. SAGURDAY. MARCH 5.1904. BASE BALL Manager Plank has beer and is still trying to get a good coach for the base ball team but so far his efforts have been unsuccessful. The applicants for positions on the team were out on McCook field for the first time Tuesday. There is a great deal of good material for all the positions except pitchers and third basemen, and with these exceptions the prospects for a team are good. Captain Sexton has certainly a difficult proposition before him in choosing from the list of applicants the right men for the places. BASKET BALL The members of the track team are doing steady, hard work preparing for the indoor meet at Kansas City. Manager Plank is arranging for an excursion at a very low rate and it is expected that a large crowd will accompany the team to witness the meeting with Missouri in Convention Hall. Exchange games have been arranged with Ottawa and Baker. The first of this series will be played, Monday, March 7th, with Ottawa in the K. U. gymnasium at 4 o'clock. The dates of the other games will be arranged later. The work of smoothing the grounds and moving the south bleachers has commenced. TRACK ATHLETICS The team will take a trip to Newton and one or two other places if the expenses can be arranged. F. L. Moulton of the class of 1900, will coach the track team, this spring, coming up from Kansas City as often as his business will allow. Moulton was the fastest man the university ever had, winning the hundred yards dash in 9 4-5. The world's record held by A. C. Duffy is only 9 3-5. He also holds the 220 yards dash record for K. U. of 22 1-5 seconds, and the 220 record for Yale, and won the 100 yard dash from Harvard last year, he being then a member of the law school at Yale. Professor Carruth is at work on a couple of german text books for use in colleges. They are as follows: Otis's elementary german, 8th edition, thoroughly revised, with new exercises throughout. Henry Holt & Co. New York. Professor Carruth's previous connections with Otis's Grammar have been confined to corrections in the plates. PROF. CARRUTH'S NEW BOOKS. A German Reader with exercises for translation into german based on the text. 135 pages of text, 40 pages of notes, 30 or 40 pages of exercises. Ginn & Co., Boston. W. L. A. JOHNSON'S ADDRESS. State Labor Commissioner Speaks to the Conference of Sociology and Economics. At the Sociological and Economic Conference Thursday afternoon, Prof. F. H. Hodder introduced Mr. W. L. A. Johnson, State Labor Commissioner. Mr. Johnson prefaced his remarks by stating that he was a mechanic and had served sixteen years in the shops. He was consequently well qualified to deliver an address based upon the progress and influence of the trade organizations. He first dealt with the labor conditions in early England. Men were forced to work for wages established by law and were prohibited from joining guilds or confederations. He then recounted the progress of trade unionism in the United States. The first union was formed in Boston in 1806 by the journeymen tailors. They were so violently opposed that they were compelled to meet in cellars and garrets. During the period from 1806 to 1866 the formations of trade unions was rather spasmodic. After the war laborers began to join with each other in order to defend themselves more successfully against the capitalists. In 1872 a national convention consisting of sixty organizations was held at which it was agreed to enter the field of politics. The defeat of their nominee for presidential honors taught them that the purpose of their organization should consist of nothing more than bettering the conditions of the working people. Later conventions confined themselves to this aim. The results are shown by the following: In 1881 the eight hour law was advocated. It now prevails in most of the building trades. In 1883 legislation providing for a Department of Commerce and Labor in the cabinet was demanded. Twenty years later (1903) the Department of Commerce and Labor was formed. In 1889 the convention advocated the adoption of the Australian Ballot System. It asked for a national holiday for working men which congress established in 1894 by setting aside the first Monday in September of each year. Labor organizations were active in securing the Chinese Exclusion Act. The Seamen's Bill of 1898, which they were mainly influential in having passed, prevents the shanghaiing of American sailors. Mr. Johnson spoke of other reforms which have been secured by organized labor. He then spoke of the last meeting of the American Federation of Labor. This body is representative of the various trades unions throughout the United States. At its twenty-third annual meeting in Boston in 1903 jt represented 25,000 organizations in the United States. During the interval elapsing between 1902-1903 it had received 440,000 additional members. In closing his remarks Mr. Johnson said the good which labor unions had done in this country was attested by the higher social, economic and intellectual standard prevailing among laborers at the present time. He asked that students of economics view the labor question from an unprejudiced standpoint. Trades unions should not be condemned for the mistakes they make without being given credit for the progress they have made. Kansas Will Send One Man to Oxford Next Year. THE RHODES SCHOLARSHIP. Chancellor Strong, as ex-officio chairman of the committee on the Rhodes' scholarship for Kansas, and upon whom devolved the duty of appointing the other members of such committee to act with him, appointed as the other two members President Plass of Washburn College and President Murlin of Baker University. The committee held its first meeting Friday at the University of Kansas. It was decided that the scholarships for Kansas should be thrown open to general competition for all students who in June of this year shall completely finish the sophomore year in colleges of the state accredited by the State Board of Education. Such candidates must be between the ages of nineteen and twenty-five years and no one is competent to apply who obtained his bachelor's degree more than two years prior to 1904. The examinations will be sent by the trustees of the Rhopes' scholarship fund and will be held at the University of Kansas at Lawrence on May 23, 24 and 25. All persons expecting to enter this examination should send application to the chairman of the committee at Lawrence on or before the first day of April, 1904. Information in regard to the subjects in which examinations will be given may be obtained by addressing Chancellor Strong. One scholar only will be chosen for the coming year and he will enter the University at Oxford in October, 1904. NO.22. INTERCOLLEGIATE NEWS. Julia Marlowe, the famous actress, has attacked college dramatics. She says they are altogether too light, and that the type of college play which prevails in the greater number of American universities and colleges is a disgrace to the intellect of both the spectators and actors. Miss Marlowe makes a strong plea for more classical plays. She goes so far as to say that if classical plays were more in vogue in college dramatics, the whole tone of the stage would be changed for the better and educated audiences would be drawn to the best class of serious plays. "The brand of college theatricals they now furnish is mainly a cheap combination of campus slang and buffoonery," she savs, "The women of our schools do much better than the the men. Smith college will this year present Romeo and Juliet, and Barnard college a performance of "The Rivals." These announcements are significant of a most welcome interest in the higher walks of the drama by college bred women, and their brothers might well imitate their example." In view of the fact that groups of men are constantly leaving the campus to take rooms together at some hotel or private club, the students at Yale are seeing a great danger to unified college spirit. This tendency is becoming more and more marked and today scarcely any of the sophomores room on the campus. As a consequence it is said that the students are loosing common interest and the famed democratic spirit of Yale is on the wane. In an effort to prevent this the sophomores societies were abolished, but this did not work out as expected. At present an effort is being made to procure Durfee hall, one of the college dormitories, especially for a sophomore dormitory. This will bring the class more together in a favorable way. Nebraska had forty men out in the base-ball field last Wednesday. Continued on page 2. SPRING STYLES. SPRING STYLES. HATS AND CLOTHES. Stetson } DERBIES SOFT HATS Knox } DERBIES SOFT HATS Manhattan Shirts and Stein Bloch Clothes. OBER'S. --- THE KANSAS UNIVRESITY WEEKLY. Editor-in-Cbrief RALPH ELLIEN Associates { } { A. H. BAYNE } E.B. BLACK Sporting Editor. FRED A GILLETTE Local Editor. J.W. KAYSER Societyy editor MABEL BARBER Literary Editor. CHAS L.VANFLEET Business Manager. M.N. MCNAUGHTON REPORTERS. J. B. Rieman, Geo Hansen, Wm. Shaw, Bert Beach, O. A. Zimmerman, Ray Barton, J. E. Brady, Mary Burwell, Earl ampibell. Entered at Lawrence Post Office as second class mail matter. Shares in the WEEKLY $1.00 each, entitting the holder to the paper for two years, may be had of the Secretary and Treasurer, GEORGE FOSTER or of M. N. MCNAUHTON, Business Manager. Subscription price 50 cents per annum in advance. Single copy 5 cents. Address all communications to M.N. M.nCaughton, Bus. Mgr., Lawrence, Kum. THE great majority of athletes who work for places upon the various teams do so with the hope of being ultimately privileged to go with the team upon its season's tours. This is a laudable ambition. It is just that men who put forth the effort our athletes do should be rewarded in some such way. But everyone must remember that the University can not afford to support losing teams. If the track men of the past have always had a trip during the season it is right that the track men should have a trip this year. To earn it they must work for it. It is no more than right that the track men should show what they can do before demanding long and expensive trips. Kansas has the material for an extraordinarily good team this spring. Now is the time to develop it. If we get together a bunch of good fast men, a few fast hurdlers and some good heavyweight men, we would be in a position to compete with the best teams of the neighboring states. If the men prove themselves worthy the trip will come. Besides this, men ought to realize what an honor it is to win a "K". At the present time it stands for the highest honor in athletics. It is an honor to wear the emblem of your college which is held in the highest esteem by those who can not wear it. The Track "K" is the hardest to win, standing as it does upon individual merit alone, and should be consequently the one most sought for. If the men will work faithfully it will create a confidence in the team. The athletic authorities are willing to do the best they can but they must know that they will have a good team. At the present time it is up to the men who wish to make places. Let them put forth some good hard work and rewards in the shape of honors and trips will follow. "SUCH ACTION on the part of the students is positively damnable" was the rather inelegant but forcible expression of a Colorado University professor, in commenting upon the fact that only nine per cent of the students attended the oratorical contest at that institution last week. The Weekly may deprecate the usage of such language on the part of the professor but it certainly agrees with the sentiment expressed. University students owe their institution their support in all university affairs. It matters little whether the student is personally attracted by the contests of his institution or not, he should lend his presence at least to them. The surest way to check the influence and growth of any educational institution is for its students, and faculty too for that matter, to show utter indifference to such affairs. Those who do interest themselves in school contests, whether they be of an oratorical, athletic or musical character, cannot do their best unless they know that they have the unqualified support of their fellows in what they undertake. What sort of inspiration could one of our debaters expect to receive, if when the first contest comes off, he should look over the audience and see only fifty or a hundred of his fellow students there. It is this feeling that he has the confidence of the entire student body that makes the representative of a university put forth every effort of which he is capable, in a contest against other colleges. If his institution does support him in spirit, the students will be on hand to encourage him, and not stay at home and not, in the event of losing the contest, say they would have gone to the contest but they knew their university would be defeated. The best way for a university student to show that he is a university man and that he is interested in his school is tor him to attend the affairs that the institution has an interest in. FEW months ago the student body of K. U. nearly went into spasms over the remarks made by a Harvard graduate to the effect that the tunes of our college songs were not original but consisted of airs taken from songs of Eastern institutions. Perhaps our indignation at the audacity of the gentleman's words, from our own Chapel platform too, was heightened rather than lessened by being compelled to admit to ourselves that the statement was true. It is lamentable that such a thing should should be true of our university songs. Why can't we have a song that belongs exclusively to Kansas University? There ought to be a half dozen people in the music school who could originate a creditable musical composition, and as for words, Mt. Oread might furnish inspiration for Miltonic lines from the hand of any one of numbers of budding K. U. poets. Numbers of small colleges would consider it a disgrace to have it said that they did not have at least one song which belonged to them individually and alone, and we too, should feel ashamed that Kansas University the head of our state public school system, has to set words to other colleges' music. It would be a most gratifying thing to K. U. students and faculty if those who have talent in a musical way should go to work upon a college song and initiate its singing in the coming May Festival. PARSONS COLLEGE as a Dancing Academy" is the title of an editorial in the Jefferson County Republican, of Fairfield, Iowa. It appears that the little college Fairfield has given two college parties in a hall down town this winter and upon both occasions the students danced. Of course the county paper could not let such questionable actions upon the part of the students go unencured. It is needless to remark that the Parsons college students were very thoughtless to cause the pain to the Fairfield paper that was occasioned by their terpsichorean ventures. In extension of their transgressions it may be said that they probably didn't think of the terrible consequences that could but result from such an unseenly entertainment as dancing. It appears that at an evening party their might be other means of passing the time away pleasantly. Checkers is an interesting game; and dominoes; some young people are never so happy as when engaged in the pleasant and scientific game of Tiddle-dewinks; others lean toward pussy wants a corner and Post-office. All of these are good old fashioned games and would in all probability meet the unqualified approval of the "Republican." The "Weekly" extends its sympathy to the students of Parsons college and hopes that they will remember their faults and be more careful in the future. Let them have nice little parties but remember not to dance, for it isn't nice at all—not at all. INTERCOLLEGIATE NEWS. Continued from page I. The Mississippi State legislature has taken a stand against college fraternities. A bill will be introduced to abolish traternities in the universities and colleges of Mississippi. The University of California, famed alike for class scraps and track teams, has rather outdone itself in the matter of undergraduate encounters. According to reports, the freshmen recently decorated a venderable negro, 'Majah' Waters, in a senior plug, a gaudy costume, and a big sign, "Boycott the Sophomore Minstrels." The seniors naturally objected to the use of the class plug for an advertising sign, and secured it after a foreible argument. The freshmen led away their advertising sign, but soon returned it with an imposing plug hat. The sophomores now helped out the seniors and the combined forces not only got the second plug hat but the advertising sign as well. They also got most of his gaudy clothes, whereupon the venderable old negro climbed the nearest spreading oak and called for the college president. The 'Majah' finally escaped and has refused to be an advertising sign for the freshmen any more. New Belts, Fancy'Ribbons, Veil Hose, New Gloves, New Spring Shirt Waists. A. D. WEAVER. New Hats, New Shirts, New Goods are coming in all the time. Come in and see us. M. J. Skofstad. Everybody is Pleased WHO PATRONIZES THE Morris Studio. 829 MASS. S. Investigate the merits of the Chicago Price $35. Do You Anticipate buying a Typewriter? Chicago. Price $35. FRED BOYLES, 639 Mass., has secured the agency and sells either for cash or payments. Also a full line of paper, ribbons, carbon paper, or anything in the stationery line Fred J. Boyles. 639 Mass. St. Headquarters for Good Eatables. We have been making a special effort to get in a full stock of good things to eat. 'Phone 226. 721 Mass. St. DONALD W. RYNE MACHINE CO. THE CHICAGO WASHINGTON, D.C. 1904-1923 W.A. GUENTHER INVESTIGATE The Globe Werneckie Sectional Book Case FOR YOUR LIBRARY. Rowland's and Stevenson BOOKSELLERS AND STATIONERS. 819 MASS. ST. HARVARD UNIVERSITY The Lawrence Scientific Schoo offers four-year courses of study leading to the degree of B. S. in Civil, Mechanical, and Electrical Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Architecture, Landscape Architecture Forestry, Chemistry Geology, Biology, Anatomy and Hygiene (preparation for medical school), Science for teachers and a course in General Science. Students are admitted to regular standing by examinations and by credits from other Schools or Colleges. App proved Special Students may be admitted without examination. The Catalogue will be sent on application to the Secretary, J. L. Love, 16 University Hall, Cambridge, mass. TEACHERS! TEACHERS! Teachers wishing to prepare for examination should write immediately for our Teachers' Interstate Examination Course as taught by mail. The course is endorsed by many leading educators, and every progressive teacher who wishes to advance in their profession should begin work immediately. Address nearest office, with stamp, for reply American Teachers' Association American teachers Association, 146 Kirkland High, Memphis, Tenn. Memphis, Tenn. Philadelphia, P --once Bakery & Restaurant. Mrs. M. F. Williams. EVERYTHING GOOD TO EAT. Come for Pies and Cakes. 