STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. SMOKING MUST STOP IN OREAD BUILDINGS NUMBER 36. Board Makes Public An Order Barring The Use of Tobacco FROWNS ON CAMPUS PUFFS Where Women or Visitors Might be Affected The Habit is Held in Disfavor Smoking in or around University buildings must cease, according to a recent ruling of the Board of Administration made public this morning. Besides putting a stop to the use of tobacco on the streets and buildings, as well as inside the Board requests that all campus smoking cease at once. The habit is particularly obnoxious if inudged in where women or visitors congregate, according to the order. The statement, which has been sent to the proper University authorities for enforcement, is as follows: "It is hereby ordered by the Board of Administration of Educational Institutions that no smoking be allowed in University buildings, or upon the steps or approaches of the same; ordered further that smoking upon the grounds where women students or visitors congregate is regarded as unlawful by law, that it is the request of the Board that students refrain altogether from smoking on the grounds." SENIORS WILL EAT, SING, WRESTLE, BOX, AND YELL The senior social committee announced this morning that the program for the smoker Nov. 12 would consist of quartet music, wrestling and boxing matches, songs, yells, and even cheering faculty members, and students. Plenty of cigars and apples will be furnished. OREAD GOLFERS LOSE TO TOPEKA PLAYERS Tags admitting to the smoker went on sale this morning at twenty-five cents each, the committee ex-posed the truth of the sale of a large number of tickets. Waiter Is Now Useless The Oread golfers were: L. W Kinnairn, Funnell, A. Sterling, Cooper, Josselyn, Patterson, M. Sterling Crawford, and Bromsickel. A team of the Oread Golf Club was defeated by members of the Topeka Country club on the Topeka links Saturday in a well-matched match that will go back to return game will be played on the Oread links some time this month. Water is Now Useless After falling thirty feet from the first floor to the stone floor of the basement the waiter at the 1320 Ohio street boarding house was uninured. Class Hears W. R. Nelson About two o'clock in the morning Thursday the household was awakened by a terrible noise in the kitchen. The boys rooming in the house rushed down the stairs, clad in pajamas, and they found that the dumb waiter had fallen and sustained serious injuries. Seven members of Prof. L. N. Flint's class an advertising went to Kansas City Saturday to get a look at the Star and Post newspaper plants, an advertising agency, an engraving plant and other places where advertising is a matter of the day's work. The class met w. R. Nelson, owner and editor of the Star, who made Debaters to Talk Then Elect - Debaters to Talk, Then Elect The question for debate tonight in the University Debating Society is, "Resolved, That the United States is in the position to impose law." After the regular debate a new set of officers will be elected for the next six weeks. A large attendance is required. Game Depressed Law Class Game Depressed Law Class Professor Humble of the School of Law showed his interest in the Oklahoma game by allowing one of the students to furnish the class with reports of the game as fast as they came to the Daily Kansas office. Miss Agnes Anderson, an analyst in the food laboratory at the University testified in a pure food case at Wichita last week. She returned to the University Saturday morning. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, MONDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 3. 1913. VICE-PRESIDENT SENDS PICTURE TO PHI GAMS A large picture of Vice-President Thomas Marshall together with his autograph was received yesterday at a house. It came as a complete surprise. A letter of explanation said, "Following the suggestion and example of former Vice-President Fairbanks who is a very loyal Phi Gam and in compliance with several requests, I am sending each charter my picture with the university's photography service. With all kinds of success in the ensuing year and in the future, I am fraternally yours, Thomas Marshall." LONDON MAN SPEAKS AT CHAPEL TOMORROW Langdon Davies, Athlete And Scholar From Cambridge, Will Talk Langdon Davies the speaker for tomorrow's chapel is connected with the Garton Foundation, an English organization working in the interest of international questions, especially peace, armament, and, war. His talks are not theoretical, the chapel committee says, but tend to the practical and the economic question which discusses, Mr. Davies, holds a master of arts degree, was an athlete holding a number of records while in school, and was president of the Cambridge Union, the highest honor that can be paid to an undergraduate in that school. In a game featured by the good work of the Jayhawker forwards, the Kansas soccer team defeated the Haskell Indians Saturday morning by the score of 2 to 0. The game played on the Government grounds. KANSAS TAKES SECOND SOCCER VICTORY, 2-0 The Redskin eleven really had no chance to break up the splendid work of the Crimson eleven. Immediately after each kickoff the Kansas forwards would take part in the work on the part of the Haskell backs, and a large amount of luck, kept the Kansas from scoring more than twice. LAWS WILL HEAR TALKS FROM CHICAGO PUBLISHER Mr. R. A. Daly of the West Publishing Company of Chicago will deliver a series of lectures to the middle and senior classes of the School of Law this week. Mr. Daly as personal representative of the publishing company will lead these lectures leading schools of the United States, and in general shows he student "where and how to find the law." CHESS WILL BE ADDED TO UNIVERSITY SPORTS Do you play chess? If so you should call up Victor LaMer, Bell phone 1049 and make arrangements to come to a meeting to be held tonight in LaMer's room at 1128 Ohio. A University chess club will be organized. Those who intend to play should bring a board and men. A lecture on the collection of etchings now on exhibition in room 301 Administration building and an illustration of the process of etching will be given by Prof. A. Griffith at the university tomorrow. The etching is free and will be on the third floor of the Administration building. The Graduate Club will meet on the campus tonight, weather permitting, otherwise at Myers hall at 7:45. This is not to be a business trip or a social day. Refreshements are prompted to those who attend. The University of Michigan alumni is arranging for the awarding of four trophy cups t the most valuable players on the Michigan football team. Graduates to Meet Tonight. The first meeting of the annual board has been called by Russell Clark, editor-in-chief, for Wednesday evening in room 6, Green hall. Unsettled weather today and Tuesday. Some snow tonight and a cold north wind. Colder tonight. Temperatures today: The Weather 9 p. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 7 n. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 6 a. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Manager Hamilton Expects Thousands Announcees Price Of Tickets RECORD CROWD WILL WATCH HUSKERS LOSE "The inquiries received concerning seats for the Nebraska-Kansas game indicate that there will be as large an attendance as for the Missouri game last year," says Manager W. O. Hamilton, "so the same preparations will be made for handling the crowd as for the big game last year." Tickets will not be placed on sale until after the Washburn game, but applications for seats will be received by mail and filed in the order received when accompanied by money to cover the price of same. Out of town applications must include a draft or post office money plus twelve cents for registering the return of the tickets. The Kansas students can have the accommodations in the north bleachers as in the other games this season. All the south and western bleachers will be reserved, and box seats will be built in on the south side lines. The prices of seats are: general admission (north bleachers), $1.100; reserved seats south bleachers, $1.50; box seats, south side line, $2.00; auto seats (limited number on north side lines), $2.00. Manager Hamilton says University students desiring reserved seats should apply at once at his office, when telephone orders will be considered. One dollar is allowed on student tickets on the purchase of any ticket. The student tickets admit to north bleachers. SOPHOMORES PLAN "BUM" NOV. 22 TO GET ACQUAINTED The first, Sophomore "bum" will be held November 22 according to the committee, which met last week. The "bum" will consist of entreaties and dance, be enjoyed by the whole class. Dancing will be tabooed. The "bum" plan is being used as a means of getting the class acquainted with itself, and has advantages over the smoker in that the young ladies of the class will also be in attendance, says the committee. The program has not yet been decided upon but the committee promises that those sophomores who are unable to go to the Missouri football game at Columbia on that day will be able to make up the loss in part by attending the get-together entertainment. CHANCELOR WILL DISCUSS ATHLETICS AT WASHINGTON Chancellor Frank Strong will attend the convention of the National Association of State Universities in Washington, D. C.; November 11 and 12, in the program in the round table discussion of the control of athletics. The National Association of State Universities has for its object the discussion of and exchange of ideas and opinion on problems which are common to all state universities. Practically all state universities are members, and will be represented in Washington. Mr. Barnum Brown, '96, was looking over the museum and visiting old friends Friday. Mr. Brown is with the American' Museum of Natural History of New York City, and has been working for the past three years in the Canary Islands to fossil fossil enthusiastically over the collections aided to the paleontology department since his last visit here. So far only a small number of students have availed themselves of the opportunity to attend the etching exhibit now going on in the Administration building. The etchings on exhibit are drawn by the members of the Chicago Society of Etchers of which many prominent artists belong. The exhibit will continue until Saturday, Nov. 7. Pleased With Museum Students Avoid Art Y. M. G. in "Movie" Business A one-reel Powers "Chivalry Days" "One and a two-reel Eclair feature of the Rablebill" will be the program at the Pattee Thursday night, Nov. 6. The Y. M. C. A. will have charge of the theater. All proceeds derived will go to the Y. M. C. A. Week-night date rules have been suspended for this date. Misa Nettie Goodell, '90, was in Lawrence visiting the University Friday. Her home at the present time is in Sedgwick. KANSAS EDUCATORS TO GO EAST FOR BIG MEETINGS E. T. Hackney, E. W. Hoch, and, Mrs. Cora G. Lewis, the members of the Board of Administration, leave for Washington the latter part of this week where they will attend three conventions, the National sociation for Conservation, Nov. 12, the National Association of Agricultural Colleges, from Nov. 12 to 15, and the National "Conservation Congress, Nov. 17 and 18. Dean Jardine and President Waters of the Agricultural College will attend the agricultural association meeting, and Chancellor Strong will represent the University at the tate university association meeting. DIRECTORY COMES OUT IN TWO WEEKS This Year's Book Will Be "Better Than Ever Before" Before" The University directory in a more complete form than it has ever before been issued, will be off the press within two weeks and distributed to the students of the University. The book is a register of the students, faculty, officers, and employees for the year 1913-14. It includes the constitutions, rules and by-laws of student organizations. The list of organizations, much larger than last year, will be included and the book contains new rulings of the two student councils passed since last year. This year the cover of the book is printed in duo-tone ink, a light brown well displaying the cover design. Last year's directory contained seventy-six pages, but the printer has not yet completed it. Will all eighty-five or more pages this issue. Two thousand five hundred copies will be printed. KANSAS TO BEAT NEBRASKA s. Haymaker, Manhattan Quarter, Says Jayhawkers Will Win Henley Haymaker, K. S. A. C. quarterback, visited former schoolmates at Fairmount yesterday. Haymaker picks Kansas as probable winner of the Missouri Valley Conference Championship largely because of superior strength in the line. He says Nebraska's backfield may be better but not enough to offset the difference in line strength. Haymaker, who was end on the Fairmount state champions of two years ago, is going for a game field goal or U. Saturday missing a field goal only by inches and making several long gains with the ball—Wichita Eagle. TOPEKA TEACHERS WILL HAVE COLLEGE SECTION In the State Teachers' Association at Topeka next week, a new feature in the nature of a college section will be inaugurated. The new branch of the association has long been considered by the teachers of the schools of higher education as necessary. Professors Hopkins, Walker, U. G. Mitchell, Trettine, and Miss Elizabeth Nowell of the University are the program of the state meeting. Information concerning the college section can be secured from O. G. Markham of Baldwin, chairman that branch of the state association. A long line of students kept Dean Templa's office busy this morning. By order of the faculty no grades will be announced except on the first Monday and Tuesday of each month. The rush was so great this morning that no other work could be done in the office. TOMORROW IS LAST DAY TO GET COLLEGE GRADES Dean F. W. Blackmar of the Graduate School, who has been absent from the University all year on account of illness, met his chase for the first time this morning in F. H. Hoader has been acting dean. Dean Blackmar Back Mrs. Jarrell Will Speak Myra Williams Jarrell will talk to the classes in journalism tomorrow afternoon. Mrs. Jarrell has been connected with the Holton Signal for a number of years and has also done newspaper syndicate work. Mrs. Jarrell Will Speak Prof. H. P. Cady gave a lecture on "liquid air" before the students of the Whiting high school, Friday night. TRIO OF STARS WIN THE OKLAHOMA GAME Brilliant Showing of Invincible Three Cinches Contest For Sooners OWEN'S MEN USE OPEN PLAY Forward Passes Responsible For Many Gains—Reeds Goes Through Line Almost at Will (By Landon Laird) Oy lander. To the wonderful playing of Claude Lee, Raymond Court-wright, and Elmer Capshaw the Kansas Jayhawkers our defeat at the hands of the Oklahoma Sooners at Norman Friday. The wonderful Oklahoma backfield was the whole show for the Sooners. The line held well, but the line was doped to do that; Johnson, the midget quarterback, ran the team well and showed excellent headwork in the pinches, but he is a first-year man and has his years of stardom to come. To the three great backs Oklahoma owes its victory. Sooners Used Open Play Kansas played good ball. Handi-capped to no inconsiderable extent by the absence of Strothers from the game, an early injury to Greenlees, and Detwiler's charley horse, the Jayhawkers nevertheless fought hard and died hard. The team showed more "pep" in the last three minutes of play during the preceding three quarters of the game, but they went up against a good team, a team trained on the defense from the Minnesota Shift, a team which opened up a new style of football to which the Jayhawkers had a hard time adapting themselves. The Sooner game was open. Forward passes were relied upon to bring the most scores to the Norman men. Combined with a fast defense when running back punts, the passed spelled victory for Oklahoma. Reeds was decidedly the individual star of the game. The big fullback, unjustly barred against Missouri, went around the Jayhawker ends time and again for big gains, shot through the line for first downs whenever needed, and practically ran the team from his position behind the line. When the Oklahomaans are being pushed back by the Kansas line, or when they had five yards to make and then down to 17, the team turned to Reed for their inspiration—and he enristured it. At times he run the team entirely. Johnson, the quarter, would give up his position and fill in on the line. Reeds, playing 15 yards behind the ball at full would shout the orders, and the other 10 men would execute them. Standing six feet two inches, and weighing 180 pounds, the big back loomed up above all of the rest of the players, and during every minute of play he would form a barrier in the depths of a mass play at center, or skirting the ends, with head tucked low, off for a 20 yard run. Capshaw weighs but 146 pounds, and Courtwright tips the beams at 150. Their lightness, which seems sufficient to bar them from the strenuous game, was more than overbalanced by their speed. One on their shoulders field the two players could not be stopped. Capshaw was a mere flash when he went through the north goal for the Sooners' last score. Needs, Capshaw, Courtwright, Stars Capshaw and Courtwright were able assistants of the Oklahoma star. During the first quarter they carried the ball, and Reeds ran interference. In the second quarter Reeds lugged the pigskin himself—twice for a touchdown. Johnson starred during the third quarter and Capshaw "came back" in the final period. Both teams made a striking appearance when they trotted out at the beginning of the first quarter. The Jayhawkers were big and confident, the Sooners light and hopeful. Kansas warmed up in the usual style. The team impressed itself on the minds of the Oklahoma roots as being confident, perhaps a little too much so. Kansas Too Confident Strothers, his sprained ankle heavily bandaged, limped out on the field to try his hand at kicking. It was no use; his first attempt was a failure. The ball never bounced nor bend his foot and there was no chance for him to get in the game. At the sound of the whittle Reeds lifted a 60 yard place kick down the field, Greenlee standing on his own line recovering the ball. The shifty halfback raced 25 yards back up the field before downed. Kansas shift- TEN ANSWERS TO THE QUERY. How Did It Happen? No. 1. Claude Reeds, Oklahoma full back. A few of his accomplishments: He ran the team when Johnson got in a tight pinch; he kicked 55 yards on every punt; kickoffs averaged 60 yards; on broken field running he shook off three sets of tacklers on his first touchdown; he broke up at least half of the Jayhawker forward passes playing alone behind the line; running interference for Capshaw and Coffright wristed the trio, and never to evade the tackler who sought to evade his interference; on more than one occasion, he climbed over, slipped under, and burrowed beneath the heart of the line from three to fifteen yards gain. No. 2. The Sooner defense formation. Playing ten men in the line, and leaving Reeds alone to cover the entire backfield and play safety, Owen evolved a system of play against which the Minnesota Shift, much touted as it was, proved useless. No. 3. The absence of Strothers from the Jayhawker lineup. Wilson did all the putting for the Lawrence aggregation, and did not average more than 35 yards on each kick. Reeds averaged from 50 to 55. No. 4. The injuries to Greenlees and Detwiler. Deprived of the services of the two regular backs, the Jayhawker could furnish no relief for Sommers and Martin, the two substitute backs, and Detwiler, handicapped by a charley horse, together with Greenlees, and his injured leg, were practically of no use to the Jayhawker coaches. Jayhawkers The Oklahoma interference. On each backfield play the Sooners would run three men ahead as interference for the man carrying the ball. If Reeds carried the ball, Courtwright, Johnson, and Capshaw, would run in front of the big fullback, each with his hands on the other's hips, and the play was so fast that the Jayhawkers couldn't catch the man with the ball from behind. No. 6. Elmer Capshaw and Raymond Courtwright. These two men, playing right and left half, were second only to Reeds in carrying the ball, and running interference for the Sooners. Combined with the fullback, and Johnson, they would form quartet players to form the greatest backfield seen in the Missouri Valley this year. No. 7. Kansas lack of practice. The snow which fell in Lawrence the greater part of last week handicapped the Jayhawkers severely in practicing for the big game. With but one workout since the contest with the Kansas Aggies the week before, and the rest of the week in grimmum play and chalk talks, the Crimson and the Blue had probably the least amount of practice that had ever been afforded them, the week before a big game. Nos. 8 to 10 inclusive. Claude Reeds. eu; the play which has defeated teams like Missouri, Drake, and the Kansas Aggeris began work and the Oklahomaans looked it over curiously. The rootsher half expected it to break up the Sooner defense, it had played the other team but playing on the line, leaving Reeds alone, twenty yards back to play for a punt, Owen, the crafty Sooner coach, killed the play. Wilson was forced to kick, 35 yards out of bounds. The Sooners quickly lined up, and began their series of splendid end runs, guarded by wonderful interference. They advanced the ball to the Jayhawkers' 35 yard line. Courtwright in the main lugging the oval, but there Kansas held and recovered the ball on downs. Kansas lost it, the Sooners recovered, and so both teams see-sawed the pigskin up and down the field during the play. Kansas gained a little, and the coaches' hopes were raised. Oklahoma however soon recovered possession of the ball, and as Courtwright, standing on his own 40 yard line, raced down the field for a 15 yard gain, the whistle blew, and the first period ended. First Quarter. No Score Okahama scored soon after play was resumed. A great forward pass, Reeds to Courtwright, gained 26 yards, Reeds dripped around right end for 10, and Okahama had scored on the Jayhawkers, the first straight touchdown that had been chalked up unjustly the team this year. Aided by great runs by Capshaw and Reeds, Oklahoma carried the ball down to the Kansas' 20 yard line, and a moment later the "Big Train" walked through the Kansas defense for another score. Kansas Made Lone Score Then the Jayhawkers woke up. Then the Indians scored. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF HERBERT FUNT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Editor-in-Chief GLEENDON ALVINE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Associate Editor JOHN C. MADDEN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Managing Editor LANDON HARD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Special Editor LANDON LEE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . High School Editor BUSINESS STAFF EDWIN ABELS RAY ELDBRIDGE JEOC BISHOP - Advertising Manager Circulation, Manager Advertising REPORTORIAL LOCY BAROND JEREMIA DYCNE JAMES DYNE RANDOLF KENNEDY SAM DOWNER REPORTORIAL STAFP BANK HANDLERS Forwards as lawrence mail master September 17, 1910, at the postoffice Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879 Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of journalism Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance; one term, $1.50 Phone, Bell K, U, 25, Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, at www.kansan.edu Lawrence. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate life of the, University of Kansas; to go further than merely provide information; to be a teacher; to be fair to no priorities; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courageous; to learn more serious problems to other students; in all, to serve to the best of its ability. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1913. Last Friday we played O.K.lahoma. Perhaps the commonest remark about the Oklahoma defeat is, "Well, if we had to lose, we'd rather lose to Oklahoma than to anyone else." Add to this unstinted praise for Bennie Owen and his great fullback, Reeds, and you know how Kansas feels about the surprise-and-deluge. Oklahoma just walloped us, and we have no excuse to offer. But when everyone knows that an old Jayhawkcoach coached the winning team and that his greatest player, playing a clean game, came out of every scrimmage smiling and then went through or around us for another gain—well, we've no cause for bitterness there; and there's no use trying to stop lightning, you know. In the end, therefore, there's little sting in a defeat at the hand of Bennie Owen, for he's one of us. And the wonderful showing of Reeds recalls the playing of our own "Tommy" Johnson; we know just what hit us. Everything considered, we take our hats off to Ola homa. AND TO OUR ROOTERS Did you hear the rooter with the megaphone voice rousing the student district to meet the team when it came back from Oklahoma? If you didn't, you missed out on what is the best thing about football at Kansas this year—the way the rooters are backing the team, winning or losing. It was cold and dark and they didn't know whether it was a false alarm or not; but before daylight a mob of students "with the pep" were at the station waiting; and they gave the team a real welcome when it arrived. This kind of spirit looks awfully good. It is the kind of backing that will send the team against Nebraska full of fight and confidence—enough, we think, to bring home a victory. We take off our hats to the rooters-who-got-up before-daylight. We rise to ask which is the more contemptuous; the glance of a fat co-ed at $ \mathbf{a} $ thin co-ed or the glance of a thin co-ed at a fat one.—University of Washington Daily. The hen stood on the river's brink And gave her college cry, Until a frog in pained surprise, Politely asked her why. She said, "Kind sir, you see that duck Out there upon the water?" Well, that's a winning college crew, And I'm her Alma Mater!" Cornell Widow. Dictionaries are like watches; the worst is better than none and the best cannot be expected to go quite true. Samuel Johnson. So long as you aspire, others will conspire; so long as you try, others will vie. You'll have hostility to face in every place and at every place. Go straight to your goal.—Herbert Kaufman. The average man can work hard and well when the band is playing and the bleachers are going crazy, but it demands real grit to do the little things and do them well when there is no ragtime accompaniment.—Personality. OCTOBER SUNRISE Gauunt, leafless trees, with barren, blackened boughs In allouette against a cold blue sky, Dim with the vaporous haze of promised dawn; A bleak horizon softened by a veil Of shifting smoke; oppressing, breathless, silence Until a dull red shadow,——soft suffused, Outshines the star, pale, shrinkling in the east, And morning breaks upon a shell-like cloud Aglow with roseate amber, like a Pearl. —Adella M. Pepper. DESIDERATA Four things a man must learn to do If he would keep his record true; To think, without confusion, clearly; To love his fellow man sincerely; To act from honest motives purely; To trust in God and Heaven merely. Henry Van Dyke. When gossip travels it always throws on the high-speed lever--Personality. (Communications to the Daily Kansan must be signed as an evidence of good faith, though not necessarily for publication. The column is open to all Daily Kansan readers). COMMUNICATIONS Many of us this year have suffered persecution and scourging of the flesh because we failed to comply with a nonsensical rule regarding caps. We must take some means to safeguard ourselves in the future. With all humility, I offer the following plans knowing better ones could be evolved if the more intellectual freshmen would set to work. Some might retort that the intellectual freshmen wear the caps, but this is beside the point. I wish it understood that the ensuing plans are merely theoretical and that I disclaim all responsibility for what may occur in case they be tried. AN OPEN LETTER TO THE FRESHMEN Editor of the Kansan; Editor of the Kansan: First: try to pass as an upperclassman. In attempt- ting this the following ideas may be helpful: do not look at anyone whom you may meet on the campus. An upperclassman never does. It is a sure and certain betrayal of first-year proclivities to peer into the faces of ol persons encountered on the walks. Second, assume an air of indifference in class. All upperclassmen do this. Try to be as reposeful as possible. Third: form no acquaintances. They are sure to give one away sooner or later. The best way to avoid identification is to eat at a restaurant and room out near Haskell. This will have the advantage of quietness, as the students out there don't make much noise on account of their Indian reservation. If questioned as to your classification, always use the term "first year man." Another plan is to carry a cap in a convenient pocket, where it can be assumed on a moment's notice. COURTESY? Freshman. Editor Daily Kansan: Dear Sir; I was greatly impressed by an occurrence in last Tuesday's chapel. Two elderly ladies, apparently visitors, came into chapel, and after looking in vain for seats went up to the balcony. Here they were again unsuccessful and remained standing. One row of seats near them was filled with men students, who merely gave the ladies a cursory glance. None offered the ladies his seat. After several minutes, two girls from a row farther back arose and gave their seats to the visitors. This lamentable lack of courtesy on the part of many of the men students may be seen every day. It is probably only thoughtlessness but, whatever the cause, it is regrettable because it only creates a bad impression of the University over the state, and also furnishes material for much unjust criticism. Respectfully yours. J.V.B Editor of Daily Kansan: WANTED-HONOR SENTIMENT Kansas City, Mo., Oct. 29, 1913. Daily Kaneen To come right down to it, there are a good many of us, not blessed with phonograph memories, who would like to prescribe the ducking-stool for professors who demand sheeaf feats of memory in quizzes, and alac the day, there are a few such still at large on Oread; but my humble opinion is that the approval of mere students to either side of us whether it be in class or at table where our deeds of valor are related, has a weight with most of us, astounding as compared with that of the several commending shields of profs. several commending comments. What do K. U. students think of a man who does not do his university work honestly appears to me to be the head of this particular need. I think there are very few who think we need an honor system here. Let there be an honor sentiment and the rest will take care of its self. If every student of Kansas University would face the issue squately, the men and women of Kansas would not tolerate graft in this form any more than in any other. A P. S. B. KANSAS CHIVALRY Is the "Jayhawker" jealous of the title so appropriate, that it causes him to ignore the fair co-ed standing through the hour of chapel, by freezing with all his might on the seat he has secured by an early arrival at the exercises? Is this action so prominently in evidence at every chapel exercise due to ignorance or pure cussness? Let's adopt at least a little more chivalry of the right sort in our treatment of women folks. laid? Grocer—“Absolutely, madam. The farmer I purchased them from won't allow his hens to lay them any other way.” —New York Mail. O. K—Lady—"Pardon me, but are these eggs fresh laid?" A Student. Not Missed.—Miss my husband? Why should I? He left me plenty of money, and at breakfast I stand a newspaper up in front of his place and think he's here just the same." —Puck. Other Means — It isn't necessary to have an automobile to run down one's neighbors. —Salt Lake Desert News. The verdict of a jury is the opinion of that juror who most needs a bath. —Smart Set. AT THE LAWRENCE CHURCHES Trinity Church (Episcopal) - Vermont and Berkeley. The Rev. Evan Alexander Edward, M. A., rector. 7:30 a.m. The Holy Communion. Service over by 8; 10 a.m. Sunday School Model Kindergarten from 10-12 in charge of experienced teacher. Student classes forming in upper school. Students invited at to attend Dean Skilton's lectures on Faith and Worship. 11 a.m. Morning prayer and sermon; 5 p. m., evening prayer and sermon. The full choir at both services. All welcome. Notice O. P. Leonard's 'Pantatorium' is on the job again this year. Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 501, Home 180 Students We Give Club Rates 841 Mass. St. Upstairs. FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Lawrence Pantorium 2 W. Warren Both Phone 510 Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE A.R. SPLADING DIVISION TRABE SPALDING MARK 4 . 1924 A "Square Deal" for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantee each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding Trade-Mark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. A. G. SPALDING & BROS. 1120 Grand Ave. Kansas City, Mo. Send for our catalogue. Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 Vermont Phones 139 BERT WADHAM The College Inn Barber When calling for a good brand of 5c CIGARS SMOKE Robert Hudson, Pierson's Hand Made At all first class dealers We have some good values in Pennants & Posters ip on point J. W. Keeler 939 MASS. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND Fresh Oysters, Regular Meals, Short Orders, Confectionery. Cigars, Etc. JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 Massachusetts Street PERFUME and TOILET ARTICLES RAYMOND'S DRUG STORE We do finishing Kodaks and Supplies Lowney's Chocolates McColloch's Drug Store LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. W. H. Quenakbush, Pres.; E. S. Weatherby, Supt. Fairfax Hotel and Dining Room Large Cool Comfortable Dining Room with prompt service. Special rates to club "feeds." Buy a commutation ticket. O. E. LEARNARD Manager 708-710 Mass. The Folks at Home Why not send it to them? would enjoy reading the University Daily Kansan. It would keep them in touch with the University and you. Phone the address to K. U. 25 or drop a card in any University mail box. PRICE FOR ONE YEAR $2.50 W. A. GUENTHER Phone 226 721 Mass. St. GIVE US A TRIAL PHONE 100 FOR TAXICABS PEERLESS GARAGE, Phone 100. The WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Syrupr $100 Capital $100,000 Corner Mass, and Quincy. Issues its own Letters of Credit and Travellers Checks. The only way to carry your money in safety. Banking of all kinds solicited. Surplus $100,000 One hundred and ninety girls went through last year at the University of Minnesota without assistance from home, most of them at the same time taking a prominent part in college activities. About one hundred of these taught, in addition to their regular work, a number did clerical work and stenography, while others performed social service work or did printing, sewing or housework. Freshmen at the University of Pennsylvania have unanimously pledged themselves to an honor system. The system places no definite restrictions upon the students. In a general way they are pledged to maintain the system "in the spirit and conduct of a gentleman." The prince expressed the intention of introducing football into his country, as well as baseball and "American college football is altogether too brutal," says Prince Madicine Q. Cele of Zulukland, who has who has been studying at the guest of the family of Robert T. P. Gobert, captain of the Harvard team. basket-ball, but will tame the first-named down considerably. Prince Cole is in this country to raise money for a trade and industrial school in Zululand, and to take back a bride. Assistant Secretary Newton of the treasury department, has refused permission to Carroll Dwight Hale to absent himself from the life-saving service in Northwestern University football team at Evanston III. President Wilson had referred to the department a petition signed by a host of Northwestern students, asking for the release of Hale, whose resignation the keeper of the life-saving station refused to accept, on the ground that this was the most important time of the year for experienced life-savers to be on duty. Leland Stanford University will give university credit for debating. Intercollegiate debaters will receive two hours' credit and members of literary societies will receive one hour's credit. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PROFESSIONAL CARDS W **C** MCCONNELL Physician 418th Home 209th Homes, Inc. Home 163rd Inc.,idence, 1436 Team Tern Home 75th Inc.,idence, 1263 Team J. F. BROCK, Optometer and Specialist Office 802 Mass Site, Phone 695-347-1800, Web site phone 695-347-1800 BARRY REDING, M. D. Eye care nurse, M.D., B.A. Education, A-B. A- B. Ed. Phones: 813, 314, 815 $\textcircled{1}$ A. HAMMAN M. D. Eye, ear, and head. $\textcircled{2}$ A. HAMMAN M. D. Eye, ear, and head. $\textcircled{3}$ A. HAMMAN M. D. Eye, ear, and head. $\textcircled{4}$ A. HAMMAN M. D. Eye, ear, and head. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BRYON, Dentist, Over Wilson's Drug Store. Boll Phone 507. J. R. BRCIPELM, D. D. O. 833 Mazzett's街 Both phones, office and phone G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diseases of Brain and Neck. Residence, 2002, 5th. Both morns. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12 F. A. L. Bhid. Residence 1300 Tenn. Phone 211. DR. H. L. CHAMBERNS, Office over *science* Studio. Both phones. DE, BURT R. WHITE Osteopath. Phones, Bell 938, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. St. B. T. Gilliam, M. D. Offere, corner Vermont Photos 509 Photos 600 J. E. Blaire Physiology and Surgery Office 280 to 1900, m, i, p; 300 to 1900, m, i, p; 200 to 1900, m, i, p; 150 to 1900, m, i, p; and 100 to 1900, m, i, p CLASSIFIED Barbers Frankill's Barber Shop, 1025 Mass Two good barbers. Sacrificed assured J. C. Frankl's Barber Shop, 913 Mass Four clients. Four chairs never have to be Razors housed. Plumbers Phona Kennedy Plumbing Co. for, gas massage Mazda lampe 1957 608 895. Ladies Tailors Mrs. Ellison, Drossmaking and Ladies Talloring, 910 Mass. Phones 2411, over www.drossmaking.com Ladies Tailoring and Dressmaking. Gowns for all occasions. All work guaranteed. Mrs. T. B., Daily, 914 Mass. Sanitary cleaning establishment in connection. Phone (212) 658-3100. Lawrence Sewing School. Lodies' tailoring freshmanstreet. Sewing school 814 Mast. Phones 550. Miss Powers; Miss C. McClar- noy. Hair Dressers Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-goods, "Mariella" toilet, toilet bag, "Mariella" toilet 1372. Home 31. 31. Select Hair Dress Shop. 927 Mass St. Sporting Goods D & M sporting goods & athletic supplies Kenndy & Ernst, $26 Mass. 8. Phones Jennifer Kowal Hiahawa Cafe for regular meals, lunch and short orders when down town. Open after Bring your shoes to Fornays, for guaranteed shoe repairing. We can help you with the work the best. Let us figure on your furnaces work. Everything in stores © Oborn & Co., #816 Mass. St. Louis. Ed. W. Papsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler of jewelry and Jewelry. Bell Phi 177 Maus. Queen City College. System and sewing techniques. Mrs. Kelsey Blair, 834 Kell, mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 Kell, Burls One trial means no risk, small investment. The good news is that a smoke W-T-Will possesses bionomical gases. Eldridge House Stable I have a nice line of plain china for painting; also some already decorated. Orders taken. Estelle Northrup, studio 733 Mass. St., upstairs. Bell Phone 152. W. E. MOAK, Prop. Taxicabs, Hacks, Livery Baggage Hauled Both Phones 148 See the New Parker Self-Filling Fountain Pen Office Supplies, Typewriters F. I. CARTER 1025 Mass. Bell phone 105 Come on Down to JIM'S Tonight 1101 Mass. St. PROTSCH The College Tailor Lawrence Transfer Co. Trunk Hauling Phone 15 All announcements or items for the University calendar either for the coming week or for future events should be given to Mr. Cronemeyer, at the department of journalism office, by 4:30 p. m. Friday. It is desired to make the calendar a complete schedule of University events and the co-operation of those interested is requested. Send the Daily Kansan home. High School News of Kansas A STUDENT ASSE'N FOR SCHOOL'S ACTIVITIES (Rv Erma Yates) (19) Erin Junction City, Oct. 31—A Student Enterprise Association has been formed in Junction City high school. Its prime purpose is to encourage and control all student activities. The membership of the S. E. A includes the whole student body. The executive board is composed of a president, a secretary, a faculty representative, and others on academic teams and the presidents of all high school societies. This plan has been found to be very satisfactory thus far this year, as it is more business-like than the usual irresponsible bodies employed in high school undertakings. The suggestion for its organization came from the new principal, Mr. Blair. TCTURE SHOWS HELP OTTAWA'S TENNIS COURTS (By Ellen O, Tepper) (Bill Elen O. Tepper) Ottawa, Oct. 31--The Gamma Sigma high school have arranged to have one of the picture shows tonight to obtain money to purchase equipment for a tennis court. Enough money has been obtained by the sale of bibs to ensure success in the plan. This is the societies court to be erected by the society of the school. ASHLAND DEBATERS GET READY FOR H. S. LEAGUE (By Francis W. Osborne) Ashland, Oct. 29—Ashland has again entered the debate. A debate club has been organized which at present has ten members. Preliminaries will be held in a few weeks and the teams selected for this year. Prof. O. O. Smith is coaching the teams. are nine schools in this district and major debates will no doubt be beld. The basket-ball squads have been chosen for the year and Amos Harper elected captain; Leland Hulstine, manager. Ashland has a strong team this year and expects to enter the inter-scholastic meet next spring. Professor Franks is coaching. Two of the faculty this year are graduates of K. U. U. Edith Lovejoy, English and physical training and Miss Elise Torre, Language, languag Souvenir plates of K. U. at Wolf's Book Store.-Adv. 35-2 Send the Daily Kansan home. Allegretti and Douglas chocolates Barber's Drug Store-Adv. 34 Bowersock Theatre Mon. Nov. 3rd Billy "Single" Clifford presents "himself" in (BEELIVE ME) "BELIEVE ME" A merry musical Stampede bubbling over with mirth and melody An excellent cast of dainty divinities who sing, dance and delight the eye. Beautifully costumed, Properly presented PRICES Parquet $1.00 1st 3 Rows Bal .75 Next 5 rows .50 All 2nd Bal .25 Parisian Ivory goods displayed in our window this week. Barber's Drug store.-Adv. 34 SAVE THE PIECES We have added Lens Grinding Machinery to our Optical department. Any Lens Duplicated Glasses Fited. HESTER Jeweler and Optician SAVE THE PIECES FOR RENT—Rooms for chafing- dish house keeping in new and modern house. Bell 1112; 1310 Tenn. FOR RENT—Modern six room house. Furnished. Bell 228. LOST—A white cloisonne brooch shaped somewhat like a fleur-de-lis. Call Bell 1152. 34-5 BURLINGAME STUDENTS DEUTSCH ZU SPRECHEN JAN (By Marshall Harkness) Burlingame, Oct. 30—Miss Steekel, German teacher has organized a student German club to meet once a week and discuss German customs and habits and to learn to converse more freely in German. The club has 22 members. EMPORIA FACULTY HELPS AROUSE STUDENTS' PEP (By H. Woodbury) Emporia, Oct. 30—A take-off on indoor track-metts was the method used by the E. H. S. faculty Friday night, October 24, to get the student body better acquainted and to arouse enthusiasm for the Topeka game. A small admission price was taken and booths placed through the building sold refreshments of weinies, popecorn, and candy. A little sketch was given by most greatly amused the large audience. The owner realized by this "old-time social" was about $40.00, which will be used to buy handsome red and black blankets for the football team. MAYBE THEY LIKE TO GO TO PHILLIPSBURG HIGH By Dwight H. Hardman) Phillipsburg, Oct. 29 — The Phillipsburg high school is firmly establishing its claim to the best record in attendance of any high school in the state. During the past two months the attendance has been 98.18 and 98.78 per cent respectively. There have also been no tardy marks during this time. The seniors are doing remarkably well having maintained a perfect record thus far. KINCAID STUDENT ASSN TO BUILD GYMNASIUM (By Arthur Beeding) (By Arch.) Kincaid, Oct. — The new school building here has a nearing completion and being in" day is looked forward to by the students with great pleasure as they were scattered around over town for about ten months; the new building is a modern ten-room structure with rooms fitted for laboratories and manual training. A new one thousand dollar gymnasium 40 by 70 feet with self-supporting roof and polished floor will be built as soon as possible. In sports events, social events, and school moving pictures which may be put into the school. The money for this gymnasium is borrowed by the High School Athletic Association which will keep the interest and ultimately pay for the building. Annual Meeting in December The fifth annual meeting of the engineering society will be held December 11th according to their decision of the society at their meeting last week. Marvin hall. Outing officers will be obtained for the morning and afternoon meetings, with a banquet in the evening. More specific announcements will be made later. Annual Meeting in December AMUSEMENTS The titanic character of the Grand Canyon of Arizona will be reproduced by Lyman H. Howe at the Bowersock on Tuesday, Nov. 4. This appalling fissure is now universally recognized as the most wonderful geological and spectacular phenomenon known to mankind. Stold indeed must be the spectator who view the unearthly splendor of the sublime gorge where caspers in astonishment. Its like is found nowhere in the world. It impresses mind as a chaotic under-world, just emptied of primeval floods. The spectacle presented is so vast that it seems to elude all sense of perspective or dimension. It is entirely beyond the faculty of measurement. And while it is terribly real, yet it seems spectral as a dream. It comprises a labyrinth of huge architectural forms, endlessly varied in design. On an awe-inspiring scale it alone, what the greatest painters, sculptors, orators or musicians of all ages have ever tried to express. Among the twenty other big features to be presented are thrilling scenes of rescue survivors during a terrific gale from an ocean greyhound dashed on the rocks and torn by raging seas; an aeroplane ride over Paris; wonders of deep sea life; a motor ride through the French Alps; a study in palmistry and many others. A faint realization of the immensity of the scene may be derived from the fact that in comparison with Niagara, the latter would seem nothing more than a rivalule. Mr. Howe's reproduction also shows the means of descending into the Canyon via mule-back over a trilite zig-zagging at an unrelenting tilt. K NOW U K U ENGINEERS The University Book Store 803 Mass. St. Carries a full line of drafting instruments and guarantees to save you on the purchase price. University Book Store 803 Mass. St. CALENDAR Monday 3-4 Chancellor's open hour to students. 4:30 Deutscher Vorsin (313 F.) 4:30 Mathematical club (103 A.) 7:30 University practice, (Fraser) 7:30 University Debating Society (110 Fraser). 4:30 Mathematical club (M.) 7:30 Orchestra practice (ser) 7:30 University Debating society. (110 Fraser). Tuesday 11:00 Chapel, Langdon Davies of London. 2:30 Entomological Club, (Mu.) 3-4 Chancellor's open hour to faculty. 3:30 Economics Seminar, (Lib.) 4:30 Journalism address, Mrs. Myra Williams Jarrell of Topeka. (Medic lecture room). 7:30 Glee Club practice, (Fra.) 7:30 Christian Science Society. (Myers hall). 7:30 Botany Club. (Snow lecture room). Wednesday 6:09 Mining Journal. (201 Ha.) 4:30 Cercle Francais. (306 Fra.) 7:30 Chemical Engineering Society, Prof. Cady. (Chem.) 7:30 Band rehearsal. (Chapel Fraser). 7:30 Hark Dramatic Club. (110 Fraser). 7:30 Mahdolin Club rehearsal. (116 Fraser). Thursday 7:00 Amer. Society Mech. Eng. (1607 Tenn). 7:30 Orchestral practice. (Fra.) 7:00 Chapel, Ministerial Alliance of Lawrence. Saturday 3:00 Football. K. U. vs. Wash burn. (McCook). 