8381 $ _ {2} $ Massachusetts St. Phone 550 Grav. Some flipies ra This bit o "I hope I tions I don't ca I'd ra I ponde I ponder upon First forl "Flirtati shou Just who just "I don't do n It's no of L "I'd rat ture The las nov "I hop take I've left love I don't as Fred day at Frar his ho At a class 7 mann class b ford ca Ral Sunda illness Miss the last Brook and Su worth Call for yo Mar branc Geo instru high hill F The day to Rec apent Che City J The Thurs bas was Gille Mar brand Jay Mit the g Wa this throu J. F atten Pr Pitta a m Sciel liver Pr Depa Clut Ma bran Ed urda Mr Smith form W frier Some flippant youth whose tendencies ran largely into rhyme This bit of crude philosophy wrote, once upon a time: "I hope I have a mind above furtations dead and past; I don't care who his first love was, "I'd rather be his last." First formed into expression in the think-works of the youth. I pondered long, I pondered late upon this gem of truth, "I hope I have a mind above," (Why should I want to know Just who the James and Mary's were that charmed him long ago? It's no concern of mine, I'm sure just how hard he was hit.) "Flirtations dead and past" (They do not worry me a bit; "I don't care who his first love was," (He likely couldn't say; Why should I conjure up the ghosts of Love's red letter day?) "I'd rather be his last." (The Scriptures say, 'The first shall be' The last, the last the first.' Somehow it rather comforts me.) So, with the callow poet's lines I've taken liberties; I've left the sentiment intact, but now the version is; "I hope he's through with early loves, confessed and unconfessed I don't care who they were so long as he loves ME the best. At a meeting of the sophomore class Thursday noon Charles Klaumann was elected manager of the class base ball team and Earl Gafford captain. Frank Sorgatz spent last week at his home in Beloit. Fred Wulfekuhler is spending to day at his house in Leavenworth. Brock Goddard spent Saturday and Sunday at his home in Leavenworth. Shelley for your Photos. Miss Helen Alder has been ill for the last week. Call and see what Shelley can do for you in rates on photos. Ralph Love was called home last Sunday on account of the serious illness of his father. March 24th. That's for remembrance. George Sharrard 01, at present instructor in the Sumner county high school, visited friends on the hill Friday. The Debating Council met Thursday to make arrangements for the preliminary contests. Reed Byers and Galen Burriss spent Friday in Kansas City. Chester Cooke was in Kansas City Friday. The middle laws held a meeting Thursday for the organization of base ball team. John Johnson was chosen manager and Fred Gillette captain. March 24th. That's for remembrance. Jay Love has been ill this week. Miss Sadie Moore of Ellsworth is the guest of Miss Robb Young. Walter Herrick will leave school this week for an extended trip through the South. J. R. Bender went home Friday to attend the funeral of an aunt. Prof. F. W. Blackmar went to Pittsburgh, Pa., this week to attend a meeting of The Academy of Science. Prof. Blackmar will deliver an address before that body. Prof. Raymond of the English Department talked to the Quill Club Tuesday on "Book Reviewing." March 24th, That's ior remembrance. Edwin O. Koch is spending Saturday and Sunday in Kansas City. Mrs. Hines and Mrs. F. Dumont Smith of Kinsley are visiting the former's son this week. Will R. Murphy is the guest of friends. There is considerable interest among the students in the coming indoor track meet at Kansas City. If excursion rates are made there will be plenty of K. U. roots there. March 24th. That's for remembrance. Chancellor Strong has appointed President Plass of Wasbburn and President Murlin of Baker as the members of the Rhodes scholarship board. Prof. Carruth has been invited to deliver a course of lectures in the Summer School of Wisconsin University. Doctor Strong was in Topeka Wednesday to meet with the Kansas Commission for the Louisiana Purchase Exposition. Harry Rhodes has been quite ill this week with the la gripe. "These nights are just too pretty to study" has been heard frequently of late. Go to Smith's News Depot for fine Cigars and Tobacco. Fred Feil, Chicago '00, was the guest of friends at the Phi Delta Theta house last Sunday and Monday. Mr. Feil made the All-American foot ball team in '90 and was left tackle on Chicago's ever victorious team the same year. Fay Moulton came in Tuesday to coach the track team. C. C. Jones, one of the 102 boys, was on the hill this week. Pipea -the finest line in the city Smith's News Depot. Hugh Jones spent four days of last week in Chanute. Sid Bernheisel was the guest of the Sigma Chis last week. Virgil Dodge of Kansas City spent Sunday with the Sigma Chis. Verne Pierson '02 was on the hill Wednesday afternoon. Verne is doing advertising work for the Western Newspaper Union with headquarters at Omaha. Wadsworth Harris of the Alexander the Great Company is an old Lawrence boy and attended the university for a short time. Harry Faulkner of Topeka visited Frank Bangs last week. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Herrick of Wellington visited their son Walter last Sunday. Clara Carr spent last Sunday at her home in Leavenworth. Harry Fleishman was the guest of his brother for the Delt party last week. Waldo Wellington has returned from a three days' visit in Ellsworth. Clare Cowley spent Sunday in Kansas City. George Hansen was called home on account of the death of his sister. Dr. Wallace C. Payne, instructor of Kansas University Bible Chair has been at Austin, Texas, for the purpose of looking into the feasibility of establishing a Bible chair at Texas University. Several Texas ladies have interested themselves in the movement and ground has been purchased and a fund raised for the building of a hall for the new project. The purpose of the Bible chair will be to interest university students in a systematic study of the bible and to assist them in their moral and religious life. Similar Chairs have been instituted at the Universities of California, Michigan, Missouri, Virginia and Georgia. The movement has met with unqualified success in all of the institutions in which it has been tried. A big line of Base Ball goods are now in at Smith's News Depot. BIBLE CHAIR AT TEXAS UNIVERSITY ONE THING AND ANOTHER Sen-Sen, March 1- Dispatches received here to verify the capture by the interpred Japanese commander, Gen. Keechee, of twenty Russian torpedo boats loaded with chewing gum. Gen. Drinkovisky for the Russians put up a stubborn resistance but having only three sheets out on his boats and a high wind blowing his efforts were without avail. Hayski, March 2-It is reported that the hatchet brigade of the Russian Vodka Killers have reached the little village of Notmuchski some versts west of here. They are under the command of Carryoff Nashunu. The Japs under Gen. Yon Yank have been detailed to shell the enemy with radium at their first appearance. Gen. Brokehisbazoo with machine guns ordered from Kansas will probably attempt a flask movement on the Tea Chewers' position. Topeksk. March 2—Great excitement prevails at Camp Washburn It is stated on good authority that Commander Choo d' Rag-oo with a following of several hundred yellow devils from Bald Wun are making arrangements for an advance upon this place on or about March 11. The threatening invasion of the yellow peril is said to have sympathizers among certain other Boxer organizations at Wun Feeld, Em Poru and other points. The garrison here are wearing the "blues" daily but will put up a fierce fight against the horde from the effete Orient. Extracts from the New University Dictionary, soon to be out of the publisher's hands: Recitation, (almost obsolete.) A meeting held by an instructor—to be avoided when possible. Quiz. The end; a punishment given by revengeful professors; a powerful poison having but one antidote—a horse. Fraternity. Synonomous with spring party; E Pluribus Unum; a survivor of Greek civilization. Barb. One of the members of a hill tribe; one who may be a pauper without being a gentleman. Chancellor. A chapel leader; a Napoleon of education. Boarding club. An anti-fat association; devotees of hash; a group of philanthropists, which keeps a student in soft clothes and spending money. At the regular meeting of the K. Y. Z. Debating Club Saturday evening, February 27, it was voted to dispense with the program for the evening and to carry it over one week. After an informal discussion of some business affairs the club adjoined to attend the program given by ladies of Snow Literary. X. Y. Z. DEBATING CUB. The regular election of officers will occur a week from next Thursday evening. A nominating committee has been appointed to name one man for each office. Any member of the association may make other nominations at the time of the election. Y.M.C.A. Some of the men interested in chess will meet at the house this evening for practice. Dr. Hoxie will speak at the meeting Sunday. Come out and hear him, at 4:30. Shelley PHOTOGRAPHER Call and see what we can do for you on rates. Some Pantatoriums Are Better than Others. Our work speaks for us. We make every job an ad vertisement. $1.50 per month fills the bill, no matter how many suits, coats, pants or vests you have nor the number of times you have them cleaned or pressed or repaired. Tel 06 Gray. Lawrence Pantatorium, 12 W. Warren St. Go to TETER BROS. For Your Groceries and Meats They make Prices that make permanent customers. k 828Mass.St. HERTZLER & CO., Phone 609 White SPOT CASH GROCERY. SPECIAL RATES TO BOARDING CLUBS BYRON JONES, Tel. 63. MEAT MARKET. 840 Mass SPECIAL RATES TO CLUBS. WM. WIEDEMANN, The Confectioner. PURE CONFECTIONS AND ICE CREAM, His Berwic Bay Oysters are delicious. Oysters are delicious. Agent for Lowney's Allegretti's,Headley's Lyon's Chocolates HOW DO YOUR FEET TREAT YOU? A man in a suit sits in a chair, adjusting his foot. In front of him are several pairs of shoes, each with different designs and sizes. The background is a simple wall with a decorative border. If your feet grow sometimes, isn't it because they are dissatisfied with your treatment of them? You prefer good comfortable surroundings to work in, and so do your feet. They can't work successfully in a misfit harness any more than you can. shoes in the feet as nicely as a good glove fits the hands and they look as well. Sold only by STARKWEATHER This is worth thinking about. Walk Over SHOE COMPANY. We are carrying a full line of Fresh Meat In addition to our fine line of Groceries. Park Grocery EACHERS WANTED. We need at once a few more teachers, both experienced and inexperienced. More calls this year than ever before. Schools supplied with competent teachers free of cost. Address with stamp. American Teachers' Association, 474 Randolph Bldg. 1423 Arch St. Memphis, Tenn. Philadelphia, Pa You Need No Money To gain admittance to the Imperial Dancing Academy if you do not dance. We would be pleased to have you call and watch our class work. We claim that we have the best school of dancing in the State of Kansas, and only ask you to investigate our methods and talk with our pupils. You don't need to buy a ticket to join our classes, but pay nightly and come whenever you can. Hall open all day. IMPERIAL DANCING ACADEMY, Phone 510 Blue. Residence, Main 425. K. U. FELLOWSHIPS. Nine Fellows are to be Appointed. The various departments in the university offer nine fellowships for the next school year. One fellow will be elected to each of the following: Mathematics, English, Chemistry, German, French, Education, American History, European History and Sociology. Each fellow is required to perform a certain amount of work in the department with which he is connected and in addition may take graduate work in other departments. Each holder of a fellowship receives $200 and his tuition. Candidates for fellowships make written application. A committee appointed from the faculty of the graduate school recommends appointments to the Board of Regents. The Board will make appointments for the places May 15. These positions offer great advantages to graduate students who contemplate doing special work in any department, and as the salary will go a considerable way in paying the student's expenses for the year, many applications should be filed this year by prospective graduate students. GLEE CLUB CONCERT. The concert given by the K. U. Glee and Mandolin Clubs in the chapel Friday evening was a very creditable entertainment and was thoroughly enjoyed by the large number of students and faculty members present. The Glee Club did especially well; its selections were good and the effects of Professor Hubach's work was very noticeable. Probably the best numbers on the programme were Miss Bowersock's violin solos and Mr. Scherer's "Asleep in the Deep." Several comic situations were introduced into the Glee Club numbers, the best one being "Voices of the Night." The Mandolin Club played several selections of which the prison song from "Il Trovatore" was the best received. Miss Harriet Greissinger played the piano accompaniment. SOCIETY About forty couples enjoyed the hospitality of the Oread boys at another of their series of parties given in Pythian hall Friday evening. Some of the Betas and their girl friends took supper at Biermann's Saturday. The Phi Delts entertained at their house Saturday evening. Miss Agnes Thompson very charmingly entertained at dinner Thursday evening. Phi Delta Theta will give its annual alumni banquet next Saturday night. Pi Beta Phi has pledged Clara Uhrh of Aitchison. Phi Delta Theta held initiation last Saturday night for Frank Relihan of Smith Center. SENIORS SNOW LITERARY SOCIETY. All seniors desiring a class pin, give their names to The Snow program for Saturday evening Feb.27 was turned over to the girls of the society. They were a credit to themselves and the society. The hall was crowded with the many friends of the society. RHODES. Miss Forrest opened the program with a piano solo and responded to an encore. An impersonation of a well known author was given by Miss Brewster. Miss Cardwell read one of Chas. Lewis's animal stories, "The Last Buffalo." Miss Wood rendered an organ voluntary. The eight notes of this unique organ were composed of human voices. With the exception of a slight lack of control and a rather jerky style, Miss Wood proved an adept on this instrument. Genevive Sterling rendered two delightful violin solos. This was followed by a recitation, "The Raggedy Man," by Miss Sharvougn. The evening's program closed with a fare, "The Bradleyville Shakespeare Club," organized for the benefit of crippled foot ball players, and rendered by seven Snow members. We do not hesitate to say that the girls gave us the best program that has been given this year. Visitors are cordially invited to attend our meetings. THE JACOB RIIS LECTURE. Jacob Riis will lecture at the opera house next Tuesday evening on the "Battle with the Slums." The lecture will be illustrated with stereoptician pictures made by Mr. Riis during the thirty years of his heroic effort to turn Mulberry Bend and the Bowery districts of New York City into the cleanest, best governed city in the world. Admission tickets will be 50 cents and all seats will be reserved; the chart will be placed on sale at Woodward's Monday morning. The Phi Delts had their group photo taken at the Squires' Studio this week. March 24th. That's for remembrance. Sodas and Ice Cream Sodas at Vics. Do it now; make an appointment with S. uires, the students' photographer, at 925 Mass, St. The Glee and Mandolin Clubs had their photos in separate groups at the Squires Studio Friday afternoon. Haviland China Plates on sale at greatly reduced prices at Hoadley's China Store. Go to Vics to meet your friends. Everybody says Raymond's Liquozone cures the grip. A sample is given by the manufacturers. Send in a coupon. Go to Vics to meet your friends. Follow the crowd and go to Vics. The Lotus Eating Club was discontinued last week. Mrs. Burgess is so busy planning for the Mount Oread encampment at the World's Fair that she did not have time to manage the club. March 24th. That's for remembrance. SQUIRES and no OTHER for upo-date photos. over Bell's music store. March 24th. That's for remembrance. PHARMACY ALUMNI NOTES The swellest line of Easter novelties and bon bons ever received in Lawrence at Vics. The circular letter was sent out this week as promised in last week's paper. It is yet too early to hear from the members, but we trust by next week to receive many favorable replies. We have 114 members who were in good standing up to Dec. 30, 1903. The Weekly has been sent to a majority for two months with the belief that these members would soon remit. The results are not quite what was expected. Next week will be the last call as each member in arrears will receive his Weekly, marked. There are quite a number of Alumni of the Pharmacy School, the address of whom we do not know. These people have either failed to receive our letters or have neglected to answer them, if received. Early in the future we will publish a list of these names and will be greatly obliged to any one who will supply us with the desired information. Vic started his soda fountain today. Get your razors honed at Majors. Call and see our new mounts, single or group pictures 45 cents at Fry's. We also have some entirely new in larger mounts. You can get your work done the cheapest at Majors', the barber, because he is not bound to prices by the union. ITEMS OF INTEREST. A chapter of Alpha Zeta fraternity has been organized at Nebraska. Alpha Zeta is an honorary fraternity confined to agricultural colleges and state universities having agricultural departments. The women at the university of Michigan are thinking of holding an inter-class athletic meet in the gymnasium this spring. One hundred and sixty students were dropped from Cornell university as a result of the January examinations. The students dropped must leave town within five days or forfeit their right to enter the university again. The regents of the University Nebraska recently decided to erect a Physics building on the athletic field. Their action has caused such consternation among the students and various members of the faculty that they are reconsidering their action. If the building is placed on the athletic field it will almost kill athletics at the university. Mosely Commission. Alfred Mosely, the English manufacturer who headed the Mosely educational commission in the United States, has some interesting things to say with regard to the conditions that he found in his investigations here. He says that athletics are not practiced here generally enough and that the Americans do not enjoy the games for their physical good, but only for the test of competition involved. He also thinks the English tongue is not taught carefully in America, and that we have too few men teachers and too many women teachers. A WORD TO THE BUYER! Your particular attention is called to the class of work now being turned out at the studio; also to our CAREFULLY SELECTRD STOCK OF MOUNTS. Prompt and careful attention given to all orders Oldest established Studio in Lawrence. 615 Masachusetts Street. MISS JUNO SHANE. PHOTOGRAPHER. First Showing of New Spring Hats SATURDAY, MARCH 5. Exclusive Styles in Stetson and No Name Hats. Every one bears our guarantee. Your style and size among them. SPRING SHOWING JART, SCHAER & MARX Ready Tailored Suits and Top Coats $10.00 to $20.00 W. E. SPALDING. --- Something To Read. We have Books and Magazines for 10c.up to new copyrights. You can rent these books at WOLF'S BOOK STORE. TAN OXFORDS For Ladies and Gentemen. Drop in and see what we have in store for you. Tan leathers will be very much in vogue this season. Many neat dressers will welcome the return of these popular and comfortable shoes. Prices $3.50 to $5.00. Fischer & Son HAPPY BIRTHDAY Who has not had the grip? And who is not entirely over it? Let that person take Raymond's Vinol and completely recover, and quickly. De best hamburg what is at Vics. Yes sir. March 24th. That's for remembrance. A BOY'S WATCH $12.00 It is one of the New Thin Models--very much up-to-Date. It has a High Grade NICKEL MOVEMENT bearing our guarantees, and the CASE is Gold Filled, guaranteed to wear for 20 years Our New Catalogue Devotes 25 Pages to Watches. Send for it--FREE JACCARD JEWELRY CO. 1032 MAIN STREET Kansas City, Mo. BOWERSOCK OPERA HOUSE One Night Only. MONDAY, MARCH 7. Eunice Fitch's Pretty Pastoral Cree... A DEVIL'S LANE With the Brilliant Comediennes, THE EL MORE SISTERS and a Distinguished Company. Beautiful Scenery. Excellent Specialties. Prices—25c, 35c end 50c. Seat Sale at Woodward's. --- A Clearance Sale of Belts MONDAY AND TUESDAY. About 1,000 Belts that we have made a substantial reduction on for two days. All worth double the price. Silk, Satin and Leather Belts at 5, 10, 15, 25 and 50 cents each. MONDAY AND TUESDAY We inaugurate a sale of the season's newest spring weight Dress Goods. Tweeds and Mixed Suitings, all serviceable fabrics, at 55 cents a yard, value 75 cents. All are bright and beautiful. THIS SPRING'S SUITS AND COATS. Here's a fine collection of the newest styles and the latest materials, some of the best of the season's Gowns, Skirts and Coats. The painstaking work put into these garments tells its own story. The cut is perfect and the tailoring like a man's. Butterick's April Delineator now on Sale Innes, Bullene & Hackman. --- TCH HOUSE storal NE ennes, RS ompany. Seat e's ut is Kansas University Weekly. THE ONLY OFFICIAL AND AUTHORIZED WEEKLY PUBLICATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. OL. XII. Geo. Davies. the Student's tailor. has received a new line of fine spring goods. He will run a SUITIIORIUM in connection with his tailor shop. Clothes cleaned, pressed and kept in perfect order for $1.50 per month. The Excelsior Pantatorium. WatkinsNationalBank Capital $100,000. Surplus $20,000. J. B. Workus, Pres. J. A. Hill, V. Pres. H. Tucker, Cust. W. H. Rizzo, Assst. C Reasonable Charges. Phone 13 Reasonable Charges. Phone 13 J. A. NICOLSON, Successor to Geo. F. Godding. LIVERY, HACK, and BOARDING STABLE. RUBBER TIRED RIGS. RUBBER TIRED RIGS. Lawrence. . . . Kansas Chas. L. Hess. Meat Market. 941 Mass. St. Telephone 14 A. P HULTS, DENTIST, No. 735 Massachusetts Street F. A. EWING 1 Pure Mexican Chili and Hot Tamales. Hot Chocolates, Tomato Boullion, Beef Tea, etc. Also a line of good Cigars. 1027 MASS. ST. Our method of buying and selling will save you 10 per cent. 1801 KY. ST. TEL. 018 WHITE McKINZIE GROCERY J. W. O'BRYON, DENTIST, Jackson Bldg. Phone 517 Gray Ed Anderson's Restaurant and Confectionery. Student's Headquarters. DONNELLY BROS., LIVERY, BOARDING, and HACK STABLES. All Rubber Tire Rigs. 10, 12 and New Hampshire. Phone 100 EASTERN STAR BAKERY EASTERN STAR BAKERY Fine Pastries and Buns. Sweet Cakes a Specialty Parties supplied. Best Candy & Ice Cream Parlor. J. Contrakon. Agent for Douglas' Choc Bonbons. WHOLESALE and RETAIL. 713 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kan SAGURDAY. MARCH 12. 1904. at THE HOME STORE Toilet requisites, Sempre Giove ine, Jennesse St. Beaute, Kan sas Toilet Cream, Curodor, Ag naline, Tooth paste, Perfume, etc 1105 Mass. St. MRS. PREN'TISS MRS. PREN'TISS at THE HOME STORE PROTSCH TAILOR. 717 MASS STREET. ATHLETICS. The basket ball team will go to Ottawa Monday to play the return game with the Baptists. The athletic board met Tuesday and authorized Manager Plank to hire Billy Durham from the Kansas City Blues to coach the base ball squad. Mr. Durham came up Thursday, and went out with the boys for the first time Friday. Manager Plank was in Kansas City the latter part of last week making final arrangements for the indoor track meet with Missouri on March 18. There will be an excursion on this date leaving Lawrence at 10 o'clock and returning at 11:30 that night. Excursion tickets will be sold with tickets to the meet, ranging from $1.75 to $2.25, according to the seat purchased. The track men held a preliminary meet Saturday at 2:30 on McCook, to try the relative strength of the men. The winners of the different events in meet will not necessarily be the representatives of K. U. in the Missouri meet. ENGINEERING NOTES. The class baseball managers met Friday noon to make arrangements for the class games. Dr. Naismith presided and Fred Gillette served as secretary. Filkin, Barton, Ward and Klaumann were appointed as a committee to arrange rules regarding eligibility of men for class rating. Alford, Filkin, Jenkinson and Gillette are the com nittee to arrange rules governing the games and schedule. The Engineering department has received an exhibition of whistles, blow off valves, etc., with the compliments of Ludken heimer & Co. of Cincinnatti, New York and London. They may be seen in the mining museum. Plans have been discussed by some of the professors and students concerning a way to advertise our Engineering schools and form a closer relation between alumni students. More of this kind of work would be of great value to the school Prof. Crane has just completed his model of "Iron Mine Working." It shows in detail the parts of the mine shafts and the vein of ore. It is an excellent piece of work. The engineers will hold a meeting Tuesday at 4:30 to talk over matters relating to engineering interests. Prof. Marvin led chapel Thursday, during the absence of Dr. Strong. The term's work in testing laboratory has been laid out by Prof. Hood and the boys are rushing it through as rapidly as possible. JACOB RIIS LECTURE. The New York Reformer Tells of the Slum District In the Metropolis City Jacob Riis lectured Tuesday night in the Opera House on "The Battle with the Slums." No man in America today has done so much toward reforming the wretched condition of the poor in New York as Mr. Riis. For thirty years he has labored to eradicate the unsanitary tenements and better the economic and social conditions of their inhabitants. As a police reporter for twenty-five years he has come in contact with the terrible conditions which have prevailed in congested parts of New York City. By his vigorous war against the municipal evils which have led to the virtual manufacture of criminals and depraved citizens he has earned the title given him by President Roosevelt, "The most useful citizen of New York." His books writter upon tenement life and conditions are true stories of the horrible conditions that have obtained in our metropolis almost up to the present time. "How the Other Hall Lives." "The Children o the Poor." "The Making of an American." "A Ten Year's War." "The Battle With the Slums." and "Out on Mulberry Street." are his principal publications In his lecture he illustrated his words with lantern slides made from photographs taken by him sell Mr. Riis began his talk by outlining the vast field of work which the battle had to do with 30-,0000 people occupying the congested district of the city. He described with graphic words the habitations of these poor, huge tenement houses containing hundreds of rooms where no sun or light ever entered; the only openings to the outer world being a narrow filthy alley. Whole families lived in one or two of the small rooms without any sanitary advantages without the possibility of a social home life in abject poverty amid dirt and squalor that would shame beasts. One whole block of tenements contained a single bath tub and that belonged to a tenant. The physical conditions were bad enough but did not compare with the deprived social life which was a direct result of such surroundings. There was no home life, hence the men went to the saloon and the children to the gutter for recreation. The influence of the streets encouraged only the evil tendencies in the child and his ultimate end was a life of crime. The reclaiming of these people, the building of suitable habitations for them, the revolution of these dens of wickedness into clean American homes has been the work of Mr. Riis for thirty years. He told of the struggle with the legislators to have laws (Continued on last page.) DEBATING COUNCIL The debating council has made arrangements for the preliminary contests and also for the interstate debates. It was decided to make the Missouri preliminary a private one so as not to interfere with the interest in the final debate. The Colorado and Nebraska preliminaries will be held in the chapel on the same night, having two sets of judges, one for each question. The question of whether we should have faculty or down town men for judges was not settled, this being left to the faculty members of the council. The sentiment of the council, though, seemed to be that there should be at least one faculty members among those who choose our debaters. The date of our inter-state debates was discussed and it was decided in as far as possible to have the Missouri-Kansas contest about the 15th of April, the Nebraska a week later and the Colorado the first week in May. The Missouri debate is the only one which occurs here and it was decided to have it first Knowing the importance of having the right kind of men for judges, the council directed the secretary to enter into correspondence with prominent men in different parts of the country looking to securing their services as judges in our inter-state debates. Kansas proposes this year to secure men of prominence and men who will not be biased on the question at issue, if such a thing is possible. PHI BETA KAPPA BANQUET. The Fourteenth Annual Banquet of Phi Beta Kappa was held in the parlors of the Presbyterian church Friday evening. Chancellor Strong acted as toastmaster. The following program of toasts followed an elegant banquet: Lucy Abel - Recollections of England. Louise Alder-The Shadow of Oread Arthur H.Basye—Port Arthur. NO. 23. Jessic B. Bennett—Every One an Artist. . Frank E. Burford—The Embryology of a State. Kate C. Clark—Grades. Edward S. Cowdrick — The Professional Dilemma. Caryl J. Dodds—Plate Matter. Walter D. Easton — College Barbarians. M. Florence Forrest—A Poem. Mary L. Johnson — College Segregation. George W. Nutting—Kansas. Roxy H. Oldroyd—The Benefactions of Science to Women. Eleanor J. Patterson—Susan B. Anthony. Chas. Harker Rhodes—The Insufficiency of Wheat. Hazel K. Smith — Academic Heredity. George H. Willis—The Presence of Plato. Jasper B. Wilson—Economic Interests of America in the Orient. Bessie M. Wood—Folks vs. Books. Following the student responses to toasts, Judge Smith, Miss Hazel Smith's father, responded to a toast and Prof. M. A. Barber spoke on Phi Beta Kappa, explaining the nature and history of the society. NEW INRTRUCTOR IN VOICE. Mrs. Blanche Lyons has accepted the position of assistant instructor of vocal music in the K.U.Music School, Mrs.Lyons is not a stranger to K.U. students. She has sung a number of times for chapel exercises and never fails to delight her audience. Mrs. Lyons won both state and inter-state contests at Hutchinson last year and is the most popular teacher in Lawrence. Kansas University may well consider itself fortunate in obtaining the services of Mrs Lyons as instructor. SENIORS. All seniors desiring a class pin, give their names to RHODES. SHIRTS Spring Styles Manhattans $1.50 and 2.00. OBER'S. THE KANSAS UNIVERSITY WREKLY. Editor-in-Crief...RALPH ELLIS Associates A. H. BANYE E. B. BLACK Sporting Editor ...FRED A GILLETTE Local Editor ...J. W. KAYSER Society Editor ...MAHEL BARBER Literary Editor ..CHAS. L.VANFLEET Business Manager. M. N. McNAUGHTON REPORTERS. J. B. Rieman, Geo. Hansen, Wm. Shaw, Bert Beach, O. A. Zimmerman, Kay Barton, J. R. Brady, Mary Burwell, Earl ampbell. Entered at Lawrence Post Office as second class mail matter. Shares in the WEEKLY $1.00 each, entitleting the holder to the paper for two years, may be had of the Secretary and Treasurer, GEORGE FOSTER or of M. N. MCNAUGHTON, Business Manager. Subscription price 50 cents per annum in advance. Single copy 5 cents. Address all communications to M. N. McNaughton, Bus. Mos. Lawrence, Kim. THE LARGE percentage of University people at Jacob Riis' lecture Tuesday night should be a source of gratification to those interested in K. U. It indicates that our students are not so deeply plunged into their text books that they forget to keep an eye upon the outside world and what it is doing. Probably the greatest public question in our country today is "Municipal Government," and the solution of the problem is yet to be worked out. The greatest agitator in the country for better city government and the uprooting of political corruption and boss rule is Jacob Riis, and every citizen of the United States should have an interest in what such a man has to say upon civic conditions and their results. The university student who does not take every opportunity possible to acquaint himself with the questions of public, moment fails in his duty to his University. The public school system was perfected, not for the benefit of the individual, but for the ultimate good which its establishment would be to the nation. The State University should turn out citizens before scholars, and if a man does finish the institution without having some ideas of citizenship and feeling some interest in his nation's welfare and method of government, he has not performed his duty to his State nor been true to his fellow man. He is not the type of broad minded man that the institution will point to with pride in the future and say: "He belongs to us; we made him and he's a credit to us." THE INDOOR track meet between the Universities of Kansas and Missouri, which is to be held in Convention Hall in Kansas City on March 19 is a new departure in Western athletics. Indoor meets in the East are very common and arouse a great deal of enthusiasm and there is no reason why meets between the Jayhawkers and the Tigers in the city at the mouth of the Kaw should not be successful in every way. The greatest obstacle in the way of such meets is the lack of interest in track athletics in Western universities. Track meets are in many ways the prettiest of all athletic contests and deserve a higher place than is given them by most students. Good track men are harder to find than good foot ball and base ball players. It takes a great deal of hard, conscientious training to develop a runner, a pole-vaulter or a jumper and there is little in the training to make it attractive. Unless the honor of belonging to a track team is considerable, few men care to try for places in it. At Yale and Harvard and the Eastern colleges the track athletics are made much of and men consider it a great honor to win track letters. Until similar conditions exist here the track team will not be strong and the indoor meets cannot succeed. Students owe it to the University to manifest more interest in the track team and to give more encouragement to candidates. This spring Fay Moulton, an alumnus of K. U. and a Yale runner of wide repute, will devote as much of his time as possible to coaching the team. Mr. Moulton wants it distinctly ununderstood that he will take no money in compensation for his services, for he takes great pride in keeping his amateur standing. Since one of the old students is so much interested in our track team, every student ought at least show enough interest to do all in his power to boom track athletics and to make the indoor meet successful. A trip to Kansas City to see the meet would be a very enjoyable outing and there will be special rates for the event so students should begin to plan to go. WE HAVE a real live base ball coach this spring. Manager Plank has secured the services of James Durham, of the Kansas City Blues, one of the best pitchers in the American Association and an all around ball player. Mr. Durham arrived last Thursday and at once began work with the candidates. This is the first time Kansas has had a regular base ball coach and the team has always showed the lack of coaching. Base ball requires team work as well as foot ball but of course much more depends upon individual excellence. Coach Durham will work with the men individually a great deal and teach them the proper way to go after the ball. In batting also the men are much in need of coaching and Mr. Durham can do a great deal of good in giving the men pointers on how to wield the stick. Since the athletic board has gone so far as to secure a coach it is up to the students to give base ball most loyal support this spring. The schedule is a fairly good one and every one ought to turn out to see all the games on McCook field at least. THE FACT that the Ottawa contingent feared that the Topeka auditorium would not be large enough for the State Oratorical contest would indicate that the Baptists are more numerous by one or two than they used to be, or that they intend to take the town along for protecting against belligerent Washburn students. 4 ECTURES, as a rule, do not appeal wey strongly to the average student, unless they deal with subjects in which he is directly concerned. The moments not employed in hard study are usually spent in some form of recreation. With most students it is either work or play, there is no middle ground. Many persons, however, are beginning to enquire into the value of such a policy. A disagreeable bookishness is sure to gather about the student who is always buried in a book; while on the other hand, there is certainly a loss when one's time is taken up with pure recreation. That the popular lecture fills a middle ground there can be no doubt. The lecture as a source of information has other advantages; it is usually not only first hand, but is up to date. A text book must of necessity be several years old before it can get into general circulation. On the other hand it is possible for a lecture to be colored by, though it does not include, the events or the discoveries of the day on which it is delivered. The value of this up-to-date information should be carefully considered when compared with that gleaned from text books. Time is certainly not lost when spent in gaining inspiration from a lecturer who perhaps has devoted a lifetime to secure such knowledge at first hand. MISSOURI University students seem to be having a fearful time over what they term "faculty interference in student affairs," brings to mind difficulties of the same nature which Kansas University used to have semi-occasionally away back in the past under the Disciplinary committee regime. : FROM THE NUMBER of freshmen who have gone into training it is evident that something is going to be doing either in athletics or on May day. THE MINNESOTA University freshmen have chosen green and white for their class colors. It's gold bricks to peanuts that they call it "Nile green." The X. Y. Z. club met as usual last Friday evening. A good attendance was present and business commenced at once. Livers led parliamentary drill, devoting the time, very profitably, to convention organization and procedure. Extempore talks were given by Coleman and Finch. The question, Resolved that the present system of taxation should be supplemented by an income system, was affirmed by Robertson and Leinbach and denied by Ashbaugh and Tillotson. The judges favored the negative. The officers elected for the next term are: Livers, president; Elder, vice-president; Logan, secretary; Petit, sergeant at arms. Mr. Elder was elected to fill the vacancy on the board of directors. One of our best men, Mr. Cowdrick, is no longer with us. The club wishes him success. X. Y. Z. DEBATING CLUB. Some Pantatoriums Are Better than Others Our work speaks for us. We make every job an ad vertisement. $1.50 per month fills the bill, no matter how many suits, coats, pants or vests you have nor the number of times you have them cleaned or pressed or repaired. Tel 06 Gray. Lawrence Pantatorium, 12 W. Warren St. Go to TETER BROS. For Your Groceries and Meats They make Prices that make permanent customers. 828Mass.St. HERTZLER & CO., Phone 609 White 00000000000000000000000000000000000000 SPOT CASH GROCERY. SPECIAL RATES TO BOARDING CLUBS BYRON JONES, Tel. 63. MEAT MARKET. 840 Mass SPECIAL RATES TO CLUBS. WM. WIEDEMANN, The Confectioner. PURE CONFECTIONS AND ICE CREAM. His Berwic Bay Agent for Lowney's Oysters are delicious. Agent for Lowney's Allegretti's,Headley's Lyon's Chocolates... ' 2 Do You Anticipate buying a Typewriter? Fred J. Boyles. investigate the merits of the Chicago. Price $35. FRED BOYLES, 639 Mass., has secured the agency and sells either for cash or payments. Also a full line of paper, ribbons, carbon paper, or anything in the stationery line Fred J. Boyles. Investigate the merits of the Chicago Price $35 630 Moss St. MIDLAND WRITING MACHINE CO. The Chicago MAY 23, 1915 WASHINGTON, D.C. 🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧🎧 New Hats. New Shirts, New Goods are coming in all the time. Come in and see us. M. J. Skofstad. 冰淇淋 冰淇淋 冰淇淋 冰淇淋 冰淇淋 Headquarters for Good Eatables. We have been making a special effort to get in a full stock of good things to eat. W.A.GUENTHER Phone 226. 721 Mass. St. Bakery & Restaurant. Mrs. M F. Williams. Mrs. M F. Williams. EVERYTHING GOOD TO EAT Come for Pies and Cakes. 