8-12 Sophore dance, (Gym.) ANNOUNCEMENTS The Ladies of the Faculty will be at home to the young men of the University and members of the faculty, Thursday afternoon, November 6 at Haworth hall from 3 to 5:30 o'clock. Freshman girls will get their grades from their advisors instead of at the dean's office. The advisors will not be ready to give out grades until Tuesday, Nov. 4. Graduate students are requested to congregate "where the bells ring" on the campus Monday evening, May 15. There will be plenty of "eats." The K. U. Dames will meet with Mrs. H. B. Hungerford, 1037 Kentucky street at 3 o'clock Wednesday. The Junior Smoker committee meets Wednesday, Nov. 5, at 4:45 in Myers hall. L. Bocker, chairman. Subscribe for the Daily Kansan. FROLICING FILM FUN FAST AND FURIOUS CLEVER-COMIC-CARTOONS AND AMUSING ANTICS BY LYMAN H.HOWE'S STAFF OF CAMERA MEN AND ARTISTS HOME OUNA The animated cartoons that have been presented by Lyman H. Howe on each of his more recent engagements in this city, have inspired many queries "How it is done?" The remark has often been overheard "I wonder how they do it?" while these quaint and amusing cartoons were convulsing the audience with laughter. They afford an illustration of the fact that amazement and amusement are only one of the maniacal features by which cartoons is always so pleasantly remembered—but it is a feature as important as it is exclusive. They cannot be seen at other exhibitions because Mr. Howe reserves them strictly for his own use, and evidently other film producers find them too difficult of execution and too costly to manufacture. At all events, Howe claims, though each of several of the "regular travel" program features a small fortune, yet none is more expensive than these snappy, lively "trick" pictures which so cleverly burlesque the serious, topical, industrial and natural history subjects presented. They leave the entire exhibition with a rollicking and wholesome comedy which the most jaded theater goer finds simply irresistible. The amusing antics of these cartoons are followed in intensely as the audacious scenes of the maudlin nature. Thereby they prove how keenly "a little nonsense now and then is relished by the best of men." The legion of "Howe travelers" who always find these whimsical cartons so delightful and refreshing, may be surprised to know that their production requires not only rare skill in designing the figures but also infinite patience in directing their movements. When an artist draws a cartoon for a newspaper, his work is finished when he hands it to the editor. Not so with the artist-creators of Howe's animated cartons. The drawing of the figures is only the first step—and the easiest—in the process. It is only the beginning of weeks of paints-taking labor. Among quite a few of these animated cartoons included in the program to be presented at the Bowersock Theater on tomorrow night Mr. Howe promises two of the most amusing subjects that have ever been produced in his studios. One of these depicts the strange and bad eidoscopic adventures of a tourists making the descent of the Grand Canyon of Arizona on mule-backs happen—and happen very fast. The burrows have certain ideas of their own. They proceed to carry them into effect and their "stunts" would make the wildest flights of fancy seem tame by comparison with any exploits recorded in Gilber's travels or the Arabian Nights. When the "cow jumped over the moon" it was called the compared Grand Canyon burrows. However, in another subject entitled "A Baseball Game" the cartoonist has let his humor and imagination run riot resulting in an avalanche of fun. It is "some" game. It reaches above the earth so that a field glass is necessary to locate the players, and sometimes underneath the earth. The pitcher delivers not only curves, but parabolic concentric circles, and geometric figures only recorded only in geometries. His exploits make the best efforts of your favorite pitcher sink into insignificance, no matter who he may be. So, too, with the other players here engaged in "our national game." Their achievements are heroic beyond the wildest dream of the most ardent baseball fan, whether you want "fan" or not, doesn't matter in the least. The mission of the situations, the mock seriousness and grogue antics of the players afford so much comedy that the entire game from start to finish is irresistible funny for everyone. of the most exacting and nerve-racking kind in the making of only one short strip of film, possibly no more than 30 feet in length. Directing the movement of the figure requires immense consumate skill, judgment, originality, a fine sense of humor and the unfailing patience of Job. BOWERSOCK THEATRE TUES.NOV.4 PRICES 25-35-50 SAM S. SHUBERT Matrices Wednesday and Saturday Lillian Russel IN Tragic Drama KENNEDY & ERNST 820 MASS. ST. PHONES 841 ROYAL ROCHESTER Chating dishes, casseroles, coffee machines and percolators. The finest line of metal and wood serving trays in the K. U. PANTATORIUM AND DYE WORKS Student Rates: See Our Solicitor's Cleaning and Ladies' Work a Specialty. JACK FULLERTON 1400 Louisiana Phones: Bell, 1400; Home, 140 Football Schedule Nov. 8—Washburn at Lawrence. Nov. 15—Nebraska on McCook. Nov. 22—Missouri at Columbia. Send the Daily Kansan home. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN You Smokers Get busy on this great value. A Genuine first quality Calabash with genuine Meerschaum bowl for $1.00. Think of It CARROLL'S SMITH'S NEWS DEPOT Phone 608 709 Mass. OUR SUPPLY. IS LIMITED Ask the EXTENSION Division Are you interested In Social and Political Progress? In Municipal Problems? In Art, or Music? In Literature? The University will try to secure a lecturer for you at very small expense. ADDRESS University Extension Division University of Kansas LAWRENCE Change to Accomodate Students MISSISSIPPI CAR TENNESSEE CAR Leaves Henry and Mass. 15 and 45 minutes past hour. (Old time 20 and 50). Leaves Henry and Mass. 25 and 55 minutes past hour. (Old time hour and 30). INDIANA CAR Leaves Henry and Mass. hour, 15, 30 and 45. (Old time 5,20,35 and 50). Lawrence Railway & Light Co. AMUSEMENT Billy "Single" Clifford's Past (Be heave Me). Billy S. Clifford, the American actor, while in England, was invited to spend a week-end in the country by a distinguished and elderly duchess, who rather patronizes Americans. After Clifford had arrived and had been shown to the great hall, his nostess came in. "Oh, Mr. Clifford," she gushed, "I am so glad, so very glad to have you as my guest! You see I love Americans, and I know all about you. Oh, indeed, yes I do—I know all about you." Mr. Clifford will be seen in "Believe Me" at the Bowersock on Monny, November 3rd.-Adv. Clifford looked around apprehension, "If that's so," he asked, "do you need a lawyer?" Send the Daily Kansan home. TRIO OF STARS WIN (Continued from page 1). Soon after Weildlein's kick off to Oklahoma, a Kansas back intercepted Reeds' forward pass on the Sooner 30 yard line, and Mosse's men for the first time in the game were within striking distance of the ball as they hit the line for 3 yards, a pretty forward pass, Stuewe to Wilson, gained 25., and a moment later Herb Sommers climbed over the Oklahoma line, crowded beneath their backfield, and rested the ball directly beneath the team's goal. Weildlein kicked a perfect goal, and the team was much encouraged. But all of the Kansas scoring for, the game was over. The half soon ended, the third quarter began, and the Sooners once more started their march toward the Kansas goal. Reeds, Courtwright, Capshaw, the same trio did the work, with the master hand of the big fullback always in evidence, guiding them. When Kansas got possession of the ball, and they did often, Wilson would try forward passes. Then the big fullback would leap up, and knock the ball away from the hands of the waiting Jayhawk. With ten men play in line—the Sooners this defense formation almost exclusively—the star fullback was forced to cover the whole backfield, as well as play safety, and he did it. Sooner Interference Too Good The third quarter passed without any scoring, the teams carrying the ball up and down the field by the Sooners, and even on either side. The Sooners held the ball the greater part of the period, Kansas in the main being unable to break up their great interference on the offensive. The runner carrying the ball caught the three other back field men, hand in hand, were running interference for him. They Started Too Late Johnson, the midqet quarterback snaply to the right side of the line, Spears, captain-at center, flipped the oval to Capshaw, and with Reeds, Johnson, and Court- wright running an impenetrable chain-like interference, the Sooner halfback raced 45 yards down the mound, then broke off hawker safety men, and resting the ball between the two goal posts for Oklahoma's third touchdown. Oklahoma came back in the fourth quarter, resuming once more the wonderful scoring tactics which the Jayhawkers for a single period had been able to stop. After an interchange of punts, Oklahoma got back into the middle of the field. A short line buck by Courtwright gained 5 yards, the pigskin resting exactly on the boundary line, 45 yards from Kansas' goal. With but three minutes to play, the Jayhawkers got busy, and with savage spirit, started pushing the ball back into Oklahoma territory. Hitting the line time and again, for small but consistent gains, Weldin and his men gradually carried the ball over the Snorer ground, only to be stopped by the sound of the referee's whistle, ending the game. "The team found itself only in" the "seconds of play." as Coach bink looked. Notes of The Trip Dr. Cloudman, an old football man hailing from Oklahoma City, acted as head linesman during the game, and his six feet one inches of height, surmounted by a seven inch dabble down, seen from all sides of the stadium. Boyd Field at Norman was in excellent condition for the big game. The turf was not stripped, as was the case at Manhattan, and being perfectly dry the conditions were ideal for hard, fast football. The Sooner players were all gentlemen, the kind that Benny Owen trains. When they had a fourteen point lead in the game, and the Jayhawkers were coming to life, and making their line yield, the Oklahomaans did not try to delay the game. When an intercepted forward pass fell into the field, Bloody big big dog man, would hurry after it and restore it to the hands of Jack Grover, the referee, with all haste. Arthur Mosee, the Jayhawker coach, enthusiastically cheered Capshew on his long run for the titid touchdown. His splendid exhibition of sportsmanship was, applauded heartily by the stands. Buster Ambruster, the Sooner captain, sat in the press box on the PRINCESS MUSEUM ALFRED BENJAMIN CLOTHES LOUNGING ROBES-- --for the bath. --for the cool evenings "when the gas is out." ... ment to study in, to lounge in—roomy, comfortable and homelike. If you haven't one, Sir, you're missing one real pleasure. For ladies too. All colors and sizes. An ideal gar- A crowd of 250 students met the special train when it pulled back into Lawrence at 6 o'clock Saturday morning. Rousing cheers for Mosse, Frank, and Weidlein aroused the players from their sweet dreams, but they were too sleepy to acknowledge the cheers which were accorded them. Nevertheless they appreciated the students' enthusiasm. The Pi Beta Pih freshmen gave their annual musical Saturday evening. The following old members were back: Dot Eckert of Kansas City, Million Boese, of Brookwood, and Constance Fenel of Kansas City. $3 to $15. They were all there from Martha Washington to the Bowyer tough; from the devil himself to sprightly fairies. The Yiddish were well represented as were also the clergy, Bedouin bandits, yama yama pickpockets, and a regiment of heterogeneous characters impossible to Saturday night the maskers were amount over at the gymnasium. sidelines during the whole game. After each touchdown he would violently punch the Daily Kansan reporter in the ribs and shout in his ear, "Pretty good team I've got, isn't it?" Amburster's excusable enthusiasm became quite painful before the end of the first half. The Custer club, 1414 Teenn, entertained with a Halloween party Friday evening. LOST-A fountain pen. Letha Og leaby. Phone B. 2025. Ic. The stands went wild when Reeds raced 25 yards down the side of the field for his first touchdown. Reeds is a favorite son at Norman and everyone admits it. Fred Capshaw, the old Oklahoma star and brother to the Capshaw in the Sooner backfield, is serving as assistant coach to Benny Owen in turning out the Sooner team and according to Mr. Owen's valiant service. Older K. U. students will well remember the elder Capshaw. Benny Owen, the Sooner coach, was much in evidence all Friday. He met the Jayhawkers at the station, made all arrangements for their stay in Norman, and held an open reception along the Sooner sidelines while the game was progressing. A number of automobiles, most from Oklahoma City, were grouped behind the press box, and there was not one whose owner Benny Owen did not know, and talk to. Owen enjoyed himself and the crowd enjoyed him. The Sooners have a pretty campus at Norman, and the entrance to the athletic field is attractively concealed beneath a group of shade trees. A new grand stand adorns Boyd Field and is 26 rows high, and 80 yards long. It would accommodate the entire Jayhawker "Thundering Thousand" and a few beside. Masquerade at Gym. Social Notes Spooks Were Hosts. Sparks Were Hosts. A Halloween party was given at Wesleyan on Friday night by The masks were removed after the sixth dance and it developed that several men were women and vice versa, men were women and wigged heads were served in the balehcy. Johnson & Carl the westminster Guild at which the spooke proved themselves charming The guests were ushered in by sheeted spirits who led them through the chambers of horrors where suffering souls rent the air with their agonized shrieks. Suddenly the lights went out and the ghosts then related to the guests their most gruesome tales. The costumes were a feature of the evening, a Yama Yami suit worn by Miss Dawson being voted the best one present. Following the march, led by Elmer Jark and Mise Dawson, refresh- ment workers moved into the area. Those who assisted Mrs. Stanton Oliniger were, Austin Bally, Mary Brisbane and Ann Schanks Elmer Clark, Dorothy Ward, and Madine Dearn and Anne Ashtea. Dr. and Mrs. Olinger entertained the Westminster Association of Kansas, at dinner, Friday evening. The following were present: Mr. Gee, Inness, W. E. Cockins, W. H. Johnson, James Naimskih, Dr. W. A. Powell, E. F. Caldwell, of Warren, M. P. Pace, and member of Salina, Dr. Oliver of Halstead, Mr. Riddle of Iola, and Mr. Glen Denning of Topeka. A business meeting was also held, at which new officers were elected, and several reports read. Halloween Party. The young ladies of the Coleman house entertained with a Halloween dancing party Friday night. Decorations in black and yellow were used throughout the rooms. The evening was spent in dancing and in performing various Halloween stunts. About forty-four guests were present. The hostesses were Maude Lourey, Pearl Milton, Margaret Coleman, Grace Green, Florence Wingart, Helen Tran, Hen Street, Street, Amabel Garvey, Josephine Lambourn, Helen Baity, Ruth Horton, Merritt Carr, Gertrude Hurly, May Anderson, Ingeborg Sungstrom, Mary Hodson, Mrs Coleman chaperoned. Mr. and Mrs, Coleman chaperoned. Alpha Taus Entertain. The Alpha Tau Omega fraternity gave a Halloween party at the chapter house Saturday night. The following guests were present: Prof. and Mrs. J. N. Van der Vries, Doris Isles, Hazel Gould, Gladys Lucken, Vera Knoblauch, Cora Shim, Oreta Moore, Graeze Zoellner, Hazel Williams, Helen Sapp, Naot, Elizabeth Brown, Ann Childs, Naot, vette Maria Hotchkiss, Mr. Roberts, and Helen Pears. Mr. Charles, Wilhelm, Mr. Frank Mr. Charles Wilhelm, Mr. Frank Reeds, M. Vinton Jones, and Mr. Mack Childs of Kansas City were out of town guests at the party. The Pharmaceutical Society will give the dance Friday night, Nov. 7, in Eugene. Evening at Whist. The Acacia fraternity gave a whist party at the chapter house Friday night. Autumn leaves and Halloween decorations were used in the rooms. The guests were Charlotte Jagger, Dorothy Ettwein, Eva Stone, Helen Gephart, Elizabeth Mackey, Maria Slade, Kitty Smith, Florence Hires, Irene Spangler, Lori Verma, Lovis Mussel Miss Bradley, Hallie Clark, Iva MacAulay, Grace Hartwell and Miss Brownlee. Mrs. R. C. Shannon, Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Sherwood and Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Amick were chaperones. Keltz Club Danced. The Keltz club entertained with a delightfully informal dance party. at the chapter house Friday night. Clever decorations of autumn leaves and jack-o'-lanterns were used. A luncheon of sandwiches, hot tomatales, pumpkin pie and coffee was served during the intermission. The music was by Messrs. Royer and Mitchell. The guest as a host. The guests were Lucile Sage, Margaret Heizer, Nan Armstrong, Lucile Brown, Helen Hurst, Pauline McLaughlin, Vera Dugger, Lucile McCormick, Bernice McFarland, Etta Smith, Emily Berger, and Ethel Bartberger. Party at Eagles' Hall. The Phi Alpha Delta fraternity gave a Halloween dance at the Eagles' hall, Friday night. Elaborate Halloween decorations were used. Cider and doughnuts were served. The guests were Annie Murtaugh, Helen Alliphin, Margery Kennedy, Florence Hoar, Cora Shinn, Dorothy Tucker, Agnes Moses, Jones T. J. Reshek, Susan Wolf, Sullivan Sarah, Mary E. Thorner, Bernice A. Anderson, Ruith Lamm, Bernice Anderson, Miss Castle, Emily Swick and Mary J. Simpson, Prof. and Mrs. H. W. Humble, Prof. Howard Hill and Mrs. B. M. Fairchilds, chaperoned. Faculty Reception. The reception given for the new members of the faculty and their wives by the ladies of the faculty in the library of Green hall Friday night was a great success. Chancellor and Mrs. Strong, Dean and Mrs. Green, and Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Kester were on the receiving line. The members of the Board ministered to Mrs. Leah and Mr. Hackney, remained in Lawrence to attend. A large number of faculty members were present. The library was decked in Halloween decorations, and delightful gift boxes. Don't drink half well and half river water. Place your order with McNish and drink pure water. Phones 198.-Adv. 36-3 DISCUSS MEXICAN TROUBLES K. U. Debaters Are Concerned Over American Lives and Property At the regular meeting of the K. U. Debating club Thursday evening the question of interference in Mexico was warmly discussed. The question was as follows: Resolved, That the United States should intervene in Mexico to protest the lives and property of Americans. The affirmative was supported by Rowland Clark, E. T. Cress, D. R. Scott. The negative was supported by Olinpoy, A. C. Castle, Mr. McClure acted as critic for the debate. After a short intermission Marsh Paterson was voted into the club. LOST- Conklin self-filling fountain pen near chemistry building. Return to Lloyd McKemmy, 929 Ala, 1934 Bell. Reward. 36-1* FOR SALE—New $25 all-wool overcoat, tailor made, will sell this evening for $15.00; too small for owner. Call Bell 2181. 1304 Mass. LOST - Fountain pen between Library and 900 block Tenn. Finder please notify Warren, 939 Teun, 2500 Bell. 36-3*1 FOR RENT Rooms for chafing-dish house-keeping. New house. Bell 1112, 1310 Penn. Send the Daily Kansan home. SQUIRES FOR PHOTOGRAPHS KODAK FINISHING AND SUPPLIES. ALSO FRAMING STATE APSTORM SAL 301,274 TOPEKA KAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XL NUMBER 37. GET YOUR SEATS FOR NEBRASKA GAME EARLY Manager Hamilton Says Crow May Exceed Number at the Missouri Game Last Year—Reservations Can Be Made Topeka, Kansas City, and Alumni Over State Are All Anxious to Get Reserved Blocks RIVALS WILL TAKE 500 SEATS Students who intend to make reservations for the Nebraska game should do so at once, for W. O. Hamilton, manager of athletics, expects a crowd that will fill McCook to overflowing. "I would not be at all surprised to see as big a crowd at the Nebraska game as attended the Missouri game last year," Mr. Hamilton said. "Every mail brings inquiries from all over the state regarding tickets. McCook will seat 9,000,and I will probably have to install more seats, as I did at the Missouri games." Nebraska has written for 500 reservations, and the secretary of the Topeka Alumni Association has asked for 300. Three Kansas City firms telephoned to Manager Lions for tips on how to sell their interest in the game there is lively, they say, and the request for tickets are numerous. A circular letter has been sent to all the alumni this week, explaining questions that have been asked about the game. The alumni crowd the grand stand will be strengthened and pu in good repair. QUILL CUB WRITES BASEBALL STORY IN MEETING FACULTY LADIES TO SERVE DOUGHNUTS AND COFFEE The task of writing a baseball story with a big league hero as a boy's idol was undertaken by the Quill club at its regular weekly meeting, yesterday. The story is to be a club story with all the work contributed by members of the club, the writing to be done during the regular sessions under the direction of the president. After the reading of an original essay on the technique of the short story by Miss Helen Hoopes, members of his school shared with me of which the above mentioned one was chosen as best suited to club work. "Tell the men to drop in between classes or spend an hour getting acquainted, said one faculty lady another. TheTERN would be pleased to meet them." The ladies of the faculty announce an "at home" for the men students of the University Thursday afternoon from 3 to 5:30 in Haworth hall. Doughnuts and coffee will be served during the afternoon. The doughnuts are guaranteed to have a better flavor than those made by the faculty, with a red pencil on our quiz books. FIFTY ITALIAN BOOKS ADDED TO LIBRARY Fifty volumes of Italian history, entitled, "Fonti per la Storia D'Italia," were added to the library last week. They were purchased by direction of Prof. F. H. Hodder, for use in the European history work. The books are beautifully bound in three-quarters vellum, and are printed in the Italian language. Besides forming a vibrant tapestry of Italian history, they add much to the appearance of the reference book. Four Engineers to Speak The Society of Mechanical Engineers will meet with Prof. F. H. Sibley, 1607 Tennessee at seven Thursday evening. A representative of each class will speak: Gas engine magazines, and the military; machinery, Joe Berrick; machinery, Charles Hagenbuck; power, Frank Beauchamp. Supt. Crocker Will Stay E. F. Crocker, superintendent of grounds and buildings, whose resignation was tendered to the Board early in the school year, will continue indefinitely in the position. The action of the Board may be to this effect was made known to the University authorities Saturday. Sailed For England Prof. William E. Higgins and family sailed Saturday for England, where Professor Higgins will study the procedure of the English courts in connection with his work with the American Judiciary society. HENDERSON TESTIFIES IN HINSHAW, CASE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 4, 1913. IN HIN The jury has been drawn in the Hinshaw forgery case, and the witnesses have been called. J. D. Henton has argued that the implication Hinshaw in the fraud. The mother and father of Hinshaw are present, the court room is packed, and keen interest is being displayed. Probably will not go to the jury today. MINISTERS SPEAK IN CHAPEL FRIDAY Lawrence Men Will Tell Students About K. U. Church Day Sunday —Girls' Glee Club Sings Friday's chapel is to be in charge of the Lawrence Ministerial Alliance and four of the city pastors will speak in the interest of Union Affairs by all three churches and by all the Lawrence churches Nov. 9. The Girl's Glee club will make its first appearance and the speakers will explain the plans of their churches for the Sunday matinees. The Sunday Rev. E. E. Saffer, Rev. F. M. Testerman and Rev. W. A. Powell will represent the Ministerial Alliance. The churches of the city have decided to have a "University day" next Sunday. A special effort will be made at the various churches and sermons which will be of interest to them will be preached. HAWKEYES ARE SMILING Iowa Looks Forward to Victory With Indiana Saturday Says Special Correspondent Iowa City, Oct. 30 (Special) Football prospects for the Hawkey University never were brighter. There is not an injured man on the team at present. Parsons the speedy little quarter, is back after a two weeks' lay-off with a sprained ankle. With another week of rest, a week in which to whip into shape for the game with Indiana, the Iowa squad is looking forward to victory. The work of the past week has developed several men until at present there is a lively scrap for position at left end and a quarter. Gross, the little man who made himself famous at Chicago, two weeks ago is giving Parsons the scare of his life for the position at quarter. Bowen, Carberry and Garnetron are the men who are contending over the end position. These positions are problems for the coaches at present. OPPOSE MINIMUM WAGE The United States needs no minimum wage law, the University Debating society decided last night. The question discussed was "Resolved: That the United States should enact a minimum wage law." B. F. McGinness and A. Durbun supported the affirmative, and C. A. Ilkenhans and W. M. Beall the negative. Debaters Decide Big Question, Then Elect Officers Mr. Reese told of the student life, especially among the boys, in the German schools and also of the number of years a person must