8381/2 Massachusetts St. Phone 550 Gray. Largest manufacturers in the world of official Athletic Supplies A.G. Spalding & Bros. BASE BALL, I/VNTINNI FOOT BALL, GOLF, FIELD HOCKEY, BASKET BALL. OFFICIAL ATHLETIC IMPLEMENTS. Plans and blue prints of Gymnastium Para pernilla Furnished upon request. Catalogue free to any Address. hanging near to any Address. A. G. SPALDING & BRO. A. G. SPALDING & BRO. New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Francisco, Boston, Baltimore, Buffalo, Louis, Kansas City, Minneapolis, Denver Montreal, Canada, London, England. We are carrying a full line of Fresh Meat In addition to our fine line of Groceries. Park Grocery I . thers Carren St. JBS Mass. A FILM REEL Bros. in the athletic TINNI FIELD BALL. IC IM- assium Para st. Address. BRO. Philip, Buffalo, Isle, Denve England. ll line of at line of ery REPORT OF THE QUILL CLUB. Miss Fones read a charming little story, "Their Disappointment." It was full of happy situations skillfully united into a consistent whole, intensely enjoyable and decidedly original. The charm of naturalness was accompanied throughout by good descriptive touches and the members present were agreed that the story was a very clever one. Mr. Kayser was not present and his paper "Sancho Piedro," was read by Mr. Winton. There was a sharp contrast between this story and the preceding one both in conception and execution. In view of the fact that Mr. Kayser was not in a position to defend his story, there was very little criticism offered although it was felt he had not entirely represented the real heart of the average Westerner but had, instead, taken the superficial view too frequently presented by sensational novelists Y.M C A. Regular election of officers will be held next Thursday evening. A large attendance is desired. Two oelegates to the national Y.M.C.A. convention will be elected at the same time All members who have not paid their dues should do so before the end of this month. Membership cards will be ready in about a week. Call for them. Mr. Grovernor will address the Sunday meeting. The men who attend these meetings find them good. It is not too early to begin to plan to attend the Geneva conference next summer. SNOW LITERARY SOCIETY The meeting last Saturday evening was opened with an extempore by Mr. Lapham. He discussed the concert given by the glee club of which he is a member. Miss Brewster gave as a recitation a selection from Hiawatha. Her interpretation of this strange, musical poem, whispering of woods, and of the solitude and desolation of winter, delighted the audience. Mr. Earbart gave a satire on the troubles of an Arkansas school teacher. Parliamentary drill was led oy Mr.Porter. The boys who wore dress suits to the concert barely escaped being expelled. Only a skillful use of parliamentary law saved our boys who wore bouquets at the last meeting. The debate was on the question, "Resolved, that a Superior Nation is Justified in Enforcing Its Civilization on an Inferior One." Mr. Hartman and Mr. Ramsey were on the affirmative; Mr. Braudy and Mr. Davis, negative. The judges decision was in favor of the negative. The affirmative found difficulty in justifying force. Chas. Brook, a former K. U. student is now in business at Humboldt, Kansas. He is a partner in the Humboldt Investment company. E. H. Barkman, '03 visited the Alpha Tau boys last Sunday. The annual banquet of the X,Y.Z debating club will be held Friday night March 18. J. P. Raymond of Kansas City will lecture on Japan, before the Pharmacy association, which will be held about March 22. Geo, O. Foster has been taking the census of students by counties the past week. Rosemary, March 24th. That's for Remembrance. Squires, the photographer, is making the best rates to Seniors on pictures. The chancellor has announced that no more university entertainments will be given down town. Many have objected to holding them in University Hall on account of having to climb the hill, but those held down town do not seem to be any better attended, so in the future they will be given on the hill. A big line of Base Ball goods are now in at Smith's News Depot The engineering department has received an exhibition of whistles valves, etc. from the Ludkenheimer Co. C. L. Rigdon has gone to his home in Wyoming on a business trip. Nelson Ward spent the week at his home in Belleville. See Major, The Barber, at 910 Mass. St. We are not the Best but just as Good as the Best. Give us a call and if you are not satisfied, don't pay a cent. All kinds of Barber Supplies for sale - just what the boys all need - made by the Koken Barber Supply Co. of St. Louis, Plenty of Baths. Lots of Hot Towels after Shaving and a good free rub, neck shaved all for 10c. Your business solicited.-C. A. Major. Karl Allen, Milo Jones and Hoyt Cates came in for the Ftheta Na Epsilon party. Squires, the photographer, is giving a picture to Seniors for the Annual. Studio over Bell,s music store. Frank Bangs was in Kansas City last Saturday on business. Chester Cooke and Jay Mack Love are in Kansas City. Seniors can get the best pictures or the least money at Squires' Studio, over Bell's Music Store. Messrs. Langsdale and Stewart of Missouri University have been on the hill the past week in the interest of the Kappa Sigma fraternity. Rosemary, March 24th. That's for Remembrance. S. R. Nelson, Engene Ware and Hazel Fassler were among the outf-of-town guests for Theta Nu Epsilon's spring party Friday night. Leland Strode was called to his home at Ft. Scott, the first of the week by the death of a sister. Miss May Murdock was visited by her sister from Clifton this week. Go to Lindseys for fine shoe repairing. Mass, street. The newspaper reporters on the hill under the direction of Prof. Hopkins, have divided the news field into a number of districts and each man will look after one division and return all news to a central dot which will be the registrar's office. Here each man can obtain the news from every department on the hill. This will greatly simplify the work and also make more thorough results possible. This new method will be given two weeks' trial beginning Monday and if the scheme is successful, a permanent Press Club will probably be established. Rosemary, March 21th. That's for Remembrance. Joe Dyer and Jesse Heinicke are visiting friends on the hill. The Phi Delta Phi was very enjoyably entertained by Mrs. Wall at the Chapter House on Wednesday, March 9th. Whist was the game of the evening. Miss Chisholm won the first and Mr. Pees secured the booby prize. About twelve couples were present. ONE THING AND ANOTHER "Yes" said the Prof. of Economics, "the time will ultimately arrive when labor and capital, work out with continual warfare, will amicably adjust their differences and i industry will run on as smoothly as a carefully constructed piece of mechanism as placidly as the ticking of yonder clock." Just then the clock struck. Here is an essay attributed to a public school boy; King Henry VIII was the greatest widower that ever lived. He was born at Anno Domiunio, in the year 1000. His first wife was beheaded and afterwards executed. The second was revoked. She never smiled again, but said the word 'Cahais' would be written on her heart after death: The greatest man in this reign was Lord Sir Garnet Wolsey. He was surnamed, the 'Boy Bachelor,' being born at the age of fifteen unmarried. In this reign the Bible was translated into latin by Titus Clates. It was also in this reign that the Duke of Wellington discovered America, and invented the curfew bell to prevent fires. Henry was succeeded on the throne by his grandmother, the beautiful and accomplished Mary, Queen of Scots, sometimes known as The Lady of the Lake. He died in the last year of his age. ENGINEERS VS. ARTS. "I don't see what all you guys are taking the arts course for," said a freshman engineer to an arts student the other day. "I see you're studying Economics, now what good will that ever do you? Why don't you take something practical like civil engineering?" "Is that a good practical course?" said the arts student. "You bet it is," rejoined the freshmen, "Why when I get out of here I'll be able to lay out a rail road and know what it'll cost to build it too." "Well I suspect that's true," finally remarked the arts student, "and remember, when you get that rail road laid out, you just look around for one of these arts students who put in his time here studying economics and such rot, and he'll probably furnish you with the capital to build your bloomin' road." "All is lost," said Caesar still dripping from the recent passage of the Rubicon, as he finished reading the "wireless" that had been placed in his hsnds. "He's done me one better." Then the consul related in a broken voice the news that Funston had swum the Bag-Bag. De Soto was exploring the Mississippi Valley for the precious metals. At Omaha he saw notices of a speech to be given by W. J Bryan, the silver tongued orator of the Niobrara. "Bring me this man," he thundered to a slave. The boy orator appeared with a pleasing smile and his pompadour. "Show me your tongue," hissed the wily Spaniard. William obeyed. "Foiled again" muttered the Castilian through his ground teeth, and stalked off unmindful of the offer of Mr. Bryan to give him the democratic nomination for president if he would remain. A FEW MATTERS OF HISTORY. Ralph Love will leave school on account of his father's death. He will take charge of his father's business. John Smith was thanking Pocahontas for saving him from the wrath of her parent. Tears of gratitude stood in the young Englishman's eyes. She was munching the chocolate with which he had just presented her. Suddenly she frantically raised her hands to her sable tresses. "John, I say, is my feather on straight." --offers four-year courses of study leading to the degree of B.S. in Civil, Mechanical, and Electrical Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Architecture, Landscape Architecture Forestry, Chemistry, Geology, Biology, Anatomy and Hygiene (preparation for medical schools). Science for teachers and a course in General Science. Students are admitted to regular standing by examinations and by credits from other Schools or Colleges. App proved Special Students may be admitted without examination. The Catalogue will be sent on application to the Secretary, J. L. LOVE, 16 University Hall, Cambridge, Mass. Lest You Forget We tell you again when down town, come in and let us show you the new things in Men's Toggery. H.S. & M. Suits and Top Coats and Manhattan Shirts. Stetson and No Name Hats. W. E. SPALDING. --offers four-year courses of study leading to the degree of B.S. in Civil, Mechanical, and Electrical Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Architecture, Landscape Architecture Forestry, Chemistry, Geology, Biology, Anatomy and Hygiene (preparation for medical schools). Science for teachers and a course in General Science. Students are admitted to regular standing by examinations and by credits from other Schools or Colleges. App proved Special Students may be admitted without examination. The Catalogue will be sent on application to the Secretary, J. L. LOVE, 16 University Hall, Cambridge, Mass. LOOK PLEASANT PLEASE Morris Studio. 829 Massachusetts Street BUY YOUR BOOKS MAGAZINES, STATIONERY, AND HAVE YOUR CLASS PICTURES FRAMED AT WOLF'S BOOK STORE. If you wish to get your work done by the best Barbers in Lawrence call at... CAbDWEbL & 812 Mass. St. 812 Mass, St. Best equipped shop in the city. SHARP'S K. S.U. Students Hair cutting and Massage a specialty. Ladies Massage given at shop or home. Rowlands and Stevenson BOOKSELLERS AND STATIONERS. Buy their Text Books and Supplies at 819 MASS. ST. American teachers Association, 172nd Street, Highland Park, Memphis, Tennessee. Philadelphia, P. TEACHERS! TEACHERS! Teachers wishing to prepare for examination should, write immediately for our Teachers' Interstate Examination Con se as taught by mail. The course is endorsed by many leading educators, and every progressive teacher who wishes to a lvance in their profession should begin work immediately. Address nearest office, with stamp, for reply American Teachers' Association Four Barbers. Shelley HARVARD UNIVERSITY. The Lawrence Scientific Schoo PHOTOGRAPHER. Call and see what we can do for you on rates. "The London" The London FOUNTAIN PEN ONLY $1.00 This is the only really High Grade PEN that has ever been offered at this price. The point is Solid 14k Gold and Pen is Guaranteed to give Satisfaction Mailed Anywhere for $1.00 JACCARD JEWELRY CO. 1032 Main Street KANSAS CITY, MO. NEW CATALOGUE of DIAMONDS, JEWELRY and NOVELTIES YOURS FOR THE ASKING You Need No Money To gain admittance to the Imperial Dancing, Academy if you do not dance. We would be pleased to have you call and watch our class work. We claim that we have the best school of dancing in the State of Kansas, and only ask you to investigate our methods and talk with our pupils. You don't need to buy a ticket to join our classes, but pay nightly and come whenever you can. Hall open all day. IMPERIAL DANCING ACADEMY. Phone 510 Blue. Residence, Main 425. TEACHERS WANTED. TEACHERS WANTED. We need at once a few more teachers, both experienced and inexperienced. More calls this year than ever before. Schools supplied with competent teachers free of cost. Address with stamp. American Teachers' Association, 474 Randolph Bldg. 1423 Arch St. Memphis, Tenn Philadelphia, Pa SOCIETY. About twenty couples spent a very pleasant evening at the Beta house Friday. The Phi Delts gave their annual alumni banquet at their chapter house Saturday evening. Adout thirty-five alumni from out-of-town were present. Theta Nu Epsilon held its annual spring party, Friday evening, March 11, at Eldridge Hall. Zeiler's orchestra of six pieces furnished unusually good music and everything conspired to make it one of the pleasantest parties of the season. At eleven o'clock the dancers repaired to the hotel dining room where an elaborate six course banquet was served. The tables which crossed forming four wings were artistically decorated in smilax and terns. After the banquet dancing was again resumed until a late hour. Before the party Joe Dyer, Fritz Wulfekuhler and Ray Delano were initiated into the mysteries of T. N.E. A number of alumni were back to help celebrate the occasion, which was a delightful one in every respect. Rosemary, March 24th. That's for Rememberance. University Calendar for Week of March 14-18. Deutsche Verein, 4:30 p. m. TUESDAY. Cercle Francais, 4:30 p. m. Lecture—Recital or Wagner's "Tannhauser" by the faculty of music, University hall, 8 p. m. WEDNESDAY. Greek Symposium. THURSDAY. Conference of Economics and Sociology, 4:30 p. m. Conference of English and American History, 7 p. m. JACOB RIIS LECTURE. Continued from page 1. passed compelling house owners to make their buildings fit to live in; the establishing of playgrounds for the children, where they could take healthful recreation; the building of parks where all the people could go for enjoyment of a social nature. It is the children of these districts that most appeal to Mr. Riis and the thought that they are being placed in a position to become good citizens is a matter of gratification to him. In speaking of the Boys' Clubs, he said: "My experience was a police reporter for twenty-five years leads me to believe that one boy's club does more good among these children than one hundred policemen's clubs." The introduction of good public schools fitted out with healthy play grounds is one of the chief factors in making good citizens out of the young children of the slum districts. "This work is more than a duty," said Mr. Riis, "for it is in their hands of that our government in future is to be placed." Millinery Opening. Thursday and Friday, Mar. 17-18. MRS. E. E. MENDENHALL, 723 Mess. St. Call and examine the new 1904 Model Bicycles. Prices from $16 to 600. Anything you want. Lawrence Bicycle Co., 905 Mass. St. Phone Pink 524 ROSEMARY. Play to be Given by K. U. Dra- matic Club Something was said in the last issue of the Weekly about Julia Marlowe's opinion on college dramatics. We fully agree and plead with her for better and more classical plays. Our University Dramatic Club will present its next play, "Rosemary," March 24th. And though it is not exactly a classical play, it is of such a high literary value, that it has received the recommendation of such men as Prof. Richard Burton of the English Department of the University of Minnesota. Mr. Burton says of "Rosemary" that it is one of the best plays that could be selected for college dramatics. The authors of "Rosemary" are Murray Carson and Louis N. Parker, who has since adapted L'Aiglon into English for Maude Adams. The play will be more expensive than previous productions as Daniel Frohman holds the exclusive rights to the play which exists only in manuscript copy. The royalty for a one night production is $50,which must be guaranteed with ten per cent of the proceeds. The plot of the play is laid in London and its suburbs at the time of Queen Victoria's coronation in 1837. "Rosemary" was presented for the first time at the Empire theater at New York City, Aug. 31, 1896, when John Drew, Maude Adams, Ethel Barrymore, and Mrs Annie Adams were in the principal roles. Isabel Irving who is to present the "Crisis" here next week on March 16, was starring with Ottes Skinner in "Rosemary" in the seasons of 1901 and 1902. Rosemary, March 24th. That's for Remembrance. Johnson Strickler spent Saturday and Sunday in Kansas City. Make an appointment with Squires the photographer. Will Mahin was in Kansas City over Saturday and Sunday. Remember Squires and no other for your pictures. The Medics met Tuesday and elected the following officers: Chas. Gibson, president; J. K Harvey, vice-president; Miss Porter, secretary; and Clarence Francisco, treasurer. Joe Alford was elected manager of the base ball team and Frank Relihan captain. Prof. Hopkins was a judge on a debate between Cooper College and Friends University at Sterling Friday night. The question was whether results justified giving the negro the ballot. Remember, Squires gives the Seniors a picture for the Annual. Call and see our Easter hats in new spring styles. Misses Edmondson, 903 Maas. Chancellor Strong addressed Ottawa University and the high school at that place Thursday. Who held up Billy Shaw? Rumors says that a new fraternity will soon be started. Query-Who held up Billy Shaw? Prof. Carruth was a delegate to the republican convention at Wichita this week. Vics soda fountain is now in full blast. E. S. Cowdrick, who is now with the "Mail and Breeze," came down from Topeka Friday evening to attend the Phi Beta Kappa banquet. Mr. Cowdrick is well pleased with his work at Topeka. PHARMACY ALUMNI NOTES P. E. Kaler, '03, clerk in Hobart's drug store at Topeka, was in Lawrence last Saturday. L. S. Hackett, '90, is still in the drug business at Humboldt, Nebraska. W. O. Roberts, '96, formerly in the real estate and loan business at Medford, Oklahoma, is now employed as bookkeeper for a firm in Wichita. Miss Mary C. Chapin, '94, of Ackerland, Kansas, has been employed of late in the drug store of J. W. Ratliff, of Tonganoxie. The nomination lists have not yet been sent out, but will be sometime next week. It is to be regretted that the lists were not sent March 1 and consequently the time for sending in of nominations will have to be extended to April 1. N. W. Clinger, '98, was married to Miss Charlotte Coulson of Peoria, Ill., March 9th. Mr. Clinger is employed in the pharmacy of Frank Hobart, Topeka. Mr. and Mrs. Clinger will make their home in the above city. The Association extends congratulations. Rosemary, March 24th. That's for Remembrance. Echo Campbell is visiting on the hill this week. Dr. John H. Long of Northwestern University will deliver the annual Sigma Xi address at K. U. June 6th. Dr. Long is an alumnus of K. U., graduating from here in 1877. Good things to eat at Vics. Every one should hear T. A. McNeal's lecture on the hill next Friday morning Dr. Naismith has his freshmen out daily doing track work endeavoring to pick out good material for the track team. Hear a good tune while you eat at Vics. The athletic board of the Kansas City Athletic Club has announced its intention to present the winning team of the indoor meet with a loving cup. The Dramatic Club is hard at work upon their new play. G Grand Opening. New Easter Hats in latest French Patterns. MRS. SHEARER. FRIDAY, MARCH 18 and 19. BOWERSOCK OPERA HOUSE Thursday, March 17. Chas. H. Yale and Sidney R. Ellis present the popular german comedian golden voiced singer. AL H. WILSON, in a grand new play A Prince of Tatters A Tale of Old New York. All new songs. Prices $1.00, 75c, 50c, 25 Box $1.50. Seat Sale at Woodward's. Spring Opening Pattern Hats and Millinery Novelties. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, March 17 and 18. MISSES HUTT 927 Mass MISSES HUTT, 837 Mass. --- Spring Footwear We are now showing all the latest styles in Shoes and Oxford in Tan and Black. Bear in mind that we are headquarters for good Shoes for the least money. Starkweather Shoe Co. --- --- New Kid Gloves for Easter. Parisienne two clasp ... $1.00 Mocha two clasp ... $1.00 Newport two clasp ... $1.25 Virginia three clasp ... $1.50 Gersier hook ... $1.50 Napoleon suede ... $1.50 A. D. WE AVER --- ISABEL IRVING, (MANAGMENT JAS. K. HACKETT) In Winston Churchill's Thrilling Play, THE CRISIS. --- BOWERSOCK OPERA HOUSE ONE NIGHT, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16. The unquestioned event of the year. Direct from triumphant runs in St. Louis and Kansas City. Original New York Production. PRICES $1.50, $1.00, 75c. 50c, and 35c. Box seats $2.00. SEAT SALE AT WOODVARD & CO'S DRUG STORE --- On the Ground Floor We Are Making a Grand Exhibition of Ladies' Suits, Skirte, Rain and Dust Coats, Silk Jackets, Silk Suits, Muslin Underwear, White and Colored Shirt Waists, Silk Petticoats, Ete. In Our New North Room It is an exhibition of unusual importance to buyers. Ladies will appreciate the exclusiveness of this department from the rest of the store. It is a Ladies Room in the true sense. The display of Suits for Easter trade is fully up to any similar display in the larger cities. But a saving of 25 per cent in money and 50 per cent of patience. You can do better in every way by giving us your business, Innes. Bullene & Hackman. 27 State Historical Society . E. ity. D Kansas University Weekly. THE ONLY OFFICIAL AND AUTHORIZED WEEKLY PUBLICATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. VOL. XII. Geo. Davies. the Student's Tailor. has received a new line of fine spring goods. He will run a — SUITITORIUM in connection with his tailor shop. Clothes cleaned, pressed and kept in perfect order for £1.50 per month. The Excelsior Pantatorium WatkinsNationalBank Capital $100,000. Surplus $20,000. J. B. Workus, Pres. C. A. Hill, V. Pres. L. D. Patten, Pres. W. E. Hazen, Asst.'s Reasonable Charges. Phone 13 J. A. NICOLSON, Successor to Geo. F. Godding. LIVERY, HACK, and BOARDING STABLE. RUBBER TIRED RIGS. Lawrence, . . . Kansas. MRS. PREN'ISS at THE HOME STORE 1105 Mass. S . Toilet requisites, Sempte Giove, incense, Jennece St. Beutie, Kans- siss Toilet Cream, Curodor, Agn naline; Tooth paste, Perfume e c Ed Anderson's Restaurant and Confectionery. Student's Headquarters. DONNELLY BROS., LIVERY, BOARDI\G. and HACK STABLES. All Rubber Tire Rigs. (th and New Hampshire). Phone RC EASTERN STAR BAKERY EASTERN STAR BAKERY Fine Pastries and Buns. Sweet Cakes a Specialty. Parties supplied. Call and examine the new 1904 Model Bicycles. Prices from $16 to 600. Anything you want. Lawrence Bicycle Co. 9.5 Mass. St. Phone Pink 254 Chas. L. Hess. Meat Market. 941 Mass. St. Telephone 14 A. P HULTS, DENTIST. No. 735 Massachusetts Street. Pure Mexican Chili and Hot Tamales. Hot Chocolates, Tomato Boullion, Beef Tea, etc. Also a line of good Cigars. 1027 MASS. ST. F. A. EWING McKINZIE GROCERY SAGURDAY. MARCH 19. 1904. Our method of buying and selling will save you 10 per cent. 1801 KY. ST. TEL. 618 WHITE J. W. O'BRYON, DENTIST, PROTSCH TAILOR. Jackson Bldg. 717 MASS STREET. ATHLETICS. KANSAS LOSES. K. U. MEN DO GOOD WORK--MISSOURI 45; KANSAS 40. Missouri won the first annual indoor meet last night by the narrow margin of 45 to 40. The Kansas men did splendid work and with the aid of McCoy would easily have won. The crimson and blue was victorious in the high hurdles, 440 yard dash, low hurdles, two mile ran and one mile relay race. High hurdles, 55 yards. Buter, K. U., first; Morrow, K. U., second. Time.072-5 Shot put. Wulff, M. U., first, 41; Anderson, M.U., second, 37% 25 The score was as follows: 50 yard dash. Bushyhead,M. U. first; Wilson, M. U. second. Time .05 3-5. Half mile run. Schultz, M. U. first; Driscoll, K. U. second. Time 2:08. High jump. Bigger, M. U first; Butler and Gordon both of K. U., tie for second place. 5 ft. 4 in. 440 yards run. O. H. Finch, K. U. first; Wayman, M. U. second. Time .57 4-5. Low hurdles, 55 yards Morrow, K. U, first; Green, K. U, second. Time .06 1-5. Two mile run. Bailey, K. U., first; Faris, M. U., second; time 11:08 4.5. Pole vault. Wulfe, M. U., first; Hurlburt, K. U., second; 9 feet. One mile run. Schultz, M. U., first; Jenkins, M. U., second: time 5:05 1:5. One mile relay. Morrow, Hurlburt, Driscoll and O. H, Finch, K. U., won. Busyhead, Wayman, Thompson and Hemphill, M. U.; second: time 4:01 3-5. Other Kansas men who should be mentioned with credit are C. Ackerman, Gordon, H.A. Finch, Purton and C.V. Jones. The indoor meet was a success and will insure future interest in such events. The crowd was very enthusiastic and gave their favorites the best of support. As a conservative estimate there were at least 2,000 people present. Our team is to be congratulated upon the showing it made. Kansas has met some discouragement this year in the loss of Capt. McCoy but the fact that the boys lacked but five points of winning such a hotly contested meet proves that Kansas has good material and that our men show the right spirit. The athletic clubs and high school who furnished invitation events should be given credit and praise for their part in the entertaining. Pay Moulton, K. U. alumnus deserves great credit for the interest he has shown in the work of the team. The good showing Kansas made is due in great measure to his coaching. The basket ball team returned Thursday from their trip to Newton and Emporia. K. U 18-Newton 10. The first game was a victory for the University over Newton by a score of 18 to 10, the lineup for K. U. being, Michaelson and Pooler, forwards; Adams and Hicks, backs, and Allen, center The people of Newton were certainly good to the boys and they enjoyed their stay there very much. EMPORIA 25-K. U.13. At Emporia Wednesday night they fared much worse both in and out of the game. Emporia won by a score of 25 to 13. Michaelson and Pooler forwards, Brown and Barlow backs and Allen center was the line up for Kansas. K. U. 16-OTTawa 26. The Basket Ball between the 'Varsity and Ottawa, at Ottawa last Monday, ended in a victory for the Baptists by a score of 26 to 16. Brown, Michaelson, Stelter, Adams and Barlow represented K. U. Chas. Lovelace accompanied the team as manager. Mgr. Plank being in Kansas City. METHODISTS VISIT K. U. M. E. Conference Attends Chapel— Bishop Walden Talks to Students The Methodist conference in session in Lawrence this week paid the University a visit Friday morning. Bishop Walden addressed the students during chapel exercises. He told of his first visit to Mount Oread in 1857 before the University had ever been thought of and said that the hill fortified by the free-state men against the pro-slavery forces presented a far different appearance from the present Oread, turned into a campus and covered with university buildings. The bishop emphasized the importance to the college men and women of cultivating a fondness for reading good books and thinking of them. The university students enjoyed Bishop Walden's talk and felt that the conference had done them no small honor in putting aside their conference work to pay a visit to the state's highest educational institution. DEBATES. How the New Plan for Choosing Debaters is Working. The success of the new plan of choosing debaters has surprised its most ardent supporters. Next week the men who will finally represent the university will be chosen in a public contest. Whoever is chosen from the debating squad to make up the teams,confidence is expressed on all sides that they will know their respective questions better than any teams ever before sent out by Kansas. The debating squad has now given nearly two months to the study of the questions. They have met at least twice a week for oral debate, considerable rivalry between men and sides has resulted, all of which has tended to bring out the strong and weak points of the question at issue. The new plan will also increase interest in the preliminary contests. Heretofore men have been in the preliminaries who have given little if any previous study to the questions. This year the men will know their subjects thoroughly and will use skill and ability in presenting their sides so that interest and enthusiasm will nearly approach that of an inter-state debate. BAKER OBJECTS The Wearers of the Orange Think They Didn't Have a Fair Show at Topeka. The Baker Orange has a two-column article in the last issue which begins: "We want to say at the beginning of this article that anything we may say is not inspired by spite or the sting of defeat." Then follows a roast on the entire affair, Washburn students coming in for the greater share. "The whole affair seemed to be a steal from beginning to end," says the article. After the Baker man had completed his oration, the "Orange" says. "Everyone felt confident that Baker had won either first or second place, but it seems to have been the general opinion at Topeka that Baker must not have a place, as her record at the present was too far ahead of her competitors and her course must be checked, and it was." Kansas University students remember another institution which had its course checked about a year ago. NO.24 INTERCOLLEGIATE NEWS. The management of the Olympic games at the St. Louis Exposition has created a permanent gymnasium and a stadium with a seating capacity of 35,-000 on the grounds of the exposition. The stadium is an exact counterpart of those historic ones of the Romans and after the games both it and the gymnasium will become the property of the Washington University of St. Louis. The Big Four Railroad company has subscribed $15,000 toward the erection of the proposed memorial gym::asium at Purdue University. President James of Northwestern University, has made announcement of the fact that the University will establish an American institute of Germanics which will not be a mere department, but a university of itself. Such a novel and progressive project has rarely been paralleled in the history of American institutions. Mr. James would devote this institute to the study of Germanic civilization; language, literature, art, music, philosophy, politics and institutions. A new building will be erected for the new school which is to be representative of german architecture, and every effort will be made to carry out distinctively german ideas throughout. President James expects the new institution to draw a large patronage from those who desire to specialize in German, since this section of the country is the center of the German population. The Japan students at Yale recently elected a committee to raise funds for Japan. The proceeds are to be devoted to the Red Cross service, the war board and the military department. The funds will be sent to the Japanese consul in New York, who has been commissioned to raise $5,000,000 in the United States as soon as possible. Continued on page 2. TIME YOU WERE LOOKING AFTER TV New Spring Suit. We are showing an extraordinary line of values at $12.50, $15.00, $16.50, $18.00, $20.00 All Hand Tailored. We can suit you and save you money. OBER'S, HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS. THE KANSAS UNIVERSITY WEEKLY. Editor-in-Cnief ... NALPH ELLIS Associates { ... A. H. BASYE E. B. BLACK Sporting Editor ... FREED A. GILLETTE Local Editor ... J. W. KAYSER Society Editor ... MAIEL BARBER Literary Editor ... CHAS L.VANFLEET Business Manager . M. N. McNAUGHTON REPORTERS. J. B. Rieman, Geo. Hansen, Wm. Shaw, Bert Beach, O. A. Zimmerman, Kay Barton, J. R. Brady, Mary Burwell, Earl ambleb. Entered at Lawrence Post Office as second class mail matter. Shares in the WEEKLY $1.00 each, entitling the holder to the paper for two years, may be had of the Secretary and Treasurer, GEORGE FOSTER or of M. N. MCNAUGHTON, Business Manager. Subscription price 50 cents per annum in advance. Single copy 5 cents. Address all communications to M. N. McNaughton, Bus. Mgr., Lawrence, Kan. THE March number of, the "National Printer Journalist," published in Chicago, has something to say regarding the course in Journalism given at Kansas University. It mentions the fact that those who have left the university have already obtained positions and commends the teaching of such a course. "Anything that a man is capable of learning can be taught to him." The writer goes on to say that the many phases of newspaper work make it especially adaptable to academic courses. In conclusion he says: "All the talk against professional schools does not prove that there is any sense in the yap of the hair-brained, nor in the stilted pronouncements of notables, who have been without such professional schools, against their great usefulness and, in all callings, excepting newspaper making, they are generally admitted necessary for the highest and surest attainments to success and broad usefulness." And yet Mr Ed Howe still insists that college journalism is taught to turn out "long-haired journalists" to give Kansas editors opportunities to make addresses at the university. Mr. Howe did not know when not long since, he said of a piece in a Kansas newspaper. "The writer of that is mighty smart," that the article was written by one of the University "Journalists." In spite of the knocking that has been done by a few narrow Kansas editors, the boys are receiving some benefit from Prof. Hopkins' course and only a little more than a week ago one of the class became city editor of the best newspaper in Lawrence and another is doing good work for a syndicate and his stuff is being used all over the state. U. again had cause last week to be thankful that she has withdrawn from the State Oratorical Association. The Topeka affair was from an oratorical standpoint one of the poorest contests that have ever been held. The right sort of enthusiasm was almost entirely lacking. The rooters seemed to forget their representatives excepting in an incidental way and devoted their chief talents to the physical contests which developed. Dodd Gaston's remarks to the effect that, it seems strange that the association should have gone to the supreme court for judges when Bob Fitzsimmons and other prize ring heroes might have been obtained, are timely. From the physical standpoint the "meet" was one long round of pleasure and applause, and the superior training of Washburn told heavily upon the Baldwin-Ottawa champions; incidentally on the Topeka police force also. The latter phase is fast becoming the chief attraction in the state contest. It has come to the point when it matters little whether the orator representing a school wins or not if his supporters are able to overcome their opponents in a physical contest, and the schools concerned do not care to attend the affairs unless they take along rooters enough to whip their opponents. As the primeval prairies of Kansas have given place to the cultivated farm of the settler; the wandering herds of buffalo to the Texas long-horn; the pristine gentleness of Kansas Oratorical Contests is being replaced by strenuous meetings of schools whose chief preparation is in the gentle arts of defence and offense. Oratory is not dead, not exactly, but it has reached the place it serves only the place of the pow-wow before the mighty battle. PROF. MARVIN'S and Chancellor Strong's remarks last Thursday and Friday upon the behavior of students during chapel exercises were pertinent. K.U. students, it seems, should not have to be told to remember their manners. Chapel attendance is not compulsory here. No one, if he is bored by the exercises, is compelled to remain. There are a number of class rooms in Fraser hall, all are unoccupied at chapel time and can be used by students desiring to visit at this hour. Prof. Skilton's talk Friday morning was the most interesting that has been given from the chapel platform for many a day and it is to be regretted that he should have been bothered and his hearers disturbed by a few "gallery gods." WASHBURN COLLEGE is torn wiith dissension. Is it proper to applaud a speaker or visitor in the College Chapel? This is the question which threatens to rock the Topeka college to its foundations. It is indeed a matter that calls for long and thoughtful consideration. If the precedent is once established some future time may see the impious freshmen raising their class yells within the classic hall or traditions may be so far forgotten as to allow the university band to enter its sacred portals. Or it may be within the realms of the imagination (perish the thought) to see long in the future a chapel class fight. Such actions may, though they need not necessarily, follow the introduction of applause in the chapel. * WE OFTEN hear it said that higher education is of no benefit to a man,that it does not make any great difference in the business world whether a cray fish is called an amphibian or a crustacean or whether a certain French verb is regular or irregular. This is all very true but while a student is learning a few things from his books, he is learning a great many things from observation and association. He is learning how to study, how to find things for himself, and perhaps best of all he is getting the rough edges taken off him in a way that is effective yet not discouraging or disastrous. We all know the typical freshman. He comes from a small high school with a sheepskin in his hand. He is bubbling over with pride in his high school record for he was valedictorian, took part in the amateur dramatics and was an orator of note in the home town. He was the one who was always called upon to read the Declaration of Independence on the Fourth of July, and at Sunday school picnics he was always much in evidence. No funeral was complete without him as a pall bearer and he was about the only boy in town who could handle the mayor by his first name. In short he was the "village cut up." What would happen to such a boy were he to go out into the cold business world? He might perhaps be successful in a business way, but he would be a poor excuse for a man. He needs pruning down before he goes out to "accept a position" and the university is the best place for this process. He soon finds out that he does not know much more than anyone else when he has entered his classes and by the time he has completed a year's work he is fairly well subdued. It is true that some students never are entirely civilized by a university course but in all cases the training is at least a great help in the direction of making better men out of the students and for this reason is of instimable value. INTERCOLLEGIATE NEWS. Continued from page 1. It is reported that the editors of the Michigan Daily have been sued for libel, and that the cause of the suit is in a certain sense a result of faculty control. Some time since, the faculty at Ann Arbor expelled several students for writing inaccurate stories for the Daily, and to remedy this evil the faculty bought the Daily from the students "to inculcate anti sensational principles." Last week the paper dabbled in reform, its representatives concealing their own identity in order to secure "acts" from prominent men, and then charging the health office and a boarding house with criminal carelessness" in serving poisoned veal. They asserted that as students had suffered from the effects of eating the meat and said that it was still being served. The facts were that only four students had been affected and that the poison in the meat was very soon discovered and its use discontinued. The paper offered an elaborate apology but the injured business men were not satisfied and have brought suit. Do You Anticipate buying a Typewriter? investigate the merits of the Chicago. Price $35. FRED BOYLES, 639 Mass., has secured the agency and sells either for cash or payments. Also a full line of paper, ribbons, carbon paper, or anything in the stationery line Investigate the merits of the Fred J. Boyles, GENERAL WORK SPACE NO. 10 DUE DAY, JUNE 25TH, MARCH 3RD, APRIL 8TH, DECEMBER 9TH The Chicago 639 Mass. St. Go to TETER BROS. For Your Groceries and Meats. They make Prices that make permanent customers. 828Mass.St. HERTZLER & CO., Phone 609 White SPOT CASH GROCERY. SPECIAL RATES TO BOARDING CLUBS BYRON JONES, Tel. 63. MEAT MARKET. 840 Mass SPECIAL RATES TO CLUBS. Some Pantatoriums Are Better than Others Our work speaks for us. We make every job an ad vertisement. $1.50 per month fills the bill, no matter how many suits, coats, pants or vests you have nor the number of times you have them cleaned or pressed or repaired. Lawrence Pantatorium, 12 W. Warren St. If you wish to get your work done by the best Barbers in Lawrence call at... Hair cutting and Massage a specialty. Ladies Massage given at shop or home. CAbDWEbL & SHARP'S Best equipped shop in the city 312 Mass. Sr. Four Barbers. WM. WIEDEMANN, The Confectioner. His Berwie Bay PURE CONFECTIONS AND ICE CREAM. Agent for Lowney's Oysters are delicious... Allegretti's,Headley's Oysters are delicious... Lyon's Chocolates... New Hats. New Shirts, New Goods are coming in all the time. Come in and see us. M. J. Skofstad. Headquarters for Good Eatables. We have been making a special effort to get in a full stock of good things to eat. W.A. GUENTHER 'Phone 226. 