spend in preparing to become a teacher. He says that "a man is at least nineteen before he starts in the university and then he has to attend for seven or eight years before he is qualified to teach." After the debate election of officers was held. Those elected were: President, Forrest Anderson; vice-president, E. M. Johnson; secretary, B. F. McGinnie; press correspondent, J. M. Johnson; program committee, W. M. Latimer; sergeant-at arms, E. J. Goppert; membership committee, W. L. Rockwell, H. V. McColloch, B. Weaver. Heinrich Reese, the German ex-change instructor gave a talk on the German secondary schools at the Deutscher Verein last night. TELLS VEREIN ABOUT GERMAN STUDENT LIFE The Botany club will meet tomorrow night at 7:30 in Sand hall to initiate new members. There will be twelve candidates for admission to the club. Miss Doble will read paper on some recent investigations. Botanists Will Initiate Helene Thomas, a freshman in the college, spent the week-end in eavenworth at the home of Florence Sheidenberger, '16. PICK QUESTION FOR TRIANGULAR DEBATE Colorado, Kansas, and Oklahoma Will Discuss Single Legislative Body The question for the triangular debate between Colorado, Oklahoma, and Kansas, as announced today is: "Resolved, That the several states should adopt, a unicameral form of government affirmative against Colorado here, and the negative against Oklahoma at Norman. The other questions submitted by Prof. H. T. H. Hill to Oklahoma and Colorado were: "Resolved, That public utilities, operating within cities, should be subject to the control of the state utilities commission," and; "Resolved, That it would be to the economic advantage of the American economy under the Panama Canal Act of 1912, which admits American vessels engaged in the coast-wise trade to the Panama Canal free of toll." Y.M.C.A. TO OPERATE "MOVIES"TWO DAYS Oklahoma begins work on the debate at once, according to the Daily Oklahoma. Proceeds From All Film Shows Will Be Given University Organization, Nov. 4 and 6. Gross receipts from the Tuesday and Thursday night shows of the Oread, Patee, and Aurora "movies" will be presented by the respective owners to the University Y. M. C. A. for its general fund. Representatives from the Y. M. C. A. will be in charge of the various places of amusement each night A. A. special been taken on board and only high class films will be shown. The W. S. G. A. rule is suspended for the two nights. On Thursday night, November 13 all active workers in the y. M. C. A. will meet at a big banquet to be given in myers hall. Chancellor Strong and Registrar Foster will probably be the main speakers. Two minute reports from each committee chairman and speeches from members of the Board of Advisors will be heard during the evening. The French Circle will hold its regular meeting at 4:30 tomorrow afternoon in room 306 Fraser hall. Mrs. Harshberger of Kansas City, Mo., is visiting her daughter, Helen, a sophomore in the College. Jessie Ingraham, a sophomore in the College, has returned from a week's visit at her home in Newton. The Men's Student Council will meet in Fraser hall tonight. A meeting of the presidents and finance committees of the junior, sophomore and freshman classes will be held in Fraser hall at 4:30 Thursday to make plans for a selling campaign of 1914 Jay Hawkers. Russell Clark, manager and key vice president, will obtain the active co-operation of the lower classes in making this year's annual a success. ASKS EVERY CLASS TO PUSH JAYHAWKER During registration week I found that the upperclassman instead of looking down upon the ignorant freshmen were only too glad to help us get enrolled among the student body. I have always admired the spirit at Missouri but it is not to be compared with the K. U. brand. On the streets I noticed groups of fellows discussing the possibilities of the coming football season. Every now and then they would talk about acquaintance and to express their gladness at seeing him back. It was more like coming home after a long three-years' absence than getting back to work after a short three-months' vacation. So she answered with a beacon, be cautioned and even I, a total stranger, began to feel the influence of it. Management of Annual Will Make an Effort to Get All Students Interested Even at the hotel I found that there was enthusiasm, when after registering, the clerk asked me if I was a prospective student, and, finding that I was, took me by the hand and said: "You could not have made such choice had you gone to Europe." Evidently he was a student. THE SPIRIT AT K. U. I attended quite a few smokers The finance committee will probably be enlarged so as to make an individual canvass of the members of the lower classes. Promis-ry notes of $2.50 will be taken from all who want to get a case. The other notes will be payable before Feb. 1, after which orders will be taken at $2.75. (Below is one view of the spirit at K. U, as described by a college freshman in a rhetoric theme. We have another which is just the opposite to run tomorrow. We think these are significant because a freshman comes here with all his pores open for new impressions.) I received my first impressions of the spirit a. K. U. when I pulled in to Lawrence on the Santa Fe, the night of Sept. 11. About two dozen fellows got off, and the way they greeted each other and spoke of "getting back" made me wish more than ever that I was an upper-class man and could recognize the students as friends and brothers. "We have to know now the names of those who want annuals," said Russel Clark this morning. "The books will have to be sold before printing starts. No more will be printed than there are tickets sold." The junior smoker committee is making preparations to hold four class smokers during the school year. The first meeting of the committee will be held Wednesday afternoon in Myers hall. In the first smoker, the junior engineers are expected to put on a skit which will compete with a stunt either by the College or the laws. HERE'S A PERFECT FRESHMAN To Ralph S. Delbridge of Jackson, belongs the honor of being the most perfect freshman, physically, emazimed at Waterman gym, University of Michigan this year. His chart shows only one mark below 90, so he was probably the 100 per cent line. He is 69.2 inches tall, weighs 167 pounds and has a lung capacity of 310 cubic centimeters. He was given 85 on physical condition, the highest percentage this year. Delbridge comes from Jackson with a reputation as an athlete; he had played second for Blacklock now of M. A. As all-state scholastic full-back, Michigan Daily. Michigan Has a First-Year Man With Great Physique JUNIOR ENGINEERS WILL GIVE SKIT AT SMOKER Achoths Initiate The date has not yet been chosen. The Achoch sorority held initiation last night for Marie Madden of Mound City, Dorothy Ettwein, Kan- dian and Margaret Kolsal, of Lawrence Send the Daily Kansan home. I also found that the K. U. alumni, who were attending school in Eastern universities, kept in constant touch with the affairs of their Alma Mater, where they have cases the fellows were starring both in athletics and scholarship. and dinners during the first two weeks and in each instance the Kansas hymns and the "Beat Missouri" parodies (which are almost to be considered Kansas hymns) were sung with the greatest enthusiasm. All the great victories the different Jayhawker teams have won as well as the scholarships won by students were discussed and praised. This spirit of loyalty invaded the unorganized freshman class and caused them to wish to keep up the traditions and customs by voting on an overwhelming majority to wear the little blue cap. In fact the only ones opposed to the custom were those who were either too slow or too dense to catch the spirit that was floating about. On the day of the William Jewell game, although it was raining, several hundred fellows turned out and marched in the parade. Moreover, a majority of the students came out in their rentals to see their team compete in the race at every event the students have turned out in a body to boost K. U. To sum it all up, the spirit I have found here has been such that it has changed my slogan from "Be Kantan" to "The extreme of Twist that Tiger's tail." SPEAKER MISSES TRAIN— SPECIAL MUSIC IN CHAPEL Because of confusion on account of train schedules Langdon Davies failed to appear to give his talk on conduction to conellation in chapel this morning. Mrs. D. W. Cornelius, wife of a member of the faculty, sang a solo from the sextate from Lucia, and re-created it with the Scotch song, "Loch Lomond." /ARSITY PARTIES TO MOVE DOWN TOWN Student Dances Leave Floor Too Slick For The Basket-ball Squads. Because the parties in the gym interfere with basket-ball practice now that the season is approaching they will be moved down town. "Parties in the gymnasium leave the floor so slick that players are handicapped in basket-ball practice, so the Friday night party will be held in the Fraternal Aid Hall (1720 Madison Ave.) of the Men's Student Council. The parties have been held in the gymnasium according to a ruling of the faculty. "Although we may have an occasional party in the gymnasium most of them will be held down town after this," said President Dodd. SENIORS SLOW TO SIGN "A committee of sixty-five is working among the seniors and graduate students this week and will try to see every one. It will make its report next week and then we can determine what will be done about the annual. But there must at least be $2,000 guaranteed before any attempt can be made to publish the book." "The seniors are not signing the six-dollar pledges to support the annual as they should," said Webb Holloway senior president this morning, behind the plan better than they have there will be no annual this year. Holloway Says Pledges For 1914 Jayhawker Are Not Coming in as Fast as They Should If any one who wants to sign the guarantee should be overlooked by the committee he can see Holloway, 'russel Clark, or Guy VonSchrill. WILL PLAN THE ANNUAL Jaybawker Board Holds First Meeting Wednesday The first meeting of the Annual Board has been called by Russell Calik, editor of the annual, for Wednesdaing in room 6, Green Hall, at 7:30. The presence of every member of the board is necessary for this meeting as the policy to be followed in the publication of the book is to be announced. The work of the different editors will be outlined, the literary work assigned, and a general discussion on the character and the make up of the book will take place. The board is proceeding on the as- The board is proceeding on the assumption that enough seniore will sign the six-dollar pledges to insure the success of the book. EXAMINES FLOUR AND REPORTS TO MILLERS The drug and food laboratory under the direction of Prof. W. S. Long is making an analysis of some bleached flour and will make a report before the meeting of the State Board of Health on November 23. The millers will discuss the bleached flour problem before the State Board of Health. Crowds Learn of Flunks. Dean Tedminin's office was again filled this morning with a large crowd of students seeking their grades for the first six weeks of the school year. Many are apparently overlooking the fact that the grades cannot be secured after today, others have returned a number of times asking to have their grades read a second time. Sophomore Dance Coming. Tom Peters, who was a student here last year, visited friends in Lawrence over the week-end. Mr. Peters is now located in East St. Louis. The first sophomore class dance will be given in Robinson gymnasium next Saturday night. The date had previously been set for Friday night, but it was changed because of a Student Council dance on that night. The dance is open to all students of the University. URGES PROFESSORS TO GO TO TOPEKA Cancellor Strong Desires Large At tendance at Teachers' Meeting From The Faculty of 6-7 University Nov. 6-7 MAY DISMISS THEIR CLASSES instructors Who Attend Need Not Worry About Objections From The Student Body. Professors and instructors of the University of Kansas are urged to attend the Teacher's' Association at Topeka Thursday and Friday, according to a statement issued by Chancellor Strong this morning. Chancellor Strong's statement closes with, "It is probably unnecessary to say that it is of great importance that the University be largely represented at the association and especially in the sections bearing more directly upon its interest." The association most directly affects the School of Education and the instructors in this school will all attend the meeting at Topeka. Although no holiday for this school is ordered, classes are closed. College may dismiss their classes and attend the association if they desire. Addresses made by professors of the university of Kansas will be as follows: "The College and the Individual Student." Dean John Templin. Student, Dean John Pelliphan "Plans for Organization of Elementary Teachers," Prof. E. M. Hopkins. "The Practical Utility of the Sabin Exhibit," Prof. A. T. Walker. "The Organization of Kansas Tanners of German," Prof. E. F. Engel. "A Different Method of Beginning "Dimensional Geometry," Prof. U. G. Mitchell. EVOLVES PLAN TO SAVE FROST BITTEN APPLES "The Sex Problem in Education," prof. A. W. Trettien. Kansas apples nipped on the trees b yearly frost need not in the future be allowed to go to waste. A salvage plan worked out this week at the University of Kansas experimental orchard by Dr. Samuel J. Hunter, professor of entomology and state entomologist, will save this portion of the crop formerly permitted to rot. "When the early frost comes, the farmer usually thinks his apples are done for," says Professor Hunter. "He lets them rot on the trees. We found that a light spray of plain water saves them from the spray of mares' parchards, both in the spring and in the winter. Early in the year, it kills the bugs and permits the apples to grow; later it saves them from freezing." Professor Hunter's system calls for spraying the frozen apples with cold water, before they begin to thaw. The water brings back the bloom and leaves the apple in perfect condition. ENGINEERES TO DISCUSS WORK ON THE RAILROAD The regular meeting of the Kansas Branch of American Institute of Electrical Engineers will be held Wednesday evening at 7:30 in room 101, Marvin hall. Messrs. Brown, Marvin hall, will talk about their summer work with the signal system of the Santa Fe. A CHICAGO PUBLISHER SPEAKS TO LAW CLASSES R. M. R. Daly of Chicago, personal representative of the West Publishing Company, gave his first lecture to the middle and senior classes of the School of Law yesterday. The Daly will talk to the seniors every morning at eleven and the middies at one-thirty every day this week. Marian Blake, freshman Fine A has returned from her home in ElReno. Dorothy Parkhurst, a junior in the College spent Sunday in Topeka. The Weather Fair tonight and cooler; probably rain or snow in the southwest tomorrow. No great change in temperature in the next few days. Temperatures: 9 p. m...40 7 n. m...41 6 n. m...42 5 n. m...524 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The official student paper of the University of Kansas HERRMAN FUNN EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief GLENDON ADVINEY Associate Editor JOHN C. MADDEH Management Editor JOHN LARD Sport Editor LOEW GILBERT High School Editor EDITORIAL STAFF BUSINESS STAFF EWEN AREA RAY FURIDGE ADVERTISING MANAGER CIRCUMSTANCE ADVERTISER REPORTORIAL STAFF REPORTORIAL LUCE BARRON JONES DUFORE RANDOLPH KENNEDY SAM DOWNBURG FRAK HANLANG Pursued second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the postoffice at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of journalism. Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance: one term, $1.50. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KAWANS. The Daily Kannan aims to picture the undergraduate life of the University of Karnataka; to go further than mere education; to make students feel joyful; to play no favors; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courageous; to be more compassionate; to be in all, in air; to serve the more needy students of the University. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1913. sity. We have seen women go sick on the McCook field bleachers from what smoking used to go on there; and certainly we have our opinion of any University girl who will permit (not an unheard of thing) a cigarette to be smoked in her presence. (Old fashioned, isn't it?) Add to this the fact that in schools of high standing such as Columbia University students are very seldom seen smoking on the steps of buildings, and perhaps it may justly be said that general smoking is selfish and objectionable if non-smokers are around, and no credit to a University in session. Comradeship is one of the strongest forces in life-- Hugh Black. The ruling concerning smoking which in addition requests that such be refrained from on the campus or near visitors or women students may sound like an infringement on the manly rights of some students to blow smoke in the faces of others, but it looks to us like a good suggestion. SMOKING AROUND A UNIVERSITY We have tried this business of smoking and have exhausted all its virile possibilities; yet, while we would not for a minute insist that those who like to smoke cease doing so, still we think there is a place for smoking, and that place is not in the immediate vicinity of a University. We think the Board is dead right in its suggestion; if you must smoke, smoke where you won't affect anyone but your elf. Igratitude is a form of weakness. I have never known a man of real ability to be ungrateful. Goethe. One thing worse than a quitter is the chap who is afraid to begin—Personality. The visit of Mr. Langdon Davies to the University today brings as an echo from the powers that be in regard to peace, war, armament and other things pertaining to the gentle art of civilization. THE PEACE MOVEMENT (?) We can't settle the Peace Movement question just at this time, since this will be in cold type before Mr. Davies appears; but we are in sympathy with him if he is out gunning for the lawless element in the world's powers. Kansas has no use for this war business. In her time she has had armed guards in her coal fields, and the sound of shots in the Colorado coal fields of late have been fairly audible; and our fathers and forefathers didn't hesitate to load up the old musket in '61. But in Kansas we go to war in a different way now. We refer everything to the legislature, and let it be a war of words. Seriously (for we can be serious) we think Mr. Davies is engaged in a worthy movement; and in view of the situation in the Balkans, Mexico, Colorado and other places, we hereby extend him our hearty support. Later. Mr. Davies missed his train. And they say this man Reeds is tall and thin, with a slender, piping voice. Some people are like low grade ore. They have gold in them, but it is so imbedded that it isn't worth the trouble of getting it out—Personality. THE CLIMBER When an army pack-mule is being loaded for an expedition, his eyes are covered and as great a burden is laashed on his back as he can carry. It is among the latter type that we find the treasurer who never made out a check, the coillion leader who never attended a dance, and the manager who never could keep his own accounts straight—a condition that can be remedied only by the exercise of discrimination by those who have the power to give offices and by those who receive them—Yale News. The only difference between this patient beast and a certain number of undergraduates is that the mule is blindfolded. Every man ought to know when his load is heavy enough, just as he should have the good sense to refuse an excessive one. Unfortunately, many forget that every election gained, every competition won, every appointment received means work in the future. To the man who picks and chooses among the positions open to him, comes an adequate heritage of interesting pursuits, which he has selected to suit his taste and ability. To the climber, the office-seeker or the thoughtless one, come unsuitable, uninteresting labor, late hours, and neglect of the curriculum. None are so blind as those who believe anything they cannot see.—Personality. Drifting with the tide is very likely to land you on the rocks.—Personality. (Communications to the Daily Kansan must be signed as an evidence of good faith, though not necessarily for publication. The column is open to all Daily Kansan readers). COMMUNICATIONS CHICAGO'S HONOR SENTIMENT MOVEMENT Editor of the Daily Kansan: Because the articles which have been appearing recently in the Kansan show a strong sentiment in favor of an honor system here, and because I had the opportunity of seeing the establishment of the Honor Sentiment Movement at the University of Chicago, I am taking the liberty of giving some of our experiences there in the hope that this may be of some help in inaugurating such a movement here. The matter of cheating had been agitated for years, but no definite work was done until the year 1911-12. Then many things happened. The College paper took the matter up, having an honor sentiment box on the front page for weeks. There were mass meetings among the men and women. The Honor Sentiment Movement was organized. At examination time those who had joined the Movement wrote in the front of their quiz books, "I affirm, on my honor, that I have not given or received help during this examination", Of course, some who cheated would lie about it, but when they found that this did not add to their popularity, they stopped. Some, too, who would not have accepted help under any circumstances, thought it stingy not to give help. But they soon realized that it was a pretty low-down trick to help another to do something that they considered beneath them. Others, too, who would not cheat in examinations, had to learn that it was as much a violation of the honor system to "sponge" or to hand in other people's themes or padded term papers. As to the punishment of the violation of the honor system, our strongest weapon was public sentiment, which, since the establishment of the Honor Sentiment Movement, had become very keen on this subject. They now have at Chicago, as at Wisconsin, a student court for trying cases of violation of the honor system. But their ideal is a public sentiment so strong that cheating will result, as in some of the Eastern colleges, in the social ostracism of the offender. This may seem a far cry from the present conditions here, but Chicago with many of the same conditions, has practically cleaned the thing up in two years. ASK DEAN TEMPLIN Mollie Ray Carroll. University Daily Kansan: Ye Editor: May I air my troubles before the general court? After carrying nineteen hours work and showing creditably in the grades at the Dean's office I am told that I must cut down my work to sixteen hours. Is this fair to me? If I can carry a certain amount of work why shouldn't I be allowed to do so? I've shown in a third of a term that I am capable of turning in satisfactory work and can't understand why I should not have the privilege of continuing to do so. Can some one please explain? Kicker. TALKING IN THE LIBRARY Editor University Kansan: Dear Sir: I wonder if a mere student would be allowed to say a word regarding the tendency toward talking in the library? Ever go to the library in a hurry, with the knowledge that you would have to work every minute to get the assignment in time and then have a couple, or perhaps three talkative and enthusiastic K. U. co-eds sit down at the same table? First it will be a difficult lesson that has been assigned, then it will be the newest acquisition at the dance last night, or how perfectly lovely some girl friend is, or isn't. Perhaps they will be absorbed for a few moments in diligent study, until one has a new inspiration after which another whispered consultation will be held, winding up perhaps with "I don't he a perfect dear?" By this time you have disgestuled taken yourself to the farthest corner of the room from the source of your troubles, and perhaps wasted many precious moments trying to keep your mind on the pages before you. Why, oh, why, can't folks have a little consideration for other students in the library even if they themselves come there to enjoy each other's company? Saw Him Too... "Ia Miss Brown in?" Maid "No, 'Pro博物er.' But I just saw her at the window. "Yes, and she saw you." All Of It—Nurse (to young doctor)—"Your practice is waiting, sir. Shall I show him in?" Wait, the word after "in?" is "in?" The word after "is waiting" is "sir." The word after "shall" is "I." The word after "show" is "him." Let's re-examine the word after "in?" again. It looks like "in?" Yes. Let's re-examine the word after "is waiting" again. It looks like "sir." Yes. Let's re-examine the word after "shall" again. It looks like "I." Yes. Let's re-examine the word after "show" again. It looks like "him." Okay, I'm ready to write. All Of It — Nurse (to young doctor) — "Your practice is waiting, sir. Shall I show him in?" —Fliegende Blaetter. The Way...Young Preacher—"What is the best way to teach the Ten Commandments?" o teach the ten Communicators, Old Preecher—"If you have a congregation of poor, each them as commandments; if middle-class, as requests; and if rich, merely as recommendations." Judge. Chantecute Tribune: "The monaca is becoming fashionable at the state university, according to a late news item. Think of it—the monaca—the badge of the empty pated, simmering, hair-tipped sclon of rotten European royalty, being worn at the Athens of Kansas by the sons of the patriots who carried muskets in the Pop rebellion of '93. Verily these are degenerate days and the downfall of the republic is at hand." Puck. Our suggestion to the Tribune: before taking it too hard find out how to spell "monocle." --for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantee each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding Trade-Mark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. A. G. SPALDING & BROS. 1120 Grand Ave. Kansas City, Mo. Send for our Catalogue. AT THE LAWRENCE CHURCHES Trinity Church (Episcopal) — Vermont and Berkeley The Rev. Evan Alexander Edward, M. A., rector; 7:30 a. m., The Holy Communion. Service over by 8; 10 a. m., Sunday School Model Kindergarten from 10-12 in charge of experienced teacher. Student classes forming in upper school. Students invited at present to attend Skilton's lectures on Faith and Worship. 11 a. m., Morning prayer and sermon; 5 p. m., evening prayer and sermon. The full choir at both services. All welcome. O. P. Leonard's Panstatorium is on the job again this year. Notice Students Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 501, Home 180 We Give Club Rates 841 Mass. St. Upstairs. Porticular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Lawrence Pantatorium Z. W. Warren Both Phones 505 AUSTIN BELLOWING TRADE SPALDING MARK 011234 A "Square Deal" Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 Vermont Phones 139 BERT WADHAM The College Inn Barber A GOOD PLACE TO EAT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND Fresh Oysters, Regular Meals, Short Orders, Confectionery, Cigars, Etc. JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 Massachusetts Street Lowney's Chocolates McColloch's Drug Store LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. W. H. Quakenbush, Pres.; E. S. Weatherby, Supt. SAVE THE PIECES We have added Lens Grinding Machinery to our Optical department. Any Lens Duplicated Glasses Fited. HESTER Jeweler and Optician SAVE THE PIECES SAM S. SHUBERT Matinee Wednesday and Saturday Lillian Russel IN Tragic Drama ROYAL ROCHESTER Chafing dishes, cassareoles, coffee machines and percolators. The finest line of metal and wood serving trays in the city) KENNEDY & ERNST 826 MASS. ST. PHONES 341 9 K. U. PANTATORIUM AND DYE WORKS Student Rates: See Our Solicitors Cleaning and Jack's Work a Specialty JACK FULLERTON 1400 Louisiana 1400 1400 LodiMisha Phones: Bell, 140; Home, 140 Subscribe for the Daily Kansan. Vet WAC. '13 $ 1 0^{\mathrm{c}} $ Full Two Ounce Tins THE SMOOTHEST TOBACCO In a debate, there is no evading the issue. Does your smoking tobacco bite or doesn't it? Velvet is aged 2 years—which eliminates the leaf harshness and mellows and tones the richness. Produces a fine flavor and a smoothness that smokers appreciate above all else. Gentlemen—there is only one side to this smoke question —that's the smooth side—"Velvet." Ask for Velvet at your dealers. Liggatt & Myers Tobacco Co. Velvet TOBACCO The Folks at Home Why not send it to them? would enjoy reading the University Daily Kansan. It would keep them in touch with the University and you. Phone the address to K. U. 25 or drop a card in any University mail box. PRICE FOR ONE YEAR $2.50 The WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $10,000 The WATKINS NATIONAL Capital $100,000 Surplus $100,000 Corner Mass. and Quincy Sts. Issues its own Letters of Credit and Travellers Checks. The only way to carry your money in safety. Banking of all kinds solicited. Banking of all kinds solicited. BETWEEN ACTS Large New Fountain and Ice Cream Tables Sodas Ice Cream Little Cigars ALLEGRETTTS CHOCOLATES CITY DRUG STORE 705 Mass. Opposite Eldridge House The Honor System In the minds of many who are watching closely the partial test of the hour system of examinations in one of the departments of this college, it is doubtful whether it will be a widespread success in this institution, because of the attitude of students toward it. General dissatisfaction has been expressed by those who have taken examinations in that department. Those who are hostile do not mind the supervision of the old system and those who would take advantage of the honor system, if there are some, are put on a more equal basis with those of the first class under the old system. Almost everyone will be willing to admit that the honor system is nearer the ideal than any system of supervision, but the advisability of its introduction does not rest on this point alone. If it is to be used to any great extent, it must be looked into pretty thoroughly before it is accepted. Its success requires first of all the student's attention, the extent to which they are trusted, and the kind of work in which it is tried. A letter from a student now in a western law school tells of the honor system as it is used there. It is the accepted standard in the law department where it is an entire success. It is also used to a limited extent in the liberal arts department where it has been used but not a success, and states that the character of the examinations in the law school are such that it would be impossible to use a pony or book to any advantage—I. A. S. C. Student. HISTORICAL SOCIETY PROFESSIONAL CARDS W C M.CONNELLE Phydean and Coeur de France, Residence, 1346 Tenn. House 1203, Hornsby, Home J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and specialist Brockwood Office 802 Mass St. Bell phone 6951 HARRY REDING. M. D Eye, ear, nose and throat. 571-680-4233. Home 612, Hotel 813, Hall 814, Home 812. 6. A. HAMMAN M. D. Eye, ear, and shoulder Guaranteed. 5. Building. Distribution. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Ocullat, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W O'BRYNON, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. J. R. BECHTIET, D. D. O. D. 833 Mass Hauppettraille Street. Both phones, office and phone. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Dicees of Washington W. BONNER, A. M. M. D. Residence, 130 St. Paul's Church, Hotham, MD DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12 F. A. H. Bldg. Residence 1130 Teen. Phones 211. 1969-1978 DR. BURT R. WHITE Osteopath, Phones, Bell 938, Room 257, Office, 745 Mass. St. DR. H. L. CHAMHORS. Office over Squirre Studio. Both phones. S. T. Gillipaic, M. D. B. Occer, corner Vermont St. Residence 728 Indiana St. Pines 5006 E. J. Blair Physician and Surgeon. Office and residence: 915. Mass. St., Office hours: 7.00 to 9.00 a.m. 12.00 to 4.0 p. and 7.00 to 8.00 p. . . . . CLASSIFIED Barbers Frank Iliff* Barrier Shop, 1025 Mass Two, good satisfaction, assured J. G. Rocky's Barber Shop, 013 Mass Chairs. We are not allowed. Chairs must have to wait. Racks honors. Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co. for, mass goods and Mazda lamps. 937 Mass. Gadget Ladies Tailors arcs. Ellison Dresmaking and Ladies artists. Ellison Mases Phones 2114, over Mars & Carl Ladies Taloring and Dressmaking. Gowns for all occaions. All work guaranteed. Mrs. T. B. Daily, 914 Mass. Sanitary cleaning establishment in connection. Phone: (800) 263-7820. Lawrence Sewing School. Leduc's tailoring and dressmaking. Sewing school 814 Mass. Phones 550. Miss Powers; Miss C. McClarnoy. Hair Dressers Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-gifts. *Mariello hello* The brand name for Mariello call Bell M172 house 51. *The Select Hair Dressing Shop*, 927 Mass St. Sporting Goods D & M sporting goods and athletic supplies. Kennedy & Ernst, 225 Mass. S., Phone: (818) 346-3900. Hawaiiia Cafe for regular meals, lunch and short orders when down town. Open after 10:30am. Bring your shoes to Fornys, for guruan eating at restaurant, or repair your clothes. Bring your work, the best. Let us figure on your furnace work. Everything in Osborn & Co., 816 Mass St. Sidney 422. Queen City College. System and sewing Mary McCormick, 844-531-9700, mrsmc.com; Mrs. G. Mark Bowna, 834 Ky. Hellman, 844-531-9700. W. D. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler. Diamonds and Jewelry. Bell Phonix. One total means no risk, small investment. The posse must smoke a smoke T-Will homemade cigarette. I have a nice line of plain cloth for painting this wonderful piece. I am located at: Eastside Northern Studio 734 Mass St. Up close to the masterpiece. W. E. MOAK, Prop. Taxicabs, Hacks, Livery Baggage Haused Both Phones 148 Eldridge House Stable See the New Parker Self-Filling Fountain Pen Office Supplies, Typewriters F. I. CARTER 1025 Mass. Bell phone 105 Come on Down to JIM'S Tonight 1101 Mass. St. PROTSCH The College Tailor Lawrence Transfer Co. Trunk Hauling Phone 15 All announcements or items for the University calendar either for the coming week or for future events should be given to Mr. Cronemeyer, at the department of journalism office, by 4:30 p.m. Friday. It is desired to make the calendar a complete schedule of University events and the co-operation of those interested is requested. Send the Daily Kansan home. High School News of Kansas A REWARD AT LAST FOR THAT TIRESOME PRACTICE (Rv Velma Yates) Junction City, Oct. 31—Credit will be given this year for outside music. This includes piano, voice culture, and violin. Monthly reports are made to the superintendent, concerning the amount of time spent in practice, by the parents of the students. At the close of this year a committee of the city teacher gives giveaway cards to these events. One credit is given for passing work and this credit may be substituted for an elective. Debate Clubs Chosen Tuesday a preliminary debating tryout was held. The two chosen teams will commence work immediately. Junction City high school has been successful in a few years of debating experience. Miss Alice Asher and Miss Evadne Laptad will be the coaches. Classes In Charge of Chapel During the last five weeks the different classes have had charge of the program for chapel Friday mornings. Outside talent is called upon on these occasions. Chapel is made more interesting and students are given a change from the routine. Basket-ball Begins The girls have started basket-ball practice. There are two classes, one for the beginners and the other for the senior. Miss Berenice Rholland is the coach. Blue and White Out Blue and White Out The journalism class issued the first copy of the "Blue and White," the school paper this week. This paper is composed wholly of schoolmen. HUMBOLD TLOSE A GAME FOR THE FIRST TIMI (Py Roy A. Woods) Humboldt, Nov. 1.—The Humboldt high school football team met its first defeat of the season on the local gridiron Friday when the Iola student team was victor in a great 3 to 8 battle. Iola scored its three points in the third quarter when Bagley, right half back made a beautiful kick from placement. It was "Walter Johnson" day in Humboldt and a record breaking crowd witnessed the contest. PRATT WILL STAND BACK OF CHAMPIONSHIP CLAIM (By Jerome Chapman) Pratt, Oct. 31—Pratt county high school won its sixth consecutive victory today by defeating Kingman 67 to 7. Pratt has made 253 points to her opponents 21, and is after the state championship. Pratt wants to play any team that claims the penant. (By Merrill Dubach) Sabeth, Nov. 9—Sabeth high school defeated Horton here Friday by a score of 30 to 1. Sabeth has amassed a score of 107 points in five games, and has not yet been scored against; she has also won again the championship of northeast Kansas, which it held last year. (By Ruby Hostetler) Glasco, Oct. 31—Glasco high school defeated Concordia Normal in a football game but by a score of 7–0. Later the team staged a Halloween entertainment in the city hall, raising $48.56, which will be used in the spring for the junior-senior banquet. HALLOWEEN CELEBRATION AFTER GLASCO'S VICTORY (By Ruby Hostetler) A contest unique in college circles is soon to occur in Galesburg, III., when three college men and three college women will compete in an articulated contest. Eastern Sororites Bar "Hags" In connection with the recent campaign of the "Hags" League against "the Hags" dances, Alpha Xi and Mu Phi Epsilon announce that they have voted to abolish all such dances. Alpha Chi Omega also voted against these dances including the "Boston."—Syracuse Daily Orange. Eastern Sororities Bar "Rags" Ohio University has received a gift of $20,000 from Andrew Carnegie for the purpose of enlarging the library, of which he is the donor. Parisian Ivory goods displayed in our window this week. Barber's Drug store...Adv. 34 FOR RENT--Rooms for chafing- dish house keeping in new and modern house. Bell 1112; 1310 Tenn. LOST—A white cloisonne brooch, shaped somewhat like a fleur-de- lis. Call Bell 1152. 34-5 TWO OF COFFEYVILLE'S TEACHERS FROM K. U. (By H. Dale Watson) Coffeyville, Oct. 10 there are eight students in the faculty of the Coffeyville high school this year. Two of this number are graduates from the University of Kansas. Miss Helen Stevens, of the University, who taught in the Moran high school last year, is the new English instructor. Miss Lela Harper, who graduated in May, is a member of the University, is in charge of the expression department and some of the English classes. Students Saw Johnson (Bv H. Dale Watson) School was dismissed Thursday afternoon to allow the students to see her popular baseball hero, Walter Johnson perform in a baseball game. The coach, Johnson, is Johnson's home which made the event of unusual interest. Long-Term Argument Lost A debate which occupied the entire chapel period was pulled off by the members of the high school debating club Thursday morning. The subject for discussion was, Resolved That the President of the United States should be able to decide of six years and be inelegible for reelection. The negative side won by the anonymous decision of the indes. Another Math Club A mathematics club is being formed in the high school. Only those who have finished three years of high school mathematics are eligible to the club. The purpose of the organization is to study subjects relating to this subject. Another Math Club TWO D. C. H. S.-JUNCTION GAMES HAVE SAME SCORE (Rv Helen Gott) Chapman, Nov. 1—The Dickinson county high school football team defeated the Junction City high school team here today by a score of 47 to 0. The features of the game were the open-field running of Taylor and Dietrich, and the blocking of punts by Kohman. Dalton, the Junction City captain, was the mainstay of the Junction City team. This is the second game of the season between the two teams, the scores of the two games being identical. The girls' glee club, under the direction of Miss McCammon sang before the County Teachers' Association in Abilene today, and was enthusiastically received. SALINA SUPERIOR IN CENTRAL KANS. CIRCUIT (By Paul A. Kuhn) Salina, Nov. 1-The Salina high school football team won an easy victory from the Abilene eleven in Salina Friday afternoon, score 29 to 0. Chambers, L. Evans, and Smith starred for Salina. The high school championship of Central Kansas now belongs to Sa THE. The next game with St. Mary's Academy Nov. 6 is expected to be the hardest game of the season. EUREKA'S ONE TOUCHDOWN BEAT COTTONOUND FALLS Eureka. Nov. 2. — Eureka high defeated the Cottonwood Falls high school team in a fast game of football by a single touchdown. Failure to kick goal make the score six to nothing. The second team played the Howard high school first team and was beaten twelve to nothing. FOR RENT-Modern six room house. Furnished. Bell 2287. (Bv Morris Smyth) The freshmen at Ohio State University have united in enforcing the wearing of the Freshmen caps. The freshmen at the University of Wisconsin recently voted in favor of the Student Court System. NORTHERN SCHOOL WORKS NIGHTS AND SATURDAYS Mr. Adolph J. Spangler, who went from the University of Kansas to the University of Minnesota last July, where he holds the position of assistant state entomologist, writes that regular Saturday classes are held in all schools and that in the extension division, of which Prof. R. R. Price is the head, night classes are being offered. Send the Daily Kansan home. Princeton University authorities, through the Department of Physical Education and Hygiene, have announced the requirements in swimming for freshmen which the first-year men must pass before being excused to compete with other forms of cancer. The test requires a man to swim twenty twents yards and demonstrate an ability to use the backstroke. We buy in large quantities, thus getting an extra discount, and our prices are guaged accordingly. We can supply you with a KEUFFEL & ESSER PARAGON BRAND Richter - - - No. 828HS $14.00 FRESHMAN ENGINEERS We can save you money on your Drawing Instruments These sets were approved by the University of Kansas Engineering Faculty. We have no student agents whose commissions add to the price. And Furthermore--We are here to back up every set that leaves this store. $18.50 "For the majority of people, the study of any science has a great religious value. Insomuch that the study of zoology gives us a bigger, broader view of the world in which we live and gives us a better understanding of our relationship to the other things in it, we know ourselves better and therefore the study is valuable." Prof. Erasmus Haworth, head of the department of geology said he could not see where the study of any science that made a man a better man for the knowledge he gained from school was objected to upon religious grounds. SCIENCE STUDY HAS A RELIGIOUS VALUE Souvenir plates of K. U. at Wolf's Book Store…Adv. 35-2 Allegretti and Douglas chocolates at Barber's Drug Store...Adv. 34 University Professors Disagree Or Theory That College Courses Clash With Church "If I thought that there were any who would study a science and then turn to the Bible for the final word of any little problem that might be in his mind, I would learn it, and in this study of science a wide bore," said William J. Baumgartner, assistant professor of zoology and histology. "Is there any religious value in the study of the sciences?" The heads of the departments of botany, zoology, and geology at the University of Kansas think that there is. "In my mind there is no doubt about the religious value of our study of the sciences," said Prof. C. Stevens, head of the department of botany today. "The thoughtful study of any science will lead us to see that the universe was created, not to satisfy a whim, but according to a thoroughly worked-out plan. The study of botany will give us a keener appreciation of the beauty around us, and will help you learn all you can about an all-powerful Creator that planned the universe and the things therein. ROWLANDS COLLEGE BOOK STORE University of Wisconsin dancers may now dance the tango. The question was placed in the hands of the Union dance committee. In making his report the chairman announced that the tango will be allowed provided "the couples maintain a distance of at least three inches, and hold the left hand from the body." Registering as a senior in Oregon University, after completing the first three years of her college course nearly \twenty years ago, is the unique record of Mrs. Mclean. Although she has a husband and three children, she nevertheless wishes to complete her college education and get an A. B. degree. She is carrying a full seventeen hour course and is doing the work merely for her own pleasure. Finishes After 20 Years "Oh, of course, there are a great many sophomores in the world," said Professor Haworth. "You know what a sophomore is, don't you? Well, a sophomore is a worldly fellow who thinks he is a lawyer. That is why the name was given to second-year students in schools. It is very applicable. Nobody but a sophomore will argue that the study of the sciences is not valuable reliably. The more we know about the world, and the more that exist upon it, the more intelligently can we read the Bible and understand the commands of Jesus Christ." 11:00 Chapel, Langdon Davies of London. 2:30 Entomological Club, (Mu.) 3-4 Chancellor's open room to faculty. 3:30 Economics Seminar, (Lib.) 4:30 Journalism address, Mrs Myra Williams Jarrell of Topeka, (Medic lecture room). 7:30 Glee Club practice, (Fra.) 7:30 Christian Science Society (Myers hall.) 7:30 Band rehearsal, (Chapel Fraser). 7:30 Hawk Dramatic Club, (110 Chancellor) 7:30 Mandolin club rehearsal (116 Fraser). Thursday 7:00 Amer. Society Mech. Eng. (1607 Tenn.) 7:30 Orchestra practice, (Fra.) Friday 11:00 Chapel, Ministerial Alliance of Lawrence. Saturday 3:00 Football, K U. vs. Washburn, McCook). 8-12 Monochrome dance, (Gym.) Future Events Nov. 4 Chapel, Langdon Davies of London. Nov. 6-7 Teachers' Convention. Topeka. Nov.11 Visiting recital, Otto Meyer (Fraser). Nov.13-14-15 Joint meeting of Kansas Conference of Charities and Corrections, Institute of Criminal Law and Criminality, and Probate Judges' Association. Nov.14 Class Dance, Robinson gymnasium, 8-12 p. m. Nov.15 Student Council Dance Robinson gymnasium, 8-12 p. m. Nov.18 Plain recital, Heniot Levy (Fraser). CALENDAR Tuesday HONOR SYSTEM AT CHICAGO Court of Students Will Try All Cheating Cases A court of students at the University of Chicago to try members of their classes for violation of the honor-code is proposed in resolutions adopted by a committee of the honor association. The plan will be approved at the next meeting of association it is expected, and then submitted to the faculty, many of whom have already endorsed it. The court will be composed of six men and six women. Its members will be appointed, the committee stating that "it is difficult for the student body as a whole to choose its most honest men and women." It is planned to place a box in the room where mail is distributed and any students observing dishonesty in examination on the part of any student will be expected to drop a slip into the box, giving the name of the guilty one. No person may be adjudged guilty until at least two persons have appeared in the prosecution. Prosecution for the first offense will be a reprimand; for the second offense the student's name will be published in the university paper and he will be expected to take part in the university outside of his regular work, and for the third offense he will be suspended.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. LOST-Fountain pen between library and 900 block Tenn. Finder please notify Warren, 939 Tenn, 2500 Bell. 38-3*t ANOKA 2 for 25 ANOKA A New ARROW Notch COLLAR Cinett, Peabody & Co., Inc. Makers ANOKA 2 for 25 ANOKA A New ARROW Notch COLLAR Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc. Makers Bowersock Theatre TONIGHT 20 BIG FEATURES LYMAN HOWES FESTIVAL TRAVEL GRAN CANYON A MILE DEEP HOPP AND JOE INDIAN TYPES DANCES INDUSTRIES THRILLING REScuCES FROM AN OCEAN GREYHOUND SHIPWRECKED TOWN BY RAGING SEAS SPEEDING BYHYROD-AEROPLANE A MILE HIGH MARINE WORDERS YACHTTING WONDERS OF MARINE LIFE MAKY O'NEILAND Prices 25-35-50 Note: The management guarantee these pictures to give satisfaction or money refunded. ANNOUNCEMENTS The Ladies of the Faculty will be at home to the young men of the University and members of the faculty, Thursday afternoon, November 6 at Haworth hall from 3 to 5:30 o'clock. A one-reel Powers "Chivalry Days" and a two-reel Eclair feature "One of the Rabbie" will be the program at the Patee Thursday night, Nov. 6. The Y. M. C. A will have traveled to all A will have arrived will go to the Y. M. C. A. Week-night date rules have been suspended for this date. The Christian Science society meets Tuesday, Nov. 4, in Myers hall at 7:30 p. m. Lewis Nofsinger, president; Carl Luke, secretary. The first meeting of the annual board has been called by Russell Clark, editor-in-chief, for Wednesday evening in room 6, Green hall. The K. U. Dames will meet with Mrs. H. B. Hungerford, 1037 Kentucky street at 3 o'clock Wednesday. The Junior Smoker committee meets Wednesday, Nov. 5, at 4:45 in myers hall. L. Bocker, chairman. New stock of "Hurds" writing paper in pound packages; also an assortment of correspondent cards. Wolfs Book Store.