721 Mass. St. A.G. Spalding & Bros. Largest manufacturers in the world of official Athletic Supplies. BASE BALL, LAWN TENNIS, FOOT BALL, GOLF, FIELD HOCKEY, BASKET BALL, OFFICIAL ATHLETIC IMPLEMENTS. Plans and blue prints of Gymnasium Para plermailum Farnished upon request. Catalogue free to any Address. A. G. SPALDING & BRO. New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Francisco, Baltimore, Buffalo, Louis, Kansas City, Minneapolis, Dene Montreal, Canada, London, England. CENTURY BS Mass hers Warren St: ssage a assage home. arbers. 欢迎光临 1. 在空白处输入你想要的文字或图片。 2. 检查字体、大小、颜色是否正确。 3. 按要求修改或添加内容。 4. 保存修改后的文件。 **完成** Bros. in the athletic TENNIS, FIELD BALL, TIC IM- Basum Parasst. Address. BRO. Alphia, Buffalo. Alisa, Denve Angland. Y.M.C.A. A number of the members of the two associations were entertained at the house Saturday evening. The association expects to continue this plan of entertaining small groups at a time. The election of officers on last Thursday evening resulted in the selection of the following men: president, J. F. Bender; vice president, C. B. Hosford; secretary E. H. Dunmire: trearurer, E. P. Davies. W. C. Clock who was president of the association in '98, is here attending the Methodist conference. He will speak at the meeting Sunday at 4:30. Y. W. C. A. NOTES. Miss Weiss left Monday for her home in Topeka. She will r.turn after the spring vacation. The advisory board reception to the city ladies has been postponed to the middle of April. The social committee are planning a number of group functions for the spring term. The Wednesday gospel meeting on "The Greatest Thing in the World" was led by Miss Nelhe Potts. Miss Sterling gave a violin solo. REPORT OF THE QUILL CLUB. Miss Ardery's short story, "Broncho Jim" showed literary skill in the preservation of the conversational style,and also an appreciation of the character of the people among whom the plot was laid. Mr. Kilby's story, "The Didero Hog" was true enough to life so that it ignored the rhetorician's demand for unity. This, of course, led to some discussion, but the critics were agreed that the story had proved a very entertaining one to them. X. Y. Z. DEBATING CLUB Our new president does not seem kindly to the duties of his office, we hope that he will improve in time. Vice president Elder presided. The work in parliamentary law was conducted by Kayser. Mr. Bartlett gave an extempore talk. The debate on question that the time has now come for a gradual reduction of the tariff for one for revenue only was affirmed by Tritt and Kayser and denined by Petit and Earheart. Mr. Hoel was admitted to membership. Mr. Cowdrick was with us again. ENGINEERING NOTES. The show cases in the Fowler shops are being rearranged so that Prof. Jones can show samples of his pattern work. The Engineer meeting for Friday noon was postponed until next Friday. Two of the new lathes are completed with the exception of being set up and four new ones are in construction. Professor Ward has finished the straight edges for the engineers. They cost much less this way. Some of the fuses burned out in the shops during the storm Wedn sday night and all on the hill was in darkness. It often happens that a wire gets grounded and burns out. The seniors are busy working on their theses. The Graduate Magazine for March is out. It is a good number. The principal article is "What Should College do for Women" by Gertrude Boughton Blackwelder. Geo. M. Vinton, law 03, representing International View Co. has been transferred from Spokane Wash., to San Francisco, Cal. See Major, The Barber, at 910 Mass. St. We are not the Best but Just as Good as the Best. Give us a call and if you are not satisfied don't pay a cent. All kinds of Barber Supplies for sale—just what the boys all need—made by the Koken Barber Supply Co. of St. Louis Plenty of Baths. Lots of Hot Towels after Shaving and a good free rub, neck shaved all for 10c. Your business solicited—C. A. Major. Hubert Thompson, who was a student of K. U. from 1800 to 1893, was on the hill Friday morning. Mr. Thompson has been in the medical department of U. S. army since 1805. From 1801-03 he served in the Philippines. He is now stationed at Angel Island, San Francisco co. The law library has recently added the works of Jeremy Bentham to its collection. A big excursion went down to Kansas City Friday afternoon to root for the Kansas track team. Pipe—the finest line in the city Smith's News Depot. Professor Olin has been invited to deliver the address to the graduating class of St. John high school Apr.22. Judge Cates of Kansas City and Judge T B, Wall of Wichita will address the law school in the near future. Coach Durham has been having trouble with an old injury in which the ligaments attached to his collar bone were affected. Dr. Strong goes to Winfield today where he will address the teacher's association. W. H. McLain of St. Louis will address the students of the sociology department, April 14, on "The Problem of Charity." He will also deliver an evening lecture open to the public Go to Smith's News Depot for fine Cigars and Tobacco. Chas. Lovelace had charge of the basket ball team on their trip this week. This is the first time a student has managed the trip of an athletic team since Mr. Plank has been general manager. E. Spencer Clark, '01, now in the medical department of Washington University, is in town, the guest of Murray Hill. Professor E. L. Taylor of the School of Engineering, is called to the engineering department of Yale University. Hicks and Allen accompanied the basket ball team on its trip this week and did yeoman service for the 'varsity. There is a movement on foot for the establishment of a course in Banking and Economics at the University. Professor Blackmar has been selected chairman of the Committee of the Sociology Section in the Arts and Science Department of the St. Louis Expation. Go to Lindsys for fine shoe repairing. Mass, street. ProfessorCone has been unable to meet his classes several days this week owing to illness. The seniors are holding their first base ball practice on McCook field this afternoon. A big line of Base Ball goods are now in at Smith's News Depot Shelley PHOTOGRAPHER Call and see what we can do for you on rates. PHOTOGRAPHER, ONE THING AND ANOTHER Wind is air when it is going somewhere. It is generally caused by unequal temperatures and the U.S. weather bureau. WIND. There are several kinds of wind among which are hot winds which scorch everything with which they come in contact, and hot air which never harms any one or anything unless it is the fellow who starts it in motion. There are high winds which blow low and low winds which sometimes blow high. Besides these there are north winds, south winds, east winds, west winds etc. Then there are zephyr's which vary greatly in nature according to the locality, and wind-jammers which are the same everywhere. Cyclones are winds which travel in a circle and raise cane, and tornadoes raise cane by going straight ahead. Funny, isnt it? Trade winds are a deep sea variety of wind and do not interest us. Scientists and explorers have discovered several Caves of the Wind; these are caverns containing and sending forth wind of various grades. They have struck the popular fancy so well that now nearly everyone car is around him a reproduction in miniature of this great natural ph phenomenon. This is where the scientists have missed it as they should never have made their discovery public. Prof. of English Literature.—Will you please relate the experiences of John Bunyon which led him to write, Figrims Progress? Of course you know, w. do not want his extended experiences. Lady student. Well, do you want me to give his internal experiences? Why did not Pen elope? Because her owner would not letter. Why did he wanta holder? Because it was his write. There will be a conference of High School principals, city superintendents, and other interested teachers held at the University on Friday and Saturday, April 15 and 16, 1933. This conference is called for the purpose of considering the state, the accredited high school system in general. Mrs. Jessie Witter has all the newest and best in fancy needle work. In her new location she is more able to accommodate her customers. Lessons free. 921 Mass. St The university authorities expect to have the new catalogue out by May 1. The engineering school are agitating the annual idea. If they conclude to get out such a publication it will have the general form of the annuals which the School of Pharmacy has been publishing. Jesse Worley has gone to work for the Lawrence Gazette. He will be on duty at the city editor's desk and criticise, curtail and otherwise demoralize the copy handed in by his city reportorial staff. Mrs. Jessie Witter can furnish you anything in fine needlework. See some of her new things for waist decorations. Orders taken for work. 921 Mass. St. Ralph Love will leave school on account of his father's death. He will take charge of his father's business. Chus, Brook, a former K. U. student, is now in business at Humboldt. He is a partner in the Humboldt Investment Co. W. A. Clark is visiting his son, Lee. The class base ball managers will meet Monday. Butler was elected captain of the track team last week. He is one of our foremost track men. Dr. Naismith has been ill with the grippe this week. Spring Millinery, Misses Hutt. 837 Massachusetts Street. Easter Novelties. We have a nice assortment at right prices. Come in. WOLF'S BOOK STORE. $10. Suit Sale $10. We place on sale Saturday over Twenty Styles of NEW SPRING SUITS. in all the new weaves and fabrics at $10.00 your choice. W. E. SPALDING. -AT- MRS, E. E. MENDENHALL'S. 823 MASS ST. CALL AND SEE THE Easter Ihats K. S. U. Students Buy their Text Books and Supplies at 819 MASS. ST. Rowlands and Stevenson BOOKSELLERS AND STATIONERS. We are carrying a full line of Fresh Meat In addition to our fine line of Groceries. Park Grocery Give me a call for YOUR NEW EASTER HAT Everything new at MRS. SHEARER'S. Mr. Stubbs started the subscriptions for the new Y. M. C. A. building with $5,000. Washburn College is rejoicing over the gift of $40,000 for a library from Andrew Carnegie. Miss Bertha Charvough went to her home at Osage City Tuesday on account of sickness. Miss Shirley of Washburn visited Miss Muckle and other friends on the hill Sunday and Monday. The faculty have arrived at no definite conclusion regarding the proposed course in Domestic Science. It is probable that some sort of a course of that nature will be established next year. T. A. McNeil of the "Mail and Breeze" one of the pioneer news paper men of Kansas, will lecture at the university at 10 o'clock next Friday morning on the subject; Experience vs. Theory in newspaper work. College Pins College Pins STERLING SILVER and Beautifully Hard Enamelled in any color Only 25 Cents Larger Sizes 60 Cents We can furnish these Pins for almost any School or College Our New Catalogue is Scot FREE Upon Request JACCARD JEWELRY CO. 1032 MAIN STREET KANSAS CITY, MO. KINGS You Need No Money To gain admittance to the Imperial Dancing Acade my if you do not dance. We would be pleased to have you call and watch our class work, We claim that we have the best school of dancing in the State of Kansas, and only ask you to investigate our methods and talk with our pupils. You don't need to buy a ticket to join our classes, but pay nightly and come whenever you can. Hall open all day. IMPERIAL DANCING ACADEMY. The Lawrence Scientific Schoo Phone 510 Blue. Residence, Main 425. HARVARD UNIVERSITY offers four-year courses of study leading to the degree of B.S. in Civil, Mechanical, and Electrical Engineering Mining and Metallurgy Architecture, Landscape Architecture Forestry, Chemistry, Geology, Biology, Anatomy and Hygiene (preparation for medical schools). Science for teachers and a course in General Science. Students are admitted to regular standing by examinations and by credit from other Schools or Colleges. Ap proved Special Students may be admitted without examination. The Catalogue will be sent on application to the Secretary, J. L Love, 16 University Hall, Cambridge, mass. Bakery & Restaurant. Mrs. M. F. Williams. EVERYTHING GOOD TO EAT Come for Pies and Cakes. 838½ Massachusetts St. Phone 550 Gray. ❖ 浇梦乐园 浇梦乐园 浇梦乐园 浇梦乐园 = The = Students' Photographers Mr. C. F. Squires. 1902 SQUIRES Mrs. C. F. Squires. Awarded grand prize gold medal P. A. of K. September 1, 1903. Every picture perfect and up to date Promptness our specialty. 945 MASS. ST., JACKSON BUILDING. DRAMATIC CLUB CAST. The Dramatic Club is hard at work getting its play in shape. The play, "Rosemary," is a comedy with a great many funny situations and a strain of pleasant sentiment running through it. It is different from any play yet given by the club and is held to be one of the best modern productions in both a literary and dramatic way. The cast of characters as follows: Sir Jasper Thorndyke - O B Seyster Capt Cruickshank,RN - Ray Adams Wm Westwood - Brock Goddard Geo Minifie - Harry Bedell Professor Jog-Ram - J A Hoel MrsCapt Cruickshank - Inez Plumb Dorothy Cruickshank - - Maude Morrison Mrs Geo Minifie - Ethel Murphy Priscilla - Hazel Stevenson Seats on sale at Woodward's drug store, Wednesday morning 8 o'clock. Usual house prices. CHEMISTRY NOTES. Last time to see Seyster in University Dramatics. Rosemary; Thursday night. Prof. H, P. Cady went to Norwich, Kansas, to lecture on liquid air Friday. The chemistry department has received from Mr. A. G. Chaffee of Colorado Springs, a valuable set of minerals and ores illustrating silver and gold smelting. E. V. Kaufman proprietor of Syracuse springs, Brown county Kansas, visited the University this week to consult in regard to the exhibit of mineral waters that he proposes to make at the World's Fair at St. Louis. Seniors, a picture free for the annual at Squires Studio. Squires and no other for up-to-date photos. The cast for Rosemary is made up of students who have done some very clever work. The Theta Sorority were photo graphed at the Squires Studio. Edwin P. Davies enjoyed a visit yesterday from his mother, of Fall River, and a sister who is attending Baker University. Remember Squires is making SENIOR'S PICTURES, the one for the annual, FREE. Fifteen hundred students of the University of Chicago petitioned the university council asking for one additional day in the spring vacation. The petition was refused. Do you ever go to Vie's? Corner of Adams and Mass. A committee of business men from down town were on the hill Thursday seeking subscriptions for the new Y, M, C. A. building. The debating council met Wednesday and decided to hold the Nebraska-Colorado preliminary on the night of the 20th. DO IT NOW. Squires and no other for up-to-date pictures. Prof. Abbott's lecture on Oxford University given before the History Conference Thursday night was exceedingly interesting. A room full of students listened closely to him for an hour and were more than willing for him to prolong his talk for another hour. Call and see our Easter Hats in new spring styles. Misses Edmondson, 003 Mass. St. John Heim, a freshman engineer has been appointed alternate candidate from the state at large for the competitive examinations admitting to West Point. Vie always has the best ice cream Hoyt Cates, Milo Jones and E. Woody were the guests of the Sigma Chis over Saturday and Sunday. Rosemary, the Dramatic Club's play given by a cast of old club members. Madolcim Garard spent last week n Topeka. A soda at Vie's is more soothing than the Balm of Gilbad. At a sophomore class meeting Thursday it was decided to adopt an 06 hat. It is said that the top piece of the sophomore boys will be colored something like our national emblem. C.V.F. Attorney A.C. Wilson of Perry is in town visiting his brother, J. B. Wilson. Sale of seats for Rosemary at Woolward's Wednesday morning at 8 o'clock. Usual prices. George Pickering is visiting in Olathe. Do it now. Have Squires make your picture. PHARMACY ALUMNI NOTES A check mark in this square means that your subscription still remains unpaid—that you are still in arrears for dues. The Weekly cannot be sent to delinquent members any longer. Don't you want to still keep in touch with the Association and the University? We trust you do and we will be pleased to hear from you at an early date concerning the matter. We publish a list of names and last addresses of alumni, from whom we have been unable to obtain replies. The corresponding Secretary is making an effort to revise the Pharmacy Alumni Association directory, and any information concerning these alumni will be gratefully received. Write to R. H. Needham, Lawrence, Kansas. Last week an error was made regarding the statement that ballots for nominations of officers would be sent out this week. Owing to the fact that the Corresponding Secretary has been unable to obtain any nominations up to date, it is deemed best to extend the time for receiving nominations to April 1st. Immediately following that date the ballot blanks will be sent out. Please send your nominations at once to the Corresponding Secretary. The following officers are to be elected: President, Vice-President, Recording Secretary, Corresponding Secretary, Treasurer, and an Assistant Corresponding Secretary from each state or territory wherein reside two or more members of the Association. Amos, W. S., '91, Dodge City. Bulin, C. E., '01, K. C., Mo. Case, A. S., '00, Ottawa. Coffman, Guy M., '02, Pittsburg. Davies, H E,'97, Chicago. Ill. Hamilton, D. G., '01, Marys- ville. Hoadley, C.R., '87, Topeka. Hoadley, C. R., 81, Topeka. Malcolm, C. C., '00, Clay Center. Meyer, A. A., '96 Junction City. Meyer, E. W., '97, St. Louis, Mo. Niemann, G. H., '02, North western University, Chicago. Murray, J. W., '02. Colorado Sorings. Rothrock, W. J. '00, McCall La. Smith, M. R.'98, Emporia. Stone, A. W.,'01, Lawrence. Thomas, E. T.,'00, Riley. Voeltzel, L C G,'94, Chicago Watt, R. A.,'03, San Antonio Texas. The Monroe Doctrine AND The Labor Question To be discussed one Saturday Evening. March 26, 8 o'clock. These are both out-of-town debates and this will be the last opportunity to hear these questions discussed. Newhouse's Orchestra. Tickets 15 cents. A WORD TO THE BUYER! Your particular attention is called to the class of work now being turned out at the studio; also to our CAREFULLY SELECTRD STOCK OF MOUNTS. Prompt and careful attention given to all orders. Oldest established Studio in Lawrence. 615 Massachusetts Street MISS JUNO SHANE. PHOTOGRAPHER. ,医院系医院临床医学临床医学院 Here's Your Spring Shoes. They Just Arrived. Come and make your selection. All the new lasts and styles. Place the old heavy winter shoes way back in the closet, you'll not need them for some time. It is time now for Spring Shoes. Starkweather Shoe Company. Umbrellas. Don't borrow when you can get one for 50c and up to $5.00. WEAVER An Easter Sale To which we bid you welcome commences at Innes' Monday Morning, Mar. 25, ending Mar. 31 1. K. K. M. The purpose of the sale is to reduce our immense quantity of stand ard merchandise stored in three great buildings. We have purchased two of the three buildings we now occupy, and we will offer many savings that should not be overlooked, in Ladies Suits, Skirts, Shirt Waists and Shirt waist Suits, Silks and Dress Goods, Perrin's newest spring Gloves for Easter wear, Ladies Union Suits and single garments spring and summer weight, Carpets, Curtains and Rugs Come and view this sale whether you are a purchaser or not. Come and roam through the store. Innes, Bullene & Hackman. DO NOT PROCRASTINATE. "TIME FLIES." Morris, Photographer. 829 Massachusetts Street. HER. S. hen for .00. R. ce. and bee as. we after be its. its. in's inter gle ner tags ner nee --- --- Kansas University Weekly. VOL. XII. THE ONLY OFFICIAL AND AUTHORIZED WEEKLY PUBLICATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS WatkinsNationalBank Capital $100,000. Surplus $20,000. J. R. Watkins, Pres C. H. Tucker, Cash W. E. Hasean, Asst C.) McKINZIE GROCERY Our method of buying and selling will save you 10 per cent. 1301 KY, ST. TEL. 618 WHITE J. W. O'BRYON, DENTIST, Kelson Bldg. Phone 517 Gra Jackson Bldg. Phone 517 Gray. DONNELLY BROS., DONNELLY BROS. LIVERY, BOARDING and HACK STABLES All Rubber Tire Rigs. Co.th and New Hampshire. Phone 10 EASTERN STAR BAKERY EASTERN STAR BAKERY Fine Pastries and Buns. Sweet Cakes a Specialty. Parties supplied. Call and examine the new 1904 Model Bicycles. Prices from $16 to 600. Anything you want. Lawrence Bicycle Co., 905 Mass, St. Phone Pinki 254 Chas. L. Hess. Meat Market. 