-Adv. 35-2 Football Schedule Football Schedule Nov. 8 — Washburn at Lawrence. Nov.15 — Nebraska on McCook. Nov.22 — Missouri at Columbia. Charles Larned, a real estate dealer of Boston, left $10,000 each to Tuskegee and Hampton Institutes who will which was probated last week. STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY The November Sale of Silks Opens Wednesday Morning Continues 4 days The most beautiful collection of the most wanted Silks, at one third less than usual. The selection includes Crepe de Chines, Crepe Meteors, Charmeuse, Silk Poplins, Brocadees for Day or Evening Wear. SILKS worth 65c at...49c SILKS worth 65e at . . . . . MESSALINES, SILKA SERGES, and Black 36-Taffeta worth $1.00 a vard at. ... 69e BROCADED SILK CREPE, in best shades, $1.25 at . . . at 79.97 CREPE de CHINE, Cheney Bros. best quality, worth $12.5 at ...98 BROCADED RATINES, $1.50 qual. iat, at. . . . . CREPE METEOR, $2.50 quality at. ... $1.69 CHARMEUSE BROCADE $2.00 quality at ... $1.39 CREPE METEOR BROCADE, 12-inch in best shades, $50.50 value at Walmart. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Ormsen Bullmeier Nackman Manicure articles, razors, strops and toilet articles of all kinds at Barber's drug store.-Adv. FOR RENT—Rooms for chafing-dish house-keeping. New house. Bell 1112, 1310 Teen. Skin cure for accema, itch, barbers' itch, dandruff, and all skin affections, at Barber & Son's.-Adv. Freshmen engineers be sure and see our ad on third page. It will save you money—Adv. For that dark crossing—a flash light from Fein's.—Adv. 1813 by will Piggoty Don't violate the law of fashion which clearly states that unobtrusive patterns in suits are the rule this fall. Indistinct lines, self stripe, neutral tints. To see just what this means see just what we show. Suits from $15 to $30. A beautiful cloth in gray or blue serge with a pencil stripe at $17. Ober's MACHINE CHEF Coffee--Don't blame the coffee if it's bad. Perhaps it's the water. Make it of distilled water, McNish. Phones 198—Adv. 39-2 Freshmen engineers be sure and see our ad on third page. It will have you money.-Adv. LOST -Theta Tau pin Friday evening. Let Leslie H. Dodd know, that he likes the job. Freshman engineers see our ad on third page.—Adv. Purdue University celebrated its 111th birthday last week. Freshman engineers see our ad on third page.--Adv. Coach Ketcham of the Yale football team has forbidden his men to write feature stories for the papers, and has himself declined an offer to write accounts of the big games in which his team takes part. A full line of electrical supplies at Fein's."—Adv. The best in gas fixtures at Fein's Adv. UNFAMILIAR VIEWS NO. 6—TWO PHOTOGRAPHS OF GREEN HALL CHAPEL HILL MARYLAND Social Notes The graduate students met east of Fraser hall last night for their annual Halloween party. After the club divided into couples it was take in charge by a ghostly leader who led the children in gorgeous Mardi Gras grove, around Potter lake and landed them safely at Mvers hall. Graduates Were Ghosts. At the darkest places they were halted by a ghost who made them change partners or called on some one for a speech. Miss Anderson, Leila Swarts, Mr. Cleaver, and H. R. Alles were chosen in this manner. Once at Myers hall the party was treated to about four times as many doughnuts as they could eat, and it was as much cider as they dared drink. --- The Delta Phi Delta art sorority met this afternoon at the home of Edith Cooper, 1349 Vermont street. The response to roll call was made by writing in the press of art. The lives and works of Raphael and Titian were the study topics for the afternoon. Light refreshments were served. The freshmen of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity entertained the upperclassman of the fraternity Saturday night with an elaborate six-string dance about eleven o'clock after the masque dance at Robinson gymnasium. Freshmen Give Dinner. The guests were Mary Atkinson, Thelmia Welsh, Phyllis Burroughs, Jessie Talbot, Margaret Talbot, Virginia Goff, Adrienne Atkinson, Virginia Lucas, Helen Jenkins, Helen Righy, Maurine Fairweather, Margaret Hughes, Linnie Sheets, Blanche Simon, Myrtle Pugh, becca Cooper, Winetta Pugh, Vena Sparks and Miss Ruth Wilson of Topeka Fraternity colors were used and ideas carried out in the decorations. The junior class will give its first class dance the night before the Nebraska game. Admission is fifty cents and Haley and Findley will play. Mr. Fred Cowles and Miss Barber chaperoned. The Allemania club was entertained with a Halloween party Saturday night at the residence of Dean Olin Templin. The young ladies of the Coleman house entertained with a matinee dance Saturday afternoon. About thirty guests were present. Nell Martindale, '12, who is teaching in the Reno county high school spent the week-end in Lawrence. The Congregational Y. P. C. E. entertained a social in the church parlors Saturday night. Prof. and Mrs. Arthur Mitchell will entertain the philosophy classes Saturday evening, Nov. 15. REALIZATION DIFFERS FROM ANTICIPATION VES VERY CLEVER INDEED OKLA. THIS IS SOME CLEVER HALLOWEEN STUNT BE- LIEVE ME J.HAWK This is the cartoon which was all ready to run in the Daily Kan san "sport extra" last week. FRANK ORLAND CYLE OF PLAY NEW YORK SHIRT This cartoon seems to be more applicable to the facts as they developed about four o'clock Friday. BELL BROTHERS Piano Polish Nothing in the polish to harm the most delicate wood. Give it a trial. 25c a bottle. This polish has been used by the Bell Brothers Music Company for the past twenty-five years in their factory and stores. It gives a high polish and acts as a preservative. A piano and furniture polish that you need not be afraid to use. Bell Brothers Music Co. FISCHER'S SHOES ARE GOOD SHOES Notice See them on center stand in our north window. Have you seen the two new women's shoes we just received, made in Mahogany Brown and Black leather? Fischer's A CALABASH Just a few of our Meerschaum bowl specials left for $1.00 Better hurry if you want in on the biggest pipe bargain in town CARROLL'S SMITH'S NEWS DEPOT phone 608 709 Change to Accommodate Students MISSISSIPPI CAR TENNESSEE CAR Leaves Henry and Mass. 15 and 45 minutes past hour. (Old time 20 and 50). TENNESSEE CAR Leaves Henry and Mass. 25 and 55 minutes past hour. (Old time hour and 30). Leaves Henry and Mass. hour, 15, 30 and 45. (Old time 5, 20, 35 and 50). INDIANA CAR Lawrence Railway & Light Co. Under Other Goal Posts The Nebraska Cornhuskers received the scare of their life in their battle with the Ames Aggies Saturday, the Iowa Farmers leading by a score of 9 to 6 at the end of the first half. Joann Bumstein gave his pupils a hair-rising talk during the intermission, and the result was that the Lincoln athletes came back in the second half and with two touchdowns in swift succession wiped the Ames Collegians off the map. The Okloma Sooners in their game with the Jayhawkers Friday did not substitute a man throughout the entire conference. They were Spears, the big center, not a single Sooner was hurt during the entire contest The Tigers had an easy victory Saturday at Columbia, Brewer's men downing the Rolla Miners, 44 to 14. The Missourians merely added proof to the statement that has been made against them all season, they were strong on the offense and the other seven in ball. Drury seven points against the Tigers, Illinois 19, Oklahoma 17, Ames 13, and Rolla 14. Only a 7ift of 70 points piled up against the Tiger defense so far this season. Poor old Fairmount was the goat of the attack of the rejuvenated Kansas Aggies Saturday, Lowman's squad burying the Wichita athletes deep beneath a 30 to 7 score. Maddened by their easy defeat at the hands of the Jayhawkers the week before, Loomis led his bunch into the game Saturday thirsting for blood, and they got it. The Washburn Ichabods walked all over the State Nomals Saturday at Topeka by a count of 41 to 7. Realizing only too well that a Kansas scout was in the grandstand, he kept his athletes down to straight football, but the accomplishment they showed in that line was a revelation. The Yale Bulldog is beau muled, battered, and bent fearfully this season. From early fall it was apparent that the Blue and White did not class with the other eastern elevens, but the real blow came Saturday at the Giants' defeat at the hands of Colgate. As Ted Coy, the former Yale coach, would so dramatically put it, "Whinoell is Colgate?" And in the meanwhile Harvard romps on! Twenty-three to six was the package they handed Cornell Saturday. Drake snowed Washington under a heavy defeat Saturday. Which proves the old law, revived in Twentieth Century Cinemas, "Once a Piker, always a Piker." LOST - Conklin self-filling fountain pen near chemistry building. Return to Lloyd McKemney, 929 Aia. 1934 Bell. Reward. 36-1* 'OR SALE' - New $25 all-wool overcoat, tailor-made, will sell this vening for $15.00; too small for owner. Call Bliar 2180. 1304 76-19. 36-1* Send the Daily Kansan home. STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. NUMBER 38. "EUROPEAN WARS ARE BAD FOR AMERICANS" Mr. Davies of London Says Quabbles Across the Atlantic Affect Industry and Capital in the United States HE LIKED THE UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 5. 1913. After Visiting the Different Buildings, the Chapel Speaker Who Was Late, Was Surprised "Armament's curb industry and European war budgets draw capital from American markets," says Langdon Davies who failed to appear in chapel yesterday morning in rived in Lawrence at 11:45 a.m. he and his friend were in the afternoon. He was the guest of the Knife and Fork club last night. Prof. D, C. Croissant of the extension department entertained Mr. Davies while he was here. According to Professor Croissant the students have missed one of the most interesting lectures of the year. Mr. Davies, after his trip of inspection over the University with Professor Croissant, spent an astonishing over the building with particular interest those departments that are not in use in the English schools from which he comes. Mr. Davies was to have spoken on "International Conclusion." When asked why he came to America to discuss this question he replied." The moral force of America, where the Peace Idea is so strong and when Europe affectionate, can be similar in the invulnerable for our campaign in Europe. The policy of as great a nation as the United States is enough to turn the tide of opinion in the European countries. Europe is today going bankrupt, and the reason is, as is usually the case, in her hands. The mass of taxation is ever on the increase, and the mass of that taxation is for war and armament, neither of which can benefit the lives of our people." DISCUSSES MISSION OF COUNTRY PAPER Mrs. Jarrell Tells Students About Work of The Rural Newspaper —"Names Are News" Again, in speaking of country newspaper work, Mrs. Jarrel said the two first things she learned were patience and self-control. "I learned the necessity of a way to keep track of my check, and I learned that names constitute news. The more names you can crowd into a paper the better it will be liked." Students in the department of journalism heard the newspaper discussed from the standpoint of a woman yesterday afternoon when Mrs. Myra Williams Jarrel, of Topeka, a newspaperwoman familiar with journalism in all its arts, spoke. The mission of the country news in the country home was one of the points emphasized by Mrs. Jarrel. "Living in a city all my life, I had no idea about the starved life many of the farmers' wives lead until I learned it through country newspaper work," she said. "The farmer's wives ask for her paper and in it winks a friend." Paper day is made of a gloom or a day of cheer. Endless little things may be written which will help make her life more bearable." Herself a successful feature story writer, she also spoke of the work that helped her. STUDENTS AND FACULTY WILL EAT TOGETHER Doughnuts like those you got at home and coffee that rivals the Harry house brand will be served by the ladies of the faculty tomorrow afternoon in Haworth hall from three until five-thirty. The men students of the University and the members of the faculty are to be the guests. Between six and seven hundred doughnuts will be served and three ladies will be there to pour the coffee. Orators Get Lay-off Mesadames Frank Strong, F. E. Kester, and M. E. Rice will be on the receiving line and they have requested every man student to drop in at Haworth hall and get acquainted. O. T. HILL will be in Topeka tomorrow and Friday to attend the State Teachers' Association. His public speaking classes will not meet on these days. HINSHAW CASE GOES TO THE JURY TODAY HINSHAW CASE GOES The last evidence in the Hinshaw case was taken this morning and this afternoon the attorneys are making their pleas before the jury. Among those speaking against Mr. Dardick who will pledge for the defense, The interest in this case is manifested by the packed courtroom at each session. Thomas J. Hinshaw is a middle law student who is charged with being an accomplice in a forgery case. WILL ELECT TWO FOR THE ATHLETIC BOARD Student Council to Fill Vacancies at Next Meeting—Candidates Should Get Busy Two vacancies which have occurred on the Athletic Board will be filled at an election by the Men's Student Council next Tuesday night. The places are those of Harry Burnham who was drowned last spring, and Audray Purcell who did not return to the University this fall. One place is for an athletic member which was held by Burnham. The other is for a non-athletic member. Petitions of the candidates for these officers must be handed in to President Dodd by next Monday night signed by twenty-five holders of Student Enterprise tickets and accompanied by fifty cents. ENGINEERS' SMOKER, MEN MONDAY, EAGLES' HALL, 25c At an enthusiastic meeting of the engineers yesterday an all-engineer smoker, to be held at Eagles' hall halloween evening at 8 o'clock was decided on. Boxing will be one of the features of the evening's entertainment open. There will be plenty of music and lots of eats. Tags will go on sale tomorrow at 25 cents each. According to Oscar Dingman, president of the engineers, this is the best way to make something better this year to make the engineers better acquainted. PLANS BEGIN FOR 3RD BIG FOOTBALL SMOKER Smokes, eats, and stunts will provide entertainment at the annual football smoker to be given in honor of the team soon after the final game, according to L. W. Kinear, chairman of the Student Council committee in charge of entertainment for the smoker. "Class societies will put on stunts, and some good ones are promised," said Kinaim the afternoon. "We want some individual stunt too, but I don't want it. If people willing to help out he should notify the entertainment committee." ANNOUNCES THE FINAL GLEE CLUB PERSONNEL Prof. C. E. Hubach, director of the Men's Glee club announced the names of those who will sing in this year's club as follows: First tenor: Wheelock, Fitzpatrick, Arnold, Frederick; second tenor, Sowers, Houston, Blackman, Gumbiner; first bass, Schwartz, McCurdy, Rankin, Paintier; second bass, Morris, Williams, Burnett, Alley. An exceptionally successful recital was given by students in the School of Fine Arts at the Unitarian church yesterday afternoon. The attendance was large and the audience appreciative. C. R. Sowers is manager of the club. those who appeared on the program were: Claire Dietrich, Helen Wellman, Mrs. Garver, William Hoyt, Dorothy Keeler, Dorothy Morgan, Ruth Lambe, and John Martin. STUDENTS GIVE RECITAL BEFORE LARGE AUDIENCE VARSITY TRACK MEN TRAIN FOR BIG MEET News dispatches in the Kansas City papers this morning from Lincoln, Nebr., say that the Nebraska Athletic篮球队 has played Rosa, the negro league play in the frame. The action followed an announcement by Chancellor Avery last week, refusing to permit the color line to be drawn. Ross Will Play Outlaw Teams Plays Football Eleven Johnson county students went to Olathe today to play the Olathe high school a game of football. The contest is an annual affair between a K. U., outlaw team and the high school. K. U, Athletes Hope to Win Conference Cross Country Race at Lincoln Saturday, Six Universities Competing Material From Each Grade Stack Up O. K.-Four Captains Want More Material INTER CLASS RACES COMING The Varsity track men are working hard all this week in preparation for the conference cross country races at Lincoln Saturday, and the annual interclass track meet on November 11, the following Tuesday. There is much speculation as to the probable make-up of the team which will represent Kansas in the all-valley race Saturday. The Jayhawkers came out third in the contest at Columbia last year, and anxious to better understand this off the first honors. The Missouri Tigers, the team which won the 1912 contest, are not rated nearly so strong as they were last fall, and the real battle should be between the Cornhuskers and the Jayhawkers for first place in the long race. Neither Coach Hamilton, nor Dan Hazen, the Varsity cap has been able to fill the spot, will represent Drake, Ames, the Kansas Aggies, or Washington, the other four contenders in the big event, and, with a bunch of dark horses, may upset all T K T DAN HAZEN, Track Captain Inter-Class a Week Later Each class is lining up its men for the annual inter-class meet to come a week later. The rivalry between the four divisions has been very keen in years past, and we know why the contest this year should not be the hardest fought of all. dope, and grab the blue ribbon. This however is not looked for, and the Tigers, the Cornhuskers, and Kansas should fight it out among themselves for first, second, and third places respectively. (Continued on page 4) Captain Hazen leads the seniors, and according to him it's going to be a lead to victory. Danny confidently doesn't see how his men are going to lose. Vincent Cissna, the spinner, Pauley, the pole vaulter, Spreier, and Perry, a hurdler, will be mainstays for the upperclassman. Junioris Are Strong (1) Ray Edwards, a specialist in interesting from theains to the two that captures the juniors. "Nuts" Hurst and Kirk Hilton form the body-guard around which Edwards will build up his squad. However it is impossible for three men to win a track entirely through these columns issues an urgent appeal for more material. The sophs have not yet chosen a captain. Bonny Reber, end on the Varsity football eleven, will probably be named for the position if the team wins or loses. The sure of 10 points in the weights, Elswick good for 6, three third places in the distance events, Flake showing well for a place in the quarter and half, and McKay, a 5 point possible, would take task (Continued on nare 4) ARE KANSAS CHILD STATUTES ADEQUATE? Kansas Societies Having Question in Charge Meet to Discuss Law Revision—Prof. Helleberg is Secretary Instructors From School of Education and Child Welfare Department Are on Program K. U. PROFESSORS TAKE PART Mount Oread will be the host of three colleges who will meet in joint session next week, Nov. 14 and 15. One of the objects of the meeting will be to consider a revision of Kansas laws which affects children, according to Prof. V. E. Heilberg, secretary of the Kansas Conference of Charities and Corrections. The Kansas Society of Criminal and Criminology holds an association of Poor Judges are the other two societies which meet together. The Rev. F. E. Sherman, Judge William F. Schoch, and Judge W. W. Parker, heads of the three organizations, will deliver addresses at the opening session. Mrs. Kate E. Pierson of Topeka, formerly of the Kansas City Board of Public Health, will speak "The Appeal of Feeble-Minded Child" Senator C. S. Hoffman, Columbus, J. F. Garver, Topeka, and Dr. J. T. Paulnker, Lansing, will make a report "On Laws Concerning Medical Treatment of Defective Children." "Arrested Development of Children" will be the subject of Prof. A. W. Trettenau of the University of Kansas. He will be followed by a National report on Backward Children" from M. E. Pearson, Kansas City, Kansas, chairman, H. W. Charles, Topkea, M. W. Woods, Wichita, and Dr. E. W. Burgess, K. U. Afternoon speakers Thursday will be: Prof. William A. M. Kecewan, head of the new department of child welfare at K. U., Judge Hug McFarland on "Our Present Juvenile Court System," and Judge H. F. Mason, Kansas Supreme Court, on juvenile matters." Judge J. Winfield, Winfield Senator J. W. Parker, Olatee, Judge J. C. Ruppenthal, Russel, and J. B. Smith,ola, will make reports on reforms of existing laws affecting children. The meeting will conclude Friday with addresses by L. A. Halbert of the Kansas City Board of Public Affairs and Dr. Frank Lowland of Topeca. JACK MALCOLMSON CAN NOT COMPETE SATURDAY Jack Malcolmson, "K" track man, while practicing the cross country run last Saturday stepped in a mole hole and broke a bone in his foot. The doctors say this injury will keep him out of practice for about six weeks and 'will keep him from entering the Missouri Valley cross country run to be held at Lincoln next Saturday. Malcolmson was a "K" man last year and won was considered almost a sure point winner in the long distance runs. Manager Hamilton is having trouble getting officials for the Washburn team. Today he learned that C. E. McBride could not serve, and will probably get either Quigley of St. Marys or McCreamy of Oklahoma. "Doe" Reilly will assist. Officials Hard to Get Clarence Miller, a junior law student last year from Montgomery county died October 29 in a hospital at Independence. Mr. Miller's death followed an operation for appendicitis. Clarence Miller Dead Nebraska Crowd to be Big Orders for $400 worth of tickets for the Nebraska game brightened the smile of Manager Hamilton this morning. "I am preparing for a crowd as big as that at the Missouri game last year," he says. Oread Teachers go to Topeka Many of the teachers of the Oread high school will attend the teachers' meeting at Topeka this week but enough will be left to keep all classes in full swing. Mrs. John Mullen of Hutchinson will visit her daughter, Blanche Mullen, this week. Freshmen on W. S. G. A. At a special election held by the freshmen girls yesterday Margaret Hughes and Janet Thompson were elected to represent the class on the council of the W. S. G. A. STUDENTS PACK Y. M. S PACK M. M. "MOVIE" LAST NIGHT Student packed the Aurora "movie" theater at every performance last night and aided the general fund of the Y. M. C. A. music mate. The date mate was the week-night date rule was off, and everybody had a good time. Thursday night the Oread and Pattee "nickles will also give a benefit performance for the Y. M. and again dates will be allowed for those students who patronize the shows. JUICY TENDERLOIN TO FEED K. U. TEACHERS Annual Topeka Banquet Will Be Luscious Feast Says Prof. L. N. Flint—350 Expected. The committee in charge of the University alumni dinner at Topeka tomorrow night will have a special feast of tenderloin steak and cranberry sauce for the University faculty members who dodged the veal loaf served last year and ate at the Harvey eating house. Wiley will prepare the dinner. Prof. L, N. Flint, chairman of the committee on arrangements, of which he will serve him with those that mother used to cook. Three hundred and fifty alumni are to attend the annual banquet. The dinner will be served in the First Baptist church at 6 o'clock. Chancellor Strong will act as toastmaster and several members of the faculty will be called on for extemporaneous talks. PHI PSIS AND BETAS FUSS Disagreement Over Rules Takes Place of Gridiron Battle Inability of *the Betas* and *Phi* Pisis to agree on terms regarding the proposed four team game between the two teams may postpone contest indefinitely. The Betas contend that interfraternity baseball rules should govern, providing that Varsity men may play, but not in their Varsity position. The Phi Psis argue that Pan-Hellenic track rules should apply, barring Varsity men. The Phi Psis say further support that the Phi Psis were tentatively accepted it was stipulated that Varsity men might participate. The game, if it is ever played, will be for a dinner at the Eldridge house. The contract, which the Phi Pals refused to sign because of the provision concerning Varsity players, calls also for a dinner in case either teams falls to appear on the field. Meanwhile, negotiations are still in progress. DODD AND MILLER TO HELP MANAGE ANNUAL Leslie Dodd and Frank Miller were elected by the Men's Student Council to places on the managing board of the Jayhawker last night. The board is composed of three members, one elected by the senior class and two by the Student Council. The chairman of the committee, Guy VonSchriltz, was elected by the class some time ago. "TONY" JANES GOES TO HOSPITAL WITH BRONCHITIS "Tony" James, the giant guard on the Varsity football team, was taken to the Simmons hospital last night with bronchitis. "Tony" is not as badly off as that sounds. He will be kept away from the rest of the team until he is well, but may be able to get into the Washburn game. EXPLAINS HOW TO FIND LAW TO LAW STUDENTS Professor Daly, of the West Publishing Company, who is here this week lecturing to the students of the law school on: "Where and how to find the law, the explained the American Digest system yesterday. Professor Daly talks to the Middles at ten and to the seniors at eleven. Mr. George Zable of Baldwin was a guest at the Keltz house for the week-end. Methodist Secretary to Talk Mary Curtiss Tarris, traveling college secretary for Methodist girls, will be in Lawrence, Friday, Nov. 7 and will speak to the Methodist girls of the University, Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock at the Methodist parsonage. Methodist Secretary to Talk WILL END INSPECTION TRIP AT MO.-KAN. GAME Fifty Engineers Plan Journey to Visit Bridges, Dams, Shops— And Then That Big Tiger Tail Twisting GO TO KEOKUK AND ST. LOUIS Senior Electricals, Professors, Other Seniors and Underclassmen Will Compose Party-Week's Trip The itinerary of the trip takes in the hydro-electric power plant at Keokuk, Iowa, several engineering accomplishments at St. Louis, Mo., and other places in the country. The members of the faculty will accompany the students. An inspection trip by more than fifty engineers, including the Missouri-Kansas football game at Columbia, Mo. Nov. 22, is being planned by the seniors in the School of Engineering. It is already certain that at least half that number will go. The School of Engineering practically requires students to visit some large bridge, dam, or other big work of an engineer, but the experience across the Mississippi river at Keokuk, Iowa, is the second largest in the world, several seniors wished to inspect it and the students have worked up enough enthusiasm in the plan to get more than twenty-five students to join the ship will include the tailtwisting spectacle at Columbia is an added inducement. At present it is planned to start from Lawrence Monday, Nov. 17, visit Keokuk on Tuesday and Wednesday, St. Louis on Thursday and Friday, and Columbia on Saturday. The department will accompany the team. The railroad fare will approximate seventeen dollars. The senior electricals and most of the senior civils will make the trip, it is said this morning. Enough seniors from the other departments and underclassmen will be ready to leave when the train pulls out, the boosters of the plan say, that at least two special coaches will be filled. COUNCILS WILL KEEP DICIPLINARY POWER Student Government Organizations to be Granted Authority at Next Council Meeting The control over student discipline last year granted the Men's and Women's Student Councils, which was not delegated again this year by the University Council owing to the delay occasioned by the fact that will be again granted without doubt according to Chancellor Strong. It has recently developed that the two councils have in reality no disciplinary power yet this year, the same being withheld until a committee of three, to be appointed by Chancellor Strong, should revise and restate the rules including the reference to student freshman caps. The University Council must pass on such revised statements and the matter will come up at the next council meeting. UNIVERSITY CLUB TO HOLD FORMAL OPENING FRIDAY The new home of the University Club is rapidly nearing completion and will be formally opened Friday, Nov. 14. The officers for the coming year will take charge at this time. They are: P. H. Hodder, president; I. M. Hodder, vice president; N. Lewis, treasurer; C. D. Croissant, secretary. The retiring officers are: J. N. Van der Vries, president; C. Becker, vice president; C. A. Dykstra, treasurer; E. W. Murray, secretary. "Freshman Bibles" are Popular All of the 1500 K books ordered by the Y. M. C. A. this fall are gone and those freshmen who have not yet received their books will now have to wait until next year. The Weather Warm and fair weather for the next two days and possibly Saturday will leave McCook field in good shape. The change in temperature in sight. The weather man is making up for his failure of last week. Temperatures today: 2 p. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 9 p. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 7 a. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The official student paper of the University of Kansas. EDITORIAL STAFF HERBERT FLAINT . . . . . BUSINESS STAFF BROWN ANERL RAY ELBRIDGE ... Advertising Manager Circulation Manager Advertising REPORTORIAL STAFF REPORTORIAL STAFF LUCE BARRON JIMMY DYNEE JOHN CROSS SAM DRUNK TOMORROW KENNETH SAM DRUNK Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the postoffice at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879 Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of journalism. Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance; one term, $1.5 Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANAR, Lawrence Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance: one term, $1.50. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate life of the University of Kansas; to go for a journey with the students in the University holds; to play no favorites, to be gentle; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courageous; to learn more persons; to teach others; in all, to the best of its ability. The University of the WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1913. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * - Glendon Allvine, associate editor, is entirely * - responsible for today's editorial page. * The greatest advantage I know of being thought a wit by the world is, that it gives one the greatest freedom of playing the fool—Alexander Pope. STUDENTS WILL "CHIP IN" We can not too strongly urge upon professors and instructors the desirability of attending on Thursday and Friday the meeting of the State Teachers' Association in Topeka. The student body unites with Chancellor Strong in saying that it is of great importance that the University be largely represented at the association. University or be a Chancellor has met with such hearty approval among the students of the College as that giving permission to the teachers in the College to dismiss classes and attend the meeting in Topeka. It is unnecessary to mention the benefits to be derived from the comparing of ideas with other members of the great profession of teaching. There is hardly an instructor in the College who thinks so much of his method of teaching that he will not admit there is room for improvement. Such improvement may be gained at the teachers' conference. We can see no reason why every class should not look in vain for its instructor Thursday. We hope that no serious handicap to the cause of international peace will result from the failure of Langdon Davies of London to speak in chapel Tuesday. II PENSEROSO. The appearance of the history reference room at the library has been greatly improved by the addition of fifty beautifully bound books printed in Italian. For decorative purposes it occurs to us that Japanese lanterns and autumn leaves would have been more effective and considerably cheaper. Or, if the Italian atmosphere were desired, sprays of spaghetti and bunches of bananas might have been used. RESOLVED. THAT "Only high class films will be shown" at the theaters when the Y. M. C. A. has charge tomorrow night. We infer that on other nights the films will be lowered to our level. A society for the simplification and furtherance or comprehensibility of resolutions to debate has a great field in which to labor. When such subjects as "Resolved, That the several states should adopt a unicameral form of legislature," are chosen for inter-collegiate debate, is it any wonder that the laymen evinces little interest? ATTENTION, THEOLOGIANS. Out feature editor has again unearthed the told topic "The religious value of the study of botany." Assurances from the professors in the biology department that there is no doubt as to the religious value thereof will now quiet the popular clamor for information on this subject. subject. Prospective theology students are urged to enroll in courses 52 and 58, Taxonomy of Phanerogams, and Special Morphology of Bryophytes and Pteriodophytes. We are more easily persuaded, in general, by the reasons we ourselves discover, than by those which have been suggested to us by others—Pascal. ENTITLED TO 95 IN TABLE MANNERS E. E. Kelley of the Toronto Republican, who delivered an address at the University of Kansas last week, writes; "The Missus wishes to know if we made any table breaks at the Greek letter fraternity luncheon. You see, several years ago we were invited to a tea where the writer happened to be about the only man at the table. We got interested in conversation as well as the actuals, and in the course of about five minutes had forks at our plate. We kept every Missus that came to us in a dish. It mortified the Missus awfully and she has never quite gotten over it. We only made one break at the luncheon. We were busy talking and all at once we noticed the fellows folding napkins. Our napkin seemed some way to have crawled under our plate and spread itself out there. We slid it gently from under the plate, folded it beside our plate, and what was our surprise on rising, to find our napkin had been on our lap all the time!"—Kansas City Star. God bless the man with an idea. It may be visionary but it starts something. That's its glorification—Personality. COMMUNICATIONS One of your correspondents suggests that everybody "Ask Dean Templin" why "Kicker" was not permitted to carry nineteen hours although he was abundantly able to do so. It is a pleasure to answer by saying that one of the oldest and most rigidly observed regulations of the College faculty provides a maximum limit of eighteen hours for all students, whatever may be their ability or ambition. I may add that there is probably not an institution having the rank of the University of Kansas in which a college student would be admitted to more than eighteen hours. Olin Templin. (Communications to the Daily Kansan must be signed as an evidence of good faith, though not necessarily for publication. The column is open to all Dally Kansan readers). Daily Kansan: THESE AUTUMN DAYS ARE FOR USE Now and then one of us stirred by the wanderlust which is in the air just now, seeks out a friend buried in his books and suggests, "Let's go up the river today," or some other alluring pastime. The friend shakes his head in dismay at the proposition in the face of the work piled at his elbow. So he works on and his face sours as he works until at length he gives up in disgust. Meanwhile his friend has opened his ears to the insistent call of the out of doors and the demands of the pen and note book go unheeded. So he, in turn, plays on, and his face is flushed with the joy of living. There are two ways of doing good work* but there is only one best way of being satisfied when the task is done. You can't give too much for your satisfaction and still be happy. Some of us as students become slaves to our books. Long ago it was proved that a free man is worth a chain of slaves. Be free. Get out and enjoy some part of the days that are left to this wonderful season. Take up athletics or just go out with Her. She will enjoy it too, and in the long run a better and more successful school year will be your reward for taking time out for Living—Drake Delphic. THAT WOMAN AGAIN Xantipe is most hard to please, She often would poor Socrat-tease Till he cried out, "Oh, why for me Do you show this Xantipe-ty"? He transcripts from Transcript. "My young man's a real gent," said Sadie, the saleslady, shifting her cud of chewing gum; "he never blows his soup like a common person; he always fists with it his hat." —Punch Bowl. Don't brag too much about your great willpower; a setting he is similarly equipped.-Personality A little iron—a cunning curl. A box of powder—a pretty girl. A little rain—away she goes. A homely girl with a freckled nose. —Michigan Aggies Herald. UNIVERSITY PRIMER Monosyllabic Expositions For Primitive Minds Num-ber One. "Have you ev-er been to u-nii-si-vet, Susie?" "No. Je-seph, what is a u-nii-si-vet-si"? "It is a big school, a ve-ry big school, who pee-po go when they have learned ev-er-y-thing in high school." "If they have learned ev-er-y-thing, why do they go to a u-ni-ner-si-ty?" "Oh, there are some things they do not know all a-bout. They learn how to waltz and two-step at high school, and then they go to a u-ni-ver-si-ty to learn the Bos-ton and Tan-co." "Do they do the Tan-go at all u-niver-sities, Jo-seph?" "Not all; they do at Wis-con-sin and Ne-bra-ska and Di-di-a-na, but at Kan-sas it is a naught-y, nought-y dance, and an-y stu-dent who tries to learn the step or who tells a-bout an-y-bo-dy who wants to tan-go is li-able to be sus-pen-ded from his class-es. The fa-cul-tiy is yre strict a-bout such of fen-ses." "The teach-ers make up the fa-cul-yt. They are called pro-fees-sora and in-stur-tors. Some are old and some are young, but all are ve-ry smart. All of them know a great deal a-bou their sub-jects, but on-by some of them know how to im-part their know-leedge. Most of the fa-cul-yt have wives, but not ma-ny have hus-hands." "The fa-cul-ty, what is that?" Do-ck; NW: the fe-male of the ape-cies. Those who are more than twen-ty-one years old can vote as men can. Ma-ny of them are, but not ma-ny do. They let the men vote and have dates with the voters." "More than two and a half thou-sand. About a third f these are co-eds." "There are ma-ny stu-dents at the U-ni-ver-si-ty of Kan-sas, are there not?" "Some do not have an-y, but some are dat-ed up so far a-head that the have to re-fer to their K-books before say-ing yes or no. They can-not have dates on week nights, but some of them do. Some u-ni-ver-sities do not al-dow co-eads to at-tend, but the scope of such in-stitu-tions is lim-it-ed." "Do they have many dates?" if these are to be "Co-eds: what are they, Jo-seph?" "Be-cause, Su-sie, no ed-u-caition is comp-pleate with out fem-i-nin-i-ty." "Why lin-it-ed, Jo-seph?" AT THE LAWRENCE CHURCHES Trinity Church (Episcopal) — Vermont and Berkley. The Rev. Evan Alexander Edwards, M. A., rector, 7:30 a.m. The Holy Communion. Service over by 8; 10 a.m. Sunday School Model Kindergarten from 10-12 in charge of experienced teacher. Student classes forming in upper school. Students invited at present to attend Dean Skilton's lectures on Faith and Worship. 11 a.m. Morning prayer and sermon; 5 p.m. evening prayer and sermon. The full choir at both services. All welcome. Notice Students Particular Cleaning and Residue O. P. Leonard's Pantatorium is on the job again this year. Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 501, Home 180 We Give Club Rates 841 Mass. St. Upstairs. FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Lawrence Pantatorium 2 W. Warren Bath Phone 506 A. L. BALDING & CO. TRADE SPALDING MARK A D 1924 A "Square Deal" for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantee each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding Trade-Mark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. A. G. SPALDING & BROS. 1120 Grand Ave. Kansas City, Mo. Cataulia Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage Garage 812 Vermont Phones 139 BERT WADHAM The College Inn Barber A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND Fresh Oysters, Regular Meals, Short Orders, Confectionery, Cigars, Etc. JOHNSON & TUTTLE PROPS. 715 Massachusetts Street Lowney's Chocolates McColloch's Drug Store Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. W. H. Quakenbush, Pres.; E. S. Weatherby, Supt. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. We have added Lens Grinding Machinery to our Optical department. Any Lens Duplicated Glasses Fitted. HESTER Jeweler and Optician SAVE THE PIECES SAM S. SHUBERT Matines Wednesday and Saturday Lillian Russel IN Tragic Drama ROYAL ROCHESTER city KENNEY & ERNST 826 MASS. ST. PHONES 3412 Chafing dishes, caseroles, coffee machines and percolators. The finest line of metal and wood serving trays in the K. U. PANTATORIUM AND DYE WORKS Student Rates: See Our Solicitation Cleaning and Ladies's Work & Specialty. JACK FULLERTON 1400 Louisiana Phones: Bell, 1400; Home, 140 Subscribe for the Daily Kansan. Vet WAC. '13 $ 1 0^{\mathrm{c}} $ THE Full Two Ounce Tins THE SMOOTHEST TOBACCO In a debate, there is no evading the issue. Does your smoking tobacco bite or doesn't it? Velvet is aged 2 years—which eliminates the leaf harshness and mellows and tones the richness. Produces a fine flavor and a smoothness that smokers appreciate above all else. Gentlemen—there is only one side to this smoke question—that's the smooth side—"Velvet." Ask for Velvet at your dealers. Liggott & Myers Tobacco Co. The Folks at Home Velvet TOBACCO would enjoy reading the University Daily Kansan. Why not send it to them? It would keep them in touch with the University and you. Phone the address to K. U. 25 or drop a card in any University mail box. PRICE FOR ONE YEAR $2.50 The WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus $100,000 Capital $100,000 Other Mass. and Quincy Sts. Issues its own Letters of Credit and Travelers Checks. The only way to carry your money in safety. Banking of all kinds solicited. At Harvard University, the managers and coach of athletic teams are appointed by the capitals and the governors of the committee on the regulation of athletic sports. Read your own KANSAN. To Cut Living Cost. To Cut Living Costs A movement is on for at Ohio State University, which thirty faculty members and boarding clubs will co-operate to cut down the high cost of student living. The project will enable the purchase of all supplies directly from the producer, eliminating even the wholesale's profit. The University has two thousand six hundred and fifty sons and daughters of the state enrolled this year, the student body itself, both in size and organization, bearing a striking resemblance to a Kansas city of 2,600. Mrs. Emeline Pankhurst, the English suffragette, said that the hope of the movement here lay in the coeducation of American universities. She gave as her reason that it worked for a saner relation between men and women. There are 747 men in the Yale University freshman class, 391 in the academic and 356 in the scientific school. Of the preparatory schools entering New Haven high schools ranks first with 81 and Andover second with 70. The electrical engineering department of Iowa University will soon install a complete wireless apparatus, costing about $500. The system will cover a distance of 500 miles. A high tension laboratory for the use of the electrical engineering department is in the course of construction at Leland Stanford University. Reginald K. Bailey, a former instructor in the chemistry department was visiting the University Monday. He is now employed as a chemist in the U. S. Geological survey. Harvard recently lost a collection of mummies through a fire at sea while they were en route to America. New stock of "Hurds" writing paper in pound packages; also an assortment of correspondent cards. Wolfs Book Store.-Advert. 35-2 Send the Daily Kansan home. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. Cox M.CONNELL, Physician and House of Cox M.CONNELL, Residence, 1346 Temp. Room J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist in Optometry, Office 802 Mass. Phone 6061, Cell phone 6065. HARRY REDING. M. D. Eyre, nose, and chin. 815. Bed 113. Home 512. Bed 113. Bed 113. Home 512. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. 6. A HAMMAN M. D. Eyre ear, ear and face reaction Guaranteed. Dick Building. J. W. O'BRYAN, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 607. J. R. BECHILT, M. D. D. O. 833 Maesbach Street. Both phones. Office and address. DR. H. H. T JONES, Room 12, F A. A. DR. H. H. T L CHAMPAIN, Office over DR. H. L. CHAMMERS. Office over Barris' Studio. Both phones. G, W JONES, A, M, M. D). Diseases of BRAIN. J, B, A, M. Residence, 1261 Morton St., B, A, M. Residence, 1261 DE. BURT R. WHITE Osteopath, Phones, Bell 938, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. St. S. T. Gillippe, M. D. Offen, corner Vermont and Wasson State. Residence, 728 Indiana St. E. J. Blair, Physician and Surgeon. Office and residency: 915 St. Mass. Office hours: 7 to 00 a.m. 8, 12 to 00 p.m. 8, and 7 to 00 b. 8 to 00 p.m. Phones Bell 45. House 131. CLASSIFIED Barbers Frank Bliff's Barber Shop, 1025 Mass two good bargains. satisfaction assured C. J. Houk's Barber Shop, 913 Mass 4 chairs pave have to wait. Razors hired. Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co., for gas manufacturing. Manda lamps; 1957. 6085 6088 Ladies Tailors Mrs. Ellison Drossmaking and Ladies Phones Messages Phones 211, over Johnson & Oarl. Ladies Tailoring and Dressmaking. Gowns for all occasions. All work guaranteed. Mrs. T. B. Daily. 014 Mass. Contact establishment in connection. Phone 211 Bol. Hair Dressers Lawrence Sewing School. Ledies' tailoring and dressmaking. Sewing school 814 Mass. Phones 550. Miss Powers; Miss C. McClarnay. Sporting Goods hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-grooming, hair treatment for appoint-men to call Bell 1573. Home : 51. The Select Hair Dressning Shop, 927 Mass St. D & M sporting goods and athletic supplies. Kennedy & Erast, $26 Mass. S. Phone: (314) 275-8080. Bring your shoes to Fornells, for guaranteed shoe repairing. Forem, 1017 Mass Hiwatha Cafe for regular meals, lunch and short orders when down town. Open after 6:30 p.m. Pricess reasonable, work the best. Let us figure on your furnace work. Everything in Barnb and Co., 816 Mass. St. phones 423. Queen College. System and sowing taught. Dressmaking in connection with school. Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 Ky. Belk 1764. Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Ballet Jewelry and Jewelry. Ball Phones 17 17 Mass. One trial means no risk, small investment, good goods, and a smile. Smoke W. T. Willis convenient cigarette made. Have a linea linea of plain china for painting aluminum already decorated. Orders taken. Estate Northrup, studio 733 Mass. St., upscalers. Bell Phone 152. For rent. A nice furnished room, 2 chests electric furniture and modern in every respect Eldridge House Stab W. E. MOAK, Prop. Taxicabs, Hacks, Livery Baggage Hauld Both Phones 148 See the New Parker Self-Filling Fountain Pen Office Supplies, Typewriters F. I. CARTER 1025 Mass. Bell phone 105 Come on Down to JIM'S Tonight 1101 Mass. St. PROTSCH The College Tailor Lawrence Transfer Co. Trunk Hauling Phone 15 All announcements or items for the University calendar either for the coming week or for future events should be given to Mr. Cronemeyer, at the department of journalism office, by 4:30 p. m. Friday. It is desired to make the calendar a complete schedule of University events and the co-operation of those interested is requested. ANOKA 2 for 25 ANOKA 2 for 25 ANOKA A New ARROW Notch COLLAR Clinett, Peabody & Co., Inc. Makers When calling for a good brand of Robert Hudson, Pierson's 5c CIGARS SMOKE Hand Made At all first class dealers We have some good values in Pennants Pictures & Posters 8. J. A. Keeler 939 MASS. W. A. Guenther Phones 226 Give Us a Trial 721 Liesr Brunswick Bowling Alley Four Regulation Allies with loop-the-loop return. 714 Mass. ANNOUNCEMENTS A one-reel Powers "Chivalry Days" and a two-reel Eclair feature "One of the Rabble" will be the program at the Patee Thursday night, Nov. 6, of the play at the theater. All proceeds derived will go to the Y. M. C. A. Week-night date rules have been suspended for this date. The Society of Mechanical Engineers will meet with Prof. F. H. Sibley, 1607 Tennessee at seven Thursday day evening. A representative each class will display their magazine magazines, call Cunningh; ice and sea machines, Joe Berrick; machinery, Charles Hagenbuck; power, Frank Beauchamp. The regular meeting of the Kansas Branch of American Institute of Electrical Engineers will be held Wednesday evening at 7:30 in room 101, Marvin hall. Mrs Brown, chairman, barnum, senior electrical, will talk about their summer work with the signal system of the Santa Fe. The Botany club will meet this evening at 7:30 in Snow hall to initiate new members. There will be twelve candidates for admission to the club. Miss Dolbee will read a paper on some recent investigations. The Ladies of the Faculty will be at home to the young men of the University and members of the faculty, Thursday afternoon, November 6 at Haworth hall from 3 to 5:30 o'clock. The first sophomore class dance will be given in Robinson gymnasium next Saturday night. The date had previously been set for Friday night, but it was changed because of a Student Council dance on that night. The dance is open to all students of the University. The first meeting of the Annual Board has been called by Russell Calrk, editor of the annual, for Wednesday evening in room 6, Green hall, at 7:30. LOST-Fountain pen between library and 900 block Tenn. Finder please notify Warren, 939 Tenn, 2500 Bell. * 36-3* The Mandolin Club will not rehearse tonight. FOR RENT—Rooms for chafing- dish house keeping in new and modern house. Bell 1112; 1310 Teen. LOST—A white cloisonne brooch, shaped somewhat like a fleur-de- dlis. Call Bell 1152. 