941 Mass. St. Telephone 14. Reasonable Charges. Phone 13 Reasonable Charges. I phone in J. A. NICOLSON, Successor to Geo. F. Godding. LIVERY, HACK, and BOARDING STABLE. RUBBER TIRED RIGS. Lawrence, . . . Kansas MRS. PREN (TISS AT THE HOME STORE 1105 Mass. S. Toilet requisites, Sempre Giove, Jennesse St. Beauce, Kan. sas toilet Cream, Curodor, Agniliae; Tooth paste, Furp e.ctc Ed Anderson's Restaurant and Confectionery. Student's Headquarters. '04 CLASS PINS '04 The official class pin at HESTER'S. Optician. Jeweler. BILLY WILLIAMSON SAGURDAY. MARCH 26, 1904. Handles all the standard brands of Cigars, Pipes and Tobacco. Manufacturer of the celebrated "Baby Ribbon." 913 Massachusetts. No. 735 Massachusetts Street. PROTSOH TAILOR, A. P HULTS, DENTIST No. 735, Massachusetts, Street 717 MASS. STREET. ATHLETICS. The receipts from the indoor meet at Kansas City last Friday was $603. This will nearly pay all the expenses, leaving a very small deficit if any. Manager Plank managed the Kansas end of the contest in an able manner. K's were awarded to Finch, Bailey, Butler and Morrow for the work on the indoor track team. The athletic Board authorized an intercollegiate meet and Manager Plank is arranging for several different contests. The University is arranging for a high school day here. Invitations will be sent out to all the largest high schools of the state and a regular high school track meet will be arranged. Several of the high schools have already expressed their willingness to participate. Gold and silver medals will be awarded for first and second prizes and ribbons for third prizes. This meet will be arranged by the University directly and not by the athletic board. The base ball team applicants were able to get on the field Tuesday and Wednesday and had good practices. Two teams were picked and a good grade of base ball was played by both teams. Capt. Sexton has not picked his men yet and while some men have the positions pretty securely there are several others still on the anxious seat. The first game will be with Haskell on April 2nd at Haskell. LECTURES IN MONEY AND BANKING Verne Pierson has been awarded a "K" for excellence in tennis. Prof. Cone is introducing a new departure in his Money and Banking course this term. A number of lectures will be delivered before the class by business men who are engaged in practical banking business. The first lecture will be given by Mr. Thornton Cooke on "The Function of the Bank in the Distribution of Products." Mr. Cooke graduated from K. U. in 1893 and now has a position with the Fidelity Trust Co. at Kansas City. The University is making arrangements for a high school day about the last Friday in April or the first in May. Invitations will be issued to all students of accredited high schools to visit the University in a body or by representatives on this day. HIGH SCHOOL DAY. In the afternoon an interscholastic field meet will be held on McCook field in which the high school athletes will compete for prizes. They will be entertained by the University, visiting the various departments and be given a good idea of the character of the work done by the State University. SOME OF THE ARTS COURSES WILL BE AUTERED TO MEET DEMANDS FOR PREPARATION IN SPECIAL TIMES OF WORK NEW COURSE ARRANGEMENTS. The K. U. faculty has finally decided upon the status of the new Business and Domestic Science courses which are to be offered at the University next year. In the first place there will be no special courses, as such, in these studies. The idea of the faculty is to so arrange the present arts courses as to give more specific instruction for the benefit of men who are fitting themselves for various lines of business, as newspaper work, banking and insurance; and for the girls domestic science. There will be some slight changes in established courses to meet these requirements and the required studies will be grouped to facilitate the special preparation for any one of these lines of study. In the studies which look toward fitting the student for special business departures, there will be introduced lectures by practical business men actually engaged in these lines of work. The idea of introducing the commercial phase into the regular academic work of universities is one that is fast growing and in a number of eastern institutions it has passed the stage of experiment and is giving universal satisfaction. GIRL'S SCHOLARSHIP The scholarship is maintained by the mother of Miss Howland whose purpose it is to perpetuate the memory of her daughter by assisting worthy and aspiring young ladies to finish their University education who might otherwise not be enabled to do so. The scholarship is a gift and the only condition attached to it is that the one holding it shall be a young lady of good scholarship and shall be at least a junior in the School of Arts. Applications for the scholarship should be handed to Chancellor Strong before May the first. The Marcella Howland scholarship, which yields sixty dollars a year was established about five years ago in memory of Marcella Howland, a graduate of the class of '90, a young woman of high scholarship and character, who had just entered upon her life's work when she died. COLLEGE MAN'S CLUB. A number of college men in Kansas City have formed an association called "The College Man's Club of Kansas City." The purpose is to draw all young men together for business and social cooperation. Young men of good standing from any college or university are considered elegible to membership. A number of schools, both eastern and western, are represented, and the membership is rapidly increasing. K.U.is well represented. T. A. McNEAL LECTURES. The Mail and Breeze Man Tells the Students of Journalism Something About the Practical and Theoretical Sides of Newspaper Work. T. A. McNeal lectured to the Class in Journalism Friday morning upon "Experience vs. Theory in running a Newspaper." Mr. McNeal remarked that no hard and tast rule could be laid down in running a newspaper; that the methods of carrying on a successful newspaper enterprise varied with the locality, the character of the readers and the purpose of the publication. He related some of his personal experience in running a newspaper, "The primary object of a newspaper," said Mr McNeal, "should be to please its readers. To do this a paper must study the desires of its constituency." "A good newspaper man must have courage, indefatigable industry, quick perception and understanding of human nature, and lastly it is absolutely necessary that he have good 'horse sense'—without the latter he will certainly fail. He must have an abiding love for his business; the newspaper must be his child, part of his being; it must fill his thoughts by day, his dreams by night; he must be wrapped up in it. Mr. McNeal spoke of the two departments of the newspaper; the business and the news end; and said that it was very rarely that a man was found proficient in both departments. He spoke of a newspaper character for good or for bad and the danger attending the getting of a reputation for unreliability. Mr. McNeal's lecture was interspersed with humorous personal experiences and anecdotes and was thoroughly enjoyed from beginning to end. ROSEMARY." K. U. Dramatic Club Presented Their Play With Great Credit. Rosemary, by the University Dramatic Club, was given at Bowersock Opera House Thursday night and met with the unqualified success which the students' efforts have deserved. It was one of the most difficult productions which the Club has attempted and the players are to be congratulated upon their good work All of the old 'stars' more than met the expectations of their friends and the new players in the cast went thro' their parts in a very creditable manner. Prot. Frazier deserves great credit for the success of the Dramatic Club's production. Thirteen students were elected into Phi Beta Kappa at the university of Minnesota last week and twenty-six into Sigma Xi. NO.25 INTERCOLLEGIATE NEWS. The sophomores at the university of Minnesota mining school have struck. They did not strike for higher wages or shorter hours, but simply because three of their number were suspended by the faculty. It has been a custom in this mining school to celebrate the birthdays, high quiz marks et cetera, of the members by a noisy and often rough demonstration. The latest feat was to subject a new man to a proper installation. The faculty rose to the occasion and suspended the ring leaders of the installation committee, whereupon the whole class has refused to go back to work. There is a rumor that the whole mining school will follow the second year men. Eight students were elected into the Phi Beta Kappa at the university of Chicago last week. John Hopkins has one professor for every four students, Yale and Wesleyan one for every nine and Columbia, Harvard and Pennsylvania one for every ten. There is a rumor abroad that Theta Nu Epsilon is to be revived at Nebraska. Prof. Swezey of the university of Nebraska has just published a new book entitled "Practical Exercises in Astronomy." (Continued on last page.) HAT Look at it need a new one, don't you? Which do you prefer, We have abundant lines of both kinds in Spring blocks, $1.50 to $5.00. SOFT OR STIFF? Must have a new hat whether the old one is good or not. The new styles put everything else out of date. OBER'S Clothiers and Hatters. --- THE KANSAS UNIVERSITY WEEKLY Editor-in-Chief ... RALPH ELLIIS Associates { A. H. BANYR E. B. BLACK Sporting Editor ... FREED A GULLETTE Local Editor ... J. W. KAYSER Society Editor ... MABEL BARBER Literary Editor ... CHAS, L.VANFLEET Business Manager. M. N. McNAUGHTON REPORTERS. J. B. Rieman, Geo. Hansen, Wm. Shaw, Abert Beach, O.A. Zimmerman, Ray Barton, J. K. Brady, Mary Barwell, Earl Campbell. Entered at Lawrence Post Office as second class mail matter. Shares in the WEEKLY $1.00 each, entitling the holder to the paper for two years, may be bad of the Secretary and Treasurer, GEORGE FOSTER or of M. N. MCNAUGHTON, Business Manager. Subscription price 50 cents per annum in advance. Single copy 5 cents. Address all communications to M. N. McNaughton, Bus, Mgr., Lawrence, Kan. U. athletes last Friday night at the indoor meet again showed what they could do in defense of a losing proposition. The knockers at the University who have been insisting that we have no track material are silent. Without a training table; without a systematic course of coaching; and with only a straggling line of supporters, our boys went against Missouri's vaunted athletes and were only defeated by five points. It seemed to be the general opinion among Kansas students that our boys would win nothing; that they were going to Kansas City simply to be shown up by the track team from Missouri. The long and careful coaching which the Missourians had received and the unswerving support which they have from their student body was all that kept them from being defeated. Had the Kansans received the same sort of preparation the outcome would have been different. All honor is due the K. U. track team for their showing. Individually and alone they have been compelled to work and excepting for the few visits from Coach Moulton they have been almost unaid.d. I is to be hoped that the team's efforts will be appreciated and that something will be done for the track men in the future. If this does result, the Weekly thinks it knows of about three meets that K. U. will win this spring. + THE WEEKLY has a pro- test to make to the athlet ic authorities of K, U. It doesn't pretend to be much of a publication, but it has the welfare of the University of Kansas as much at heart and is as much interested in University affairs as any other newspaper. And moreover it considers that as much courtesy is due it from University authorities as to any other paper. At the indoor meet every Kansas City paper had a representative on the floor of Convention Hall-down on the field where they could get records of events correctly and see things to the best advantage. The Weekly representative wasn't allowed in the sacred precincts but was compelled to see what he could from a box and depend on an announcer for the result and time of the races. Now the Weekly doesn't wish to be understood as thinking itself in the same class of publications as the metropolitan dailies of the city, tho' it was able to report the final score correctly, which one Kansas City paper with two representatives on the floor failed to do; but it does think that it deserves as good treatment as any publication on earth or off it. At the present writing the Weekly fails to recall the name of any paper that does half as much toward encouraging University athletics as it does. It makes little difference what sort of an athletic team may be representing K. U., this paper is expected to support it and does support it. For that and other reasons it would in return like to be supported. + THE COMMERCIAL spirit of the age is fast invading the long standing conservatism of the college and the university. The decision of the Kansas University faculty to establish courses next year in Banking, Insurance and Domestic Economy apparently indicates that Greek, Latin, Philosophy and the other old standbys of the classical educational course are being gradually thrust aside for courses that will be of material benefit to the student after he has left his Alma Mater. It seems to be growing to be the general opinion that a student cannot afford to spend four years in studying courses that will not assist him in luring unto himself the almighty dollar after he has obtained his diploma. The rapidity with which this new order of things has come about presents food for thought. At present perhaps only a common sense stage has been reached, where it is felt that every boy and girl should know something of the really practical affairs of life before they complete their academic studies. But if this commercial wave continues to its height, it bids fair to sweep away the long honored classical university. It is within the realms of imagination to see a century hence no vestige of the modern higher institution of learning. Instead we may have huge factories which turn out business men and house keepers made to order along particular lines. The courses in Economics will be replaced by others which will instruct in the best methods of forming trusts following the Morgan text book or short courses in preparation for becoming walking delegates and union organizers; the English course to consist of lessons in writing patent medicine advertisements and a thorough course in writing bank checks and drafts; and the fierce foot ball player instead of sporting about the gridiron will learn the latest methods of rushing banks and tackling Wall street combinations. The girls too ir their domestic science department will give up their German and French to learn how to carry on a winning conversation with the Irish cook and to make angel food with a thermometer; the servant girl problem will take the place of mathematics; and the experimental study of various brands of breakfast foods will serve for her laboratory work. Of course the "prep" department will be filled with embryo messenger boys with brass buttons, and little girls carrying big bunches of housekeeper's keys will listen with wide-eyed meekness to lectures on how to train the young. Greek and Latin may be used, but only for the purpose of anathematizing the dullards who are not able to become millionaires. T SEEMS to us that it is almost time for another plea for a new K. U. song. The matter has not been brought up for some time and "lest we forget" the Weekly wishes to remind the sons and daughters of Oread that there is room at the front for a large bunch of song writers. Nothing does more to arouse enthusiasm especially at gatherings of alumni and at meetings of county clubs over the state than rousing songs. What we need is something with an abundance of life both in time and words, at the same time we believe that the songs should be of a distinctly college brand. It is said that the Marseillaise was worth more to the cause of the revolutionists in France than an army would have been, and a good song for K. U. would have a similar effect upon the new University spirit. Why not pass the hat around among the students and alumni and collect some money to be offered as a prize for a suitable song. Sometimes a monetary bait does much toward bringing people out of their lethargy. CHE MEMBERS of our faculty find it hard to decide upon what shall constitute a proposed course in domestic science. Some hold that students should be given special instruction in the making of angel food, while others maintain that graham bread is the only healthful diet. It is to be hoped that a compromise may be reached at an early date, as many of the young women of the University are anxiously awaiting an opportunity to put their culinary abilities to a test. The Weekly hereby serves notice that the department need not attempt to curry favor with the sheet by sending any burnt offerings to the office. We suggest that when the course is established students be detailed to the various boarding clubs for practical experience. THE METHODIST conference retained Rev L.H. Murli; as president of Baker university. The Weekly extends to the Methodist school its congratulations. President Murlin has done a great deal for Baker and will in all probability do more before his connection with the institution ceases. Mr. Andrew Carnegie has offered to give Washburn $40,000 for the erection of a new library building. There is a rumor in Topeka that President Plass has decided to accept this little gift. The New Millinery Store, 921 Has all the latest novelties in Millinery at very low prices. Call and see us before buying. MASS. Mrs. W. H. Elder. ST. --- FOR A SPEAKING LIKENESS, VISIT THE STUDIO OF Morris. Photographer. 829 Massachusetts Street F Do You Anticipate buying a Typewriter? Investigate the merits of the Chicago Price $35 Fred J. Boyles. Chicago. Price $35. FRED BOY1ES, 639 Mass, has secured the agency and Llls either for cash or pay- ments. Also a full line of paper, ribbons, carbon paper, or anything in the stationery line BROADWAY WRITING MACHINE CO. 964 E. 10TH ST., N.Y.C. THE CHICAGO The Chicagoo 639 Mass. St. Go to TETER BROS. For Your Groceries and Meats. They make Prices that make permanent customers. They make Prices that make permanent customers. Some Pantatoriums Are Better than Others Our work speaks for us. We make every job an ad vertisement. $1.50 per month fills the bill, no matter how many suits, coats, pants or vests you have nor the number of times you have them cleaned or pressed or repaired. Tel 506 Gray. Lawrence Pantatorium, 12 W. Warren St. BYRON JONES, rel. 63 MEAT MARKET. 840 Mass SPECIAL RATES TO CLUBS. Easter Cards and Novelties. Easter Remember the folRs at home with something appropriate. Rowland & Stevenson BOOKSELLERS AND STATIONERS. 819 MASS. ST. A.C. Spalding & Bros Largest manufacturers in the world of official Athletic Supplies. BASE BALL, LAWN TENNIS, FOOT BALL, GOLF, FIELD HOCKEY, BASKET BALL, OFFICIAL ATHLETIC IMPLEMENTS. Plans and blue prints of Gymnasium Para pherma Furnished upon request. Catalogue free to any Address. A. G. SPALDING & BRO. New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, François, Boston, Baltimore, Buffalo, Louis, Kansas City, Minneapolis, Denve Montreal, C niadue, L doon, England. The University of Chicago Schools of Law Medicine Theology Education Each school has a special Circular of Information which will be sent on request. The Courses in Medicine are given in connection with the work of RUSH MEDICAL College. SUMMER QUARTER June 18—September 2 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO Chicago, Illinois. 1 • www.mathpgs.org • www.mathpgs.org Mass ros the c NNIS, HELD ALL, IM- m Para ress, O. o. ab. Denve end. Y.M.C.A. W. C. Clock addressed the Association last Sunday. Mr. Clock was well known while in college, being President of the Y. M. C. A. and a member of the Beta fraternity. He spoke of some of the experiences of his university life. "There is great danger," he said, "when college men for the first time begin to get different ideas about religion, to lose faith in it and throw it aside. While in college we go through the period that separates childhood from manhood. The danger is that during this period we will discard things we have always believed in, simply because we must take another view of them. Our views of almost everything change as we change from children to men. Let us not quickly discard our religious beliefs during this period and we will come to a fuller and more real conception of them as we grow." Y. W. C. A. NOTES. The first meeting of the large cabinet, under the new departmental plan, was held Thursday evening at the Association house. Miss Alice Boyle, president of the Association in 1902, was visiting in town Wednesday and Thursday. The Wednesday meeting was one of the best this year. Prof Burdick gave an address on "The Divinity of Christ." Miss Simpson sang. The new social committee gave their first function Friday afternoon at six-a University Tea. for all young women, held in the large botany laboratory in Snow Hall. X. Y. Z. The X. Y. Z. Club gave their fourth annual banquet last Saturday night in their hall. The room was artistically decorated with crimson and blue bunting. This with the Club penants and other decorations gave a very pleasing effect. The electroleers which were used for the first time are a great improvement. It is a recognized fact that the X. Y. Z. men do good work when seated at the table but they are also at home when on their feet, and this was clearly demonstrated by those who responded to toasts. The speakers and their subjects were as follows: J. W. Kayser—Our Guests. W. H. Livers—Ex. X. Y. Z's. F. R Grant-The Past A. G. Tritt—The University. A. G. Price The University N. Washington, The State L. N. Morscher—The Snows B. A. Earhart—Traitors. C A. Leinbach-The Piano, S. R. Logan-The Scientific Literary Man S. E. Bartlett-Beyond the Power of Civilization. J. F. Bender—The Future. W. H. Elder—Good Night. The X Y. Z. boys should be proud of their organization. It shows what can be accomplished in this line. The management of the University has given them every encouragement. If this and the other clubs continue to advance, in a few years debate work will count for something and Kansas will have nothing to fear when she contests on the platform. Dode Henley will give a dinner party for the Sigma Chi's next Friday. Will Mahin is visiting in Smith Center. Pipes—the finest line in the city Smith's News Depot. Miss Grice Muckle visited in Pope poke Saturday and Sunday. Ray Clifford came down from Kansas City Thursday to attend the line party given by the Sigma Chis to the play given by the Dramatic club. Call and see our Easter Hats in new spring styles. Misses Edmondson, 903 Mass. St. Miss Ellen Pendleton forensic instructor in the department of English, has been appointed second proof reader to the Hudson-Kimberly Publishing Co. of Kansas City. Miss Pendleton will continue to read for the English department until the end of the present term Her office work is being performed by Miss Lulu Gardner. All Seniors should hand their photographs for the Annual to Manager Humphrey before April 16. A big line of Base Ball goods are now in at Smith's News Depot. On Monday afternoon the preliminary for choosing the Missouri debaters was held before Professors Hopkins, Becker and Johnson as judges. G. A. Neely, G. F. Guernsey and W. H. Elder were chosen after a tively and close contest. George Aliborn, Vene Frey and Rollin Feitchens attended the banquet given by the Kansas City alumnae chapter of Sigma Chi in Kansas City last Friday. Go to Lindsey's for fine shoe re pairing. Mass, street. Walter Easton has completed his work and returned to his home in Illinois Thursday. W. S. Kretsinger, law 98, visited friends on the hill Thursday. Ex-Comptroller of currency, James Eckeler will lecture at the university in the near future on some plan of money or banking. Rev. J. Withington, arts35,visited friends on the hill Thursday. Prof. Ashton talked to the teachers' association at Manhattan Saturday. See Major, The Barber, at 910 Mass. St. We are not the Best but just as Good as the Best. Give us a call and if you are not satisfied don't pay a cent. All kinds of Barber Supplies for sale—just what the boys all need—made by the Koken Barber Supply Co. of St. Louis Plenty of Baths. Lots of Hot Towels after Shaving and a good free rub, neck shaved all for 10c. Your business solicited—C. A. Major. E. S. Cowdrick, who has been working for the Mail and Breeze; has severed his connection with that paper and is reporting for the Topeka Herald. Mrs. Jessie Witter has all the newest and best in fancy needle work. In her new location she is more able to accommodate her customers. Lessons free. 921 Mass, St The ladies glee club is practicing for a presentation of the Mid-Summers Night Dream to be given in a few weeks. Call and see our Easter hats in new spring styles. Misses Edmondson. 903 Mass. St. The Glee club began practice this week for the May day Festival. Spring vacation begins next Wednesday Go to Smith's News Depot for fine Cigars and Tobacco. Shelley Call and see what we can do for you on rates. PHOTOGRAPHER, ONE THING AND ANOTHER THE STATE ORATORICAL CONTEST. (As seen by Uncle John Meisner.) "Faith and it's great doin' they hey at or itorial contists these days, eh John?" said Pat as he ordered a lemonade at the old shop of John Meisner down on Massachu- "Ach, it unit it sdat," replied the old-time soft drink brewer. "I see py de papers apont vone uff dese oggassions vat dey hat at Topee-ka de oder day alretté. De Mitland, de Vashburn unt a lectle Methodist school somevere peween here unt Ottava unt vone or two oders organized a State Ritorical Lenge for de prevention uff gut manners unt de spread uff de plessed doctrine uff free license unt hot times, uff vitch K. U. is not a member yet, alretté. Vell dy got a charter on de Auditorium at Topea-ka unt on de day uff to great efent dey pegan to gather like Noah's household ceptin dat der vass two hundert uff effry kind instead uff two. Venn dy reached Topea-ka dey formed in fours unt paraded de streets up mit ad aggunpaintim uff cow bells, fog horns unt brass bunds. But de fun pegan mit 'de deseent uff de sun into de western seas' as Schon Seonson sess. A lot uff de students got dere early but de police uff Topoe ka vass equal to de ogasion as at de door dey hat stationed vone uff de high officers uff de force, de dog catcher, unt py hiss wonderful presence uff mind unt a rety refolver he gallantly repulsed de mad attacks uff de irate unt lawless students who sought to spit on him unt drown him after he hat refused dem entrance to de half But de officer vass finally gompelled to let dem in. Howeffer dis ysss but de 'prelim nary skirmish' as Schon Schonson sess. Now come de contest, that is I mean de orratorical contest. Shonny Shumpliver from Pond Lillie, Oklahoma, represented Fairmount College, unt also spoke, his subject bein "Pond Lillie, de Gateway uff de Vest." He spoke vell unt especially strong only he began a leetle veak unt was slow to warm up. But anyone who heard that oration couldn't neffer pelief as der is any odder city as hat haf a chance long side uff Pond Lillie. Next came Villie de Gobble uff Ottava, who spoke on "Baptism as She Iss!" He vas very realistic. Hiss description vsso s vivid thet at de criseses uff speech de whole audience shivered unt chattered der teeth so loud as he had to discontinue his remarks, unt dey say thet among de twelt baskefuls picked up after de carnival vass found two sets uff false teeth, but deyaint found de owners yet. Den O. P, Hudson uff Atchee'son spoke on Vhy Hay is petter feed for Diplomats as Russian Thistleovich. He handled hiss subject vell in spite uff de stickers. Rev. George Vasnington Nicholson uff Baker also spoke. Meanwhile de various bunches uff students hat peen 'maneuvering for advantageous positions' as Schon Schmonson sess. Unt venn de last speaker vass trough de made a grand rush for de stage on to see who could shake hands mit de or orsers first unt get a few neckties unt collar buttons uff de principal orators to hang up offer de Peruna advertisements mit vitch dey hat ornamented der rooms alretty. But de gallant Police uff Topekea vonce more proved der right to haf der statues in de Hall uff Fame py repelling de fearful onslaught mit great loss, if a big lump on your heat iss a loss, to de enemy. De students did not succeed in cleaning out de whole bunch as dyh hat eggspected but dey managed to giff vone uff de policeman a bath howefer unter full vater pressure. “I dells you, Pat,” concluded Uncle John, “effey vould schoost haf a law school unt raise a couple uff Dodds's de rest uff de schools would G. O. N. E. DAFFY. Spring Millinery Misses Hutt. 837 Massachusetts Street. EASTER SUITS TOP COATS HATS SHIRTS NECKWEAR Everything in Easter Toggery. W. E. SPALDING. --- Easter Novelties. We have a nice assortment at right prices. Come in. WOLF'S BOOK STORE. WM. WIEDEMANN, WM. WIEDEMANN The Confectioner. Agent for Lowney's PURE CONFECTIONS AND ICE CREAM. Oysters are delicious Agent for Lowney's Allegretti's, Headley's Lyon's Chocolates... ^2 If you wish to get your work done by the best Barbers in Lawrence call at... CAbDWEbL & SHARP'S 812 Mass, St. 812 Mass. St. est equipped shop in the city. Hair cutting and Massage a specialty. Ladies Massage given at shop or home. Four Barbers CIAL RATES TO BOARDING CLUBS 323 Mass. 51. HERTZLER & CO.. Phone 609 White SPOT CASH GROCERY. YOUR NEW EASTER HAT Everything new at MRS. SHEARER'S. Give me a call for We are carrying a full line of In addition to our fine line of Fresh Meat Groceries. Park Grocery HARVARD UNIVERSITY The Lawrence Scientific chco offers four-year courses of study leading to the degree of B.S. in Civil, Mechanical, and Electrical Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Architecture, Landscape Architecture Forestry, Chemistry, Geology, Biology, Anatomy and Hygiene (preparation for medical school). Science for teachers and a course in General Science. Students are admitted to regular standing by examinations and by credits from other Schools or Colleges. proved Special Students may be admitted without examination. The Catalogue will be sent on application to the Secretary, J. L Love, 16 University Hall, Cambridge, mass. You Need No Money To gain admittance to the Imperial Dancing Academy if you do not dance. We would be pleased to have you call and watch our class work. We claim that we have the best school of dancing in the State of Kansas, and only ask you to investigate our methods and talk with our pupils. You don't need to buy a ticket to join our classes, but pay nightly and come whenever you can. Hall open all day. IMPERIAL DANCING ACADEMY. Phone 510 Blue. Residence, Main 425. CALL AND SEE THE Easter ibats VRS, E. E. MENDENHALL'S. 823 MASS. ST. New Hats, New Shirts, New Goods are coming in all the time. Come in and see us. M. J. Skofstad. SOCIETY. The Seniors had a spread and dance at I. O. O.F. hall Saturday evening. Miss Corbin very pleasantly entertained the new members of Phi Beta Kappa at her home on Friday evening. The Phi Gams entertained at their home March 29th. The evening was spent at cards and dancing. Mr. Warren Henley entertained the Sigma Chis at a dinner party Friday evening. The guests were the active chapter and alumni of Lawrence and Ray Clifford, Dr. Lyons, R. S. Woody, of Kansas City, The Laws gave a dance in Pythian hall Monday evening. WATTERSON LECTURE The next number of the University Lecture Course will be the lecture of Colonel Henry Watterson, the eloquent editor of the Louisville Courier-Journal. The lecture will be given at the University hall, Wednesday evening, March 30th, the last day of the half term before the spring vacation. For those not holders of course tickets the price of admission will be 50 cents. Reserved seats will be on sale at Woodward's drug store Tuesday morning. This visit of Colonel Watterson to Lawrence is a matter af unusual importance. He is probably the most brilliant speaker of the many public men who will have visited the University this year, able, eloquent, witty, one of the few remaining of the old school orators of the South. "MESSIAH" AT LINDSBORG The annual "Messiah" given at Lindsborg under the auspices of Bethany College begins March 27th and lasts until April 3rd This is one of the great Kansas musical events and the entertainment will be on a grander scale than ever this year. A chorus of 550 voices and an orchestra of 60 pieces will be present. Special memorial renditions to the late Dr. Swensson, founder of Bethany, will be a feature of the musical program. Headquarters for Good Eatables. We have been making a special effort to get in a full stock of good things to eat. W. A. GUENTHER 'Phone 226. 721 Mass. St. Fraternity Stationery WE MANUFACTURE AND ORIGINATE IN OUR OWN WORKSHOPS Stationery Fraternity Emblems OF ALL KINGS SUITABLE FOR Correspondence, Party Invitations, Dance Programs, Visiting Cards, Etc. WRITE US FOR SAMPLES AND PRICES JACCARD JEWELRY CO. 1032 MAIN ST. KANSAS CITY, MO. Acknowledgement to CATALOGUE OF JEWELRY AND NOVELTIES DR. REYMOND'S LECTURE. The illustrated lecture given by Dr. Reymond on Japan Tuesday night was of unusual interest. The audience filled Blake hall lecture room to overflowing and a few people left without hearing the speaker. Dr. Reymond has spent several years in China and Japan, hence was perfectly acquainted with his subject. His views were a fine and valuable collection and exceedingly entertaining. Squires for Seniors Pictures. Pref. Hodder gave the second of his series of lectures upon "Political Caricatures" Thursday afternoon. This lecture covered the period from Van Buren to Lincoln and was very interesting. Remember to have Squires make your picture. W. M. Murdock of Clifton Kansas visited his daughter Mae, Thursday. W. M. Sutdock or Christine Wilson visited his daughter Mae, Thursday. Prof. L. I. Blake has been selected as a member of the International Congress of Electricians, which meets at St. Louis next summer. Corner of Adams and Mass.—Vic. The Y. W. C. A. gave a tea to all K. U. girls at Snow hall Friday evening at 0 o'clock. Misses Cooke, Greissinger, Wiedemann and Miller have been added to the faculty of the school of fine arts in the music department. Professor Miller will talk to the Y. M. C. A. Sunday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock in the Christian church. E. G. Brown received a number of photographs and an interesting letter from Dr. Martin who is in South America for the University. The members of the party are well and getting along nicely in their work. The best ice cream at Vic's. The engineers held a meeting Friday noon for the purpose of talking over the project of getting an Engineer's year book. Professors Diemer and Haworth are favorable to the idea and made short talks. The purpose of the book will be to advertise the K. U. engineering school by showing something of the character and work done here. Copies will be distributed throughout the state. Suppers at Vic's. On Saturday, March 19th, the delegates to the M. E. conference went in a body down to Baldwin to visit the university there and also to hold a joint meeting with the South Kansas Conference which met there. They were accompanied by a number of K. U. students. At noon a dinner was spread for the visiting delegates in the new gymnasium. Two of the K. U. boys got in line with the delegates and marched into the building and fed on the fat of the land. Even the Baker students who waited on the tables took them for M. E. divines. Word has been received by the Chancellor that the U. S. National Museum has received a shipment of ancient stone implements from Fayum, Egypt, consigned by H. W Seton-Karr. Of the shipment, 110 specimens are for Kansas university. The arrival of these interesting implements is expected daily. For a late breakfast go to Fie Kel lar's. Richard T. Ely, Professor of Economics at Wisconsin University, will deliver a series of lectures at K. U. on Economic subjects during the first term of next year. The Dramatic Club who presented Rosemary, were photographed Saturday at the Squires Studio. Squires and no other for Photos. Do it now; have Squires make your Picture. The students who have been denying themselves the pleasure of attending classes during Lent will find the hill rather interesting about Easter time. PHARMACY ALUMNI NOTES Dr. H. E. Davies, '97, formerly connected with Chicago University Medical School, is now practicing medicine at Emporia. Of late years Dr. Davies has been in poor health, and it is hoped that Kansas climate may recuperate h'm. W. E. Henry, '00, who conducted a drug store during the early winter in Topeka, sold out a short time ago and is now empleted as a drug clerk in Independence, Kansas. In some mysterious manner we have heard that the enterprising secretary of the St. Joe Drug Co., E.F. Schopflin '96, is contemplating matrimony. We do not know the name of the young lady, nor the date as to when the marriage will take place, but we feel certain that our informant and the information are wholly reliable. Let it be added, "there are others"—and in Lawrence, If the members of the Association do not wake up pretty soon and send in some nominations, the society will evidently save itself something on the printing of ballots and the postage required in sending out of the same. So far not a single nomination has been received. Remember th; time expires April 1st and there should be at least fifty nominations received by that time. A full line of EASTER HATS ...at... MISS M. E. CATHORNE'S 833 Mass. St. BOWERSOCK OPERA HOUSE Wednesday, March 30. Charles H. Yale's Everlasting Devil's Auction. New scenic wonders. The marvelous inferno consisting of following scenes magnificent scene The Fartastic Fog. The Gates of Hades, The Frozen Path, The Lake of Lost Souls, and the superb Miseen scene. Special features. The five family Orii, the four Salamonsky, Elena Rossi, Frauline Prager, Bonless Herman, Imperial dancing troupe. Prices, $1.00, 75c, 50c, and 35c Soil sale at Woodwards. Friday, April 1. Friday. April 9. John M. Hickey presents the Engl grant tragédian, JOHN GRIFFITH, Aid d by a brilliant company of legitimate players in a stupendous production of Shakespeare's immoral tragedy. Macbeth Complete and correct specifie equipment, dazzling electrical effects, startling chemical illusions, sensational battle tableaux, etc. A tale of enchantment in six acts surpassing any performance oerion in this city Prices 25, 50, 75 and $1.00, $1.50. Boxes $1.50. Saturday, April 2. THE TED E. Faust Minstrels. ALL WHITE. Prices 25c., 50c. and 75c. A WORD TO THE BUYER! Your particular attention is called to the class of work now being turned out at the studio; also to our CAREFULLY SELECTRD STOCK OF MOUNTS. Prompt and careful attention given to all orders. Oldest established Studio in Lawrence. 615 Massachusetts Street MISS TUNO SHANE. PHOTOGRAPHER. Easter Corsets. Eidt Forn The most complete line of the best standard makes is to be found in this department; all the new shapes in Batistes and contril at popular prices from 50c up. A. D. Weaver. --- EASTER FOOTWEAR That's what we have; all the New Styles and Leathers. Our new Oxfords are beauties. You do not want to miss seeing them before buying, we can save you money. Starkweather Shoe Company Easter Week at Innes.' In order that the last days of March and the first two days of April forming the week before Easter may be the best in our business history, we offer the following additional inducements to those already advertised. LADIES NECKWEAR—Modeled into the shapes that delight fastideous ladies, together with Lace Collars, Ruchings and everything that is new in Neckwear. RIBBONS—We carry the best Ribbons in any market. Nowhere else can there be found such splendid assortment. Our soft finish Mousselline Ribbon, wide at 25 a yard, are in good demand. KID GLYOES—Perrin Freres, the glove that has no rival. For Easter Tide trade we show a line of unprecedented strength and about double our usual ass't. VERY ATTRACTIVE—Never before were we able to place before our trade such a wonderfully attractive stock of Hosiery far ladies, gentlemen, children, boys and girls, as we are now doing CORSETS—Possibly every and any Corset that you can name can be supplied by our department. Innes, Bullene & Hackman.