34-5 Parisian Ivory goods displayed in our window this week. Barber's Drug store.-Adv. 34 FOR RENT-Modern six room house. Furnished. Bell 2287. Read your own KANSAN. High School News of Kansas Alta Vista, Oct. 31 - Alta Vista received her second攻关 this season today when the White City high school won a football game 10 to 7. Alta Vista was handicapped in absence of players from the basketball team lost to Alta Vista Lost Twice (By Harry H. Morgan) The girls' basketball team lost to White City 14 to 11. The game was won. L. C. Hodge of Topeka, formerly managing editor of the Topeka Daily Capital spoke here this afternoon on "Common Sense English." His talk dealt chiefly with the writing of the news story *The Murderer* by reporter. His humorous stories of newspaper life made his talk extremely interesting. Lebanon 20, Kensington 6. (By Walter E. York) (By WALTER L. Lebanon, Nov. 1.—The Lebanon high school football team met and defeated the Kensington high school team in a fast game at Kensington Friday, with a score of 20 to 6. Both high schools have good teams and an interesting game was played. (By Clarence Ward) St. John, Nov. 1.-St. John high school defeated Great Bend high school in a hard fought football game here today by a score of 7-6. The second team of St. John defeated the Macksville first team Friday by a score of 32-6. CALENDAR Wednesday Of course you are going to church next Sunday. Every one is **is-Adv.** St. John Victorious Twice (D. Clarence Wood) 4:30 Mining Journal. (201 Ha.) 4:30 Circle Francais, (306 Fra.) 7:00 Chemical Engineering Society, Prof. Cady. (Chem.) 7:30 Band rehearsal. (Chapel Fraser.) 7:30 Hawk Dramatic Club, (110 Fraser.) 7:30 Mandolin Club rehearsal, (116 Fraser.) 7:30 Thursday 7:00 Amer. Society Mech. Eng. (1607 Tenn.) 7:30 Orchestra practice, (Fra.) 7:11 Chapel. Ministerial Alliance of Lawrence. 7:30 Saturday 3:00 Football. K. U. vs. Washburn, (McCook) 8-12 Sophomore dance. (Gym.) Events Nov. 4 Chapel, Langdon Davies of London. Nov. 6-7 Teachers' Convention, Topeka. Nov. 11 Violin recital. Otto Meyer, Topeka. Nov. 13-14-15 Joint meeting of Kansas Conference of Charities and Corrections, Institute of Criminal Law and Criminalology, and Probate Judges' Association. Nov. 14 Junior Class Dance, Robin Johnson, 8-12 p.m. Nov. 15 Student Council Dance Robinson gymnasium, 8-12 p.m. Nov. 18 Piano recital. Heniot Levy Both men and women are being served in Fraser hall lunch room— Adv. 38-5c Of course you are going to church next Sunday. Every one is— 184-4 DECATUR COUNTY WILL PLAY CHAMPION TEAM (By Harry Anderson) (By Harry Anderson) Friday, Nov. 3 - Oberlin the Decatur county high school of Oberlin defeated the Thomas county high school of Colby in football by score of 25. Muirhead, McKinzie, and Clark are stars for Oberlin, with Thurston, Connelly and Sloan played good ball for Colby. Oberlin meets the Norton county high school at Norton Wednesday. Norton claims the championship of Northwest Kansas. Stafford 42, Reno County 0. Stafford, Nov. 1—The Reno county high school football team was easily defeated here today by the Stafford team, Boise, and the Capitol team, Boring, and the Arrowhead of the Stafford team did exceptionally good playing, and carried the ball for long gains. New Courses at Garnett (By John Donaldson) Garnett, Oct. 31—At the beginning of the school year the Garnett Board of Education added courses in domestic science and manual training. These two departments have been furnished with the most up to date equipment, and are giving splendid satisfaction. A two years' course in each has been provided, and classes are filled to capacity. Social Notes The Kappa Sigma fraternity will give an informal dinner at the chapter house Friday night, Nov. 15. Sigma Delta Phi will give an informal party, Friday night at the chapter house. --- The Achoh sorority will entertain the Acacia fraternity with a progressive dinner whilst Friday night. Founders' Day Banquet The Sigma Kappa sorority will hold initiation Friday night, followed by the annual founder's day banquet at the Eldridge Bridge. The following gift giving event from out of town is Mabel Anderson, Arkansas City; Marguerite McChellan, Summerfield; Alma Estep, Kansas City; Ruth Lambert, Hiawatha; Bertha Anderson, Manhattan Anderson, Dunn, Edna Lyon, Kittie Smith, and Bertha Anderson will be initiated. The Sigma Nu fraternity will give a party at Ecke's Friday night. The Sigma Nu fraternity is entertaining the freshmen of the Alpha Delta Pi sorority tonight at dinner. The greetings are: Bibby, Lucie Brown, Olive Brown, Ruth Castles, Lucile M-cormick, Reba Protch, Florence Templeton and Nell Templeton. Sheidenberger, Stella Stubbs, Has- The "40" club will give its second dance at the F. A. A. hall Saturday night. This is a club of forty men who have organized to have dances periodically throughout the winter. * * * * Haley and Findley will play for the first junior party that will be held in the gymnasium on November 14th. Remember We are exclusive agents for the "Swim Ezy" bathing suits. Used in all the large colleges of the country. Made of a good fadeless black galatea, adjustable bust and waist, so that they have fit to them. Each $2.00. WEAVER'S Ask the Extension Division The University of Kansas SENDS LECTURERS ON Social and Industrial Problems Municipal Questions Music and Art Literature TO Kansas Cities and Towns The Expense Is Small University Extension Division University of Kansas LAWRENCE ADDRESS The ministers of the city churches will have special messages for all University students next Sunday.— Adv. 38-3 Of course you are going to church next Sunday. Every one is.—Adv. 38-3 Of course you are going to church next Sunday. Every one is.-Adv. 38-3 The ministers of the city churches will have special messages for all University students next Sunday.— Adv. 38-3 UNFAMILIAR SCENES NO.7—THE PAINTING CLASS P. C. H. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 'PLAY CLEANER BALL' SAYS ILLINOIS MAN "Dirty Work on The Gridiron Soon Threatens Existence of College Game." That "dirty" playing will kill football unless action is taken by certain coaches and officials is the opinion of G. Huff, director in the University of Illinois, according to an article in the Chicago Tribune. An increasing tendency and officials to go dirty playing is perpetrated to go unchecked will play on trial for its life. The complete article follows: "The existence of football will be threatened, sooner or later, unless a growing tendency to forget the lesson of some years back and return to the practices which put the sport on trial for its life is checked. "I refer to unnecessary and unfair roughness. I do not criticize hard playing, and football, as a matter of fact, is rough. Not noticed are the difficulties of production of the matches which nearly cost the galleries their favorite game. Coaches Urge Rough Tactics? Coaches OK! "I already year I have seen needed dressing. I have seen playen dress their feet over the head of an opponent. 'Piling up' even when easily seen to be unnecessary, goes unrebuked. The blame for the existence of this tendency is to be placed on the heads of unscrupulous coaches and complacent officials. It is a matter of common report in the conference camps that coaches make no bones of encouraging their men to march and slug if they can get away with it. Their linenmen tenderness and curse their opponent hoping to lead them into play of honest and almost justifiable physical retaliation that will paraps be seen and punished. "For the most part western officials have ceased to pay any attention to unnecessary roughness. After the agitation which changed the rules officials were quick to punish violations. I am aware that often it is hard to differentiate between intentional and unintentional roughing it, but I have seen flagrant violations ignored. "Let 'em fight it out," seems to be the implied attitude of many officials, especially the attorneys; the attempts to be sane get the worst of it. Some Other Types of problem in the west incidentally needs study. Or rather it is the official who needs it. Just as there are conscientious men who make a thorough study of rules, there are other knowledge areas that more than can be shown when an infrequent incident exposes their ignorance. "I am a believer in football as a square, manly sport if properly supervised. I would regret to see it lost, but I firmly believe that after success with the new style of game all will go for naught unless coaches and officials see that the practices I mention are eliminated." TRACK WORK STARTS (Continued From page that has the spot. (The writer is a second year man). Freshies Again Dark Hair The freshies are as usual dark horses, pure beauty. There is an excellent material among the first year men. Heath, candidate for the freshman football eleven, possesses many good records in the high and low hurdles, while Dick Small, another Kansas City boy, hurts the discus far above the Freshies. The freshiest man up a good class is in the inter-class meets; their class has more loyalty than the rest. And so, from the above lineup, the track meet to be held on McCook field a week from Tuesday should be interesting and hard-fought. If their class needs them in a pinch those two old war horses, Lefty Sproul, and Gene Davis may stop their work over in the training shed and emerge in track suits, ready for battle. Try the lunch counter in the basement of Fraser hall—Adv. 38-56 TOWN CITY BROADCASTING COMPANY 103 24 w. n. k Night clothes and day clothes --- business suits and dress suits---- everything for every occasion and "fresh every hour." Tomorrow—outing flannel or soisette, in one and two piece pajamas, regular $2 grades $1.50. Underwear -- Superior Union Suits—the closed croch t kind. Some extra good values at $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00. This is the Underwear store. For the boy of 3 or the man of 300 pounds, or any size between. Ober's HEAD TO FOLK OUTFITTERS Under Other Goal Posts Quality Goods Attract Quality Trade Says the Kansas City Star, "in the Oklahoma game the Jayhawkers displayed little football ability. They didn't seem to know the signals well, their line failed to hold, and their ends were skirted repeatedly. On top of all this the kicking was miserable, and the Minnesota Shift was a complete fizzle." Well, aside from those few features, Parsons was the scene of an angry group of men Friday night, when Arthur Mosse, Manager Hamilton, and Jack Grover failed to make connections with a train which was to carry them toward Columbia to carry them toward the Miss-Rolla team, held there the next day. Hamilton and Mosse wished to witness the spectacle, and Grover was scheduled to referee. In picking the All-Missouri Valley football team, Arthur Mose, the Kansas coach, advises the critics to look long and hard at Capshaw, Courtwright, and Beeds, and the three men have no equals in the backfields of any of the conference teams, according to the Kansas coach. It may be a surprise to the Jaya- hawker students to note that Hardy, left half on the Washburn Ichabads, is a negro. Kansas and Nebraska have been having considerable liti- gation over the playing of Ross, the Cornhusker's big black, but little has been said concerning Hardy contesting. This is due to the effect that the Nebraska game will have an effect on the race for the Championship; the Washburn battle will not. Word has been received from Nor man, Okla., to the effect that Claudi Reeds did not break his nose in the Jayhawker game Friday, as had been feared. Reeds accounted for an akebie hearin' in the third quarter, but refused to have it attended to until after the end of the game. Skin cure for eczema, itch, bar bers' itch, dandruff, and all skin af fections, at Barber & Son's.-Adv Send the Daily Kansan home. Ever notice the high-class character of our trade? But of course you have. GRIGGS 827 Mass. "The Store of Quality" HAVE NOT YET WON WASHBURN CONTEST Coaches Have Wholesome Respect For Ichabods, Playing Trobert, Deaver, Bearg, and Hardy—First Class Warriors K. U. HOSPITAL LIST SMALL Detwiler May Not Get in Saturday's Game But Other Men Are in Fair Condition Leonard Frank looked over the lechadots in their game with the State Teachers Saturday, and realizes the worth of the Washburn eleven. Not in a class with Oklahoma, Frank nevertheless believes that the Topeka lads will fight hard from start to finish on McCook Saturday, and lots of fight and "p" on the part, of their kaleidoscopic rivals in their game. The Congregationalists whitewashed us last year, 10 to 0, and both coaches are training the eleventh to wine out this defeat. Beaver. Heath is Topeka's hope. Combined with Trobbert he is the mainstay of Cipr Gray's eleven, and is known to be a power on the defense and a good player when Washburn is in possession of the ball. The eleven, according to Coach Frank, is heavy and fast, and the Jayhawkers will have the battle of their lives on their hands. Saturday. The Ichabod line-up has not yet been announced. Trobert at end and in the kicking department, Deaver at quarter, with Bearg and Hardy in the backfield are the individual Washburn stars. Hardy is a negro, against whom the Jayhawkers have played before. The report which has been generally circulated over the hill that half the Kansas eleven was ready for the hospital is false. Stuewe scrimmaged last night, but the coming game, but Greenlee is in fair condition, Wilson, was excused from Monday's practice because of being "all in" from the hard game of the Friday preceding, but is in the line-up now, and the team as a whole is in fair position for its next contest on diet cook. The whole University in church next Sunday...Adv. 38-3 The whole University in church next Sunday...Adv. 38-3 KANSAS SCIENTISTS WILL MEET DURING HOLIDAYS FOR RENT—One first class room. Single or double. Price reasonable. W. E. James, Angney Club, 1339 Ohio St. The ministers of the city churches will have special messages for all University students next Sunday.—Adv. 38-3 Next Sunday is University Church Day. Special services in all the Lawrence churches.-Adv. 38-3 Coffee--Don't blame the coffee if it's bad. Perhaps it's the water. Make it of distilled water, McNish, Phones 198—Adv. 39-2 Professors E. H. S. Bailley, F. B. Diener and William Hill are members of the academy. The Kansas Academy of Science, a body of scientific men from the state colleges will hold its annual meeting at Baldwin during fall. A number of papers will be read in coordination with the State Board of Agriculture For that dark crossing—a flash light from Fein's.-Adv. The ministers of the city churches will have special messages for all University students next Sunday.—Adv. 38-3 Freshmen engineers be sure and see our ad on third page. It will save you money.-Adv. LOST - Theta Tau pin Friday evening. Let Leila Lauil, Hodd Dinkel 37.2 A full line of electrical supplies at Fein's."-Adv. Freshman engineers see our ad on third page.'-Adv. Freshman engineers see our ad on third page .-Adv. NOT MANY STUDENTS GO TO ART EXHIBIT Allegretti and Douglas chocolates at Barber's Drug Store—Adv. 34. The best in gas fixtures at Fein's. Ady. Manicure articles, razors, strops, and toilet articles of all kinds at Barber's drug store...Adv. Next Sunday is University Church Day. Special services in all the Lawrence churches.-Adv. 38-3 "Department Scarcely Feels Repaid For Trouble in Bringing Etchings to K. U."—Griffith According to Professor Griffith the number of students who have been up to see the pictures is very small, and the department hardly feels repaid for the trouble and expense involved in bringing the etchings here. They will be sent back to Chicago Friday. Professor Griffith said this afternoon, "Among the pictures are many fine works of art, including many scenes and portraits. The pictures are all done by experts in their line, and the shading and coloring, as well as the general execution of outline, are excellent." Some time in the near future an exhibit of copies of original pictures done by a color photography process, will be opened in the Administration building. Professor Griffith has a number of these pictures in condition now, and is framing and putting in order the rest of the exhibit. He is also making measurements by the Ameri- ceric Art club. The pictures exhibited by this club are some thirty in number, and are all prize pictures. Each picture represents the prize work of art for a given year. The lecture on the Processes of Etchings, announced by Professor Griffith for Wednesday was attended by four persons. At a meeting of the junior committee on memorials last night it was decided to present a definite plan to the class for adoption sometime next week. Prof. H. P. Cady will lecture on "Tungsten Lamps" at the regular meeting of the Chemical Engineers tonight in chemistry building, room 207, at 7 p. m. Sigma Alpha Epsilon has pledged Sidney Moss of Shanghai, China. Souvenir plates of K. U. at Wolf's Book Store.-Adv. 35-2 FOR RENT—Rooms for chafing-dish house-keeping. New house. Bell 1112, 1310 Tenn. FOR SALE—New $25 all-wool overcoat, tailor made, will sell this evening for $15.00; too small for owner. Call Bell 2180. 1304 M TRAVEL Miss May Nachtmann of Junction City visited her sister, Madeline Nachtmann over the week-end. Jerome Beatty, a former student of the University is now employed as special writer on one of the Los Angeles papers. Mr. Beatty lectured to the students in the department of journalism two weeks ago. W. C. McCroskey, '96, has accepted a position under the War Department in the educational service at Porto Rico. Faculty Meeting Postponed On account of the State Teachers' Association meeting, no will be faculty meeting in the College tomorrow as previously announced. Next Sunday is University Church Day. Special services in all the Lawrence churches.-Adv. 38-3 A New Spalding Sweater for the Girls—they are white, with pockets. Something new and exclusive. Of course you will find them at CARROLL'S SMITH'S NEWS DEPOT Phone 608 749 Mass. 'SHADOW' - the smart fall and winter collar style that keeps its smartness and style when you wear it. C. G. H. W. The LION collar features give the reason—especially the famous LION "Lock-that-Locks." 6 for 75c or as usual 2 for 25c. Lion Collars Oldest Brand in America UNITED SHIRT & COLLAR CO., Makers, TROY, N. Y. THE SPIRIT AT K. U. CAPT. "BILL" WEIDLEIN Star Lineman Who Played His Uusual Good Game Against Oklama. Before I came to Lawrence I heard much of the "Kansas Spirit," the football rallies, and the great interest the students showed toward their athletics teams. I have discovered the "Thundering Thousand" nothing more than a hundred rooters who attend the football and give the famous old "Rock Chalk" in a weak, spissified manner. There have been few rallies, and little or no excitement, even at the pajama parade, and, so far as I have been able to find out, the fierce flame of athletic enthusiasm burns very low. Of course, the students know they are very stars, and we care enough to give them the support and encouragement which football men deserve. (The freshman as a harsh criti- tion wrote last week yesterday during the One of the few unfavorable impressions made upon me by the students of the University of Arizona was the enthusiasm in school politics and in athletics. An example of the indifference, toward athletics was the actions of the students the day of the game. Jewell game for the few men turn the game and for the parade before the game; after the game was in progress, the rooting seemed to cease- Send the Daily Kansan home. the interest in class politics was even weaker than that in athletics. The election impressed me as a very tame affair. Only a few of the students seemed to be more militant, and now to vote. Little interest was taken at the polls and only a bare majority of the class members cast their ballots. is presented here in the second n opposition to the one we published K, U.) The "Kansas Spirit" does not live up to its reputation. All over the state K. U. students are reputed to be loyal to the school and enthusiastic in their support of it. At least my first month at the University, I have found a spirit of indifference instead of one of interest and loyalty. and not until after the first touchdown did the students wake up and show a little of the "Kansas Spirit." The game was a hard one, one, and the Varsity was wearing the mind. Placing it with the mind was hard and disagreeable work, and the team needed praise and encouragement, but it got very little. Most of the students went away from the game disappointed because Kane was too ruthless to care. They seemed to expect victory without voting or Working for it. OCTOBER VERY ORDINARY SAYS MONTHLY REPORT The whole University in church next Sunday...Adv. 38-3 Prof. Erasmus Haworth has been invited to make a talk before the Irrigation Convention at Hawley He. will speak on ground water. Are Now at Yale. Russel Bracewell, a senior in the School of Engineering with drawn from University on accom- pension for all health. He expoires to re-enter school next semester. Mr. and Mrs. John P. Shea, who were married at "Slabside," West Park, N. Y., the home of John Burroughs, June 19, are now doing graduate work at Yale. Mrs. Shea who was Miss Adella Pepper of Lawrence was graduated from the University of Kansas with the class of 1913. Mr. Shea who was graduated in 1910, won several eastern scholarships, and was at Yale at the time of their engagement. Next Sunday is University Church Day. Special services in all the Lawrence churches.-Adv. 38-3 October broke but one weather record and in every other way was a very common month. There was less wind this month than any previous October recorded, the total being 7049 miles. The rainfall was much more and a average October had a total of 5.76 inches exceeded the month which has been exceeded but four times in the history of this station. The first snow fell on the 18th with traces on the 26th and 28th. There were seven totally clear days and but one cloudy. A very slight earth tremor was recorded by the seismograph on the 14th. The disturbance lasted about twenty-five minutes. The whole University in church next Sunday…Adv. 38-3 REPAIRING We like to do little jobs of repairing Gustafson The College Jeweler Call for our catalogue of K. U. and fraternity novelties. We have the most complete line in Lawrence. STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. NUMBER 39. MEDICS ISSUE A BIG FOOTBALL CHALLENGE Former Football Stars Willing to Play Any Oread Team—Bar Varsity Only And Are Ready Now. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 6, 1913. PLAYERS ARE EXPERIENCED No Amateurs on Doctors' Squad Men Came From Varsity, Colleges, and High Schools The School of Medicine challenges any other K. U. football team—barring the Varsity—to a football game at any satisfactory time or place. --- "twenty-nine, sixty-seven, thirty- three." Eleven burly medics, under the guidance of Quarterback Gillette went through their first signal practice this week on the field. Coach Cappas was not present, so most of the time was devoted to learning the signals. The doctors are in earnest. They mean to be the school champions. Several old football stars are enrolled in the School team, and they will all be on the team that is intended for the school championship. Gridiron warriors with a past record that is creditable, who will appear in the first game are: Coleman (Varsity, 1912); Dale (Southwestern College, 1911); Peterson (Kansas State Normal, 1911); Culter (Kansas State Normal, 1911); Gilleen (Kingman high school, Kansas state champions, 1911); Baker (Bethany College, 1911); Conner (Midland College, 1911); Boone (Highland College, 1911); Captain Richmond county high (Captain Richmond county high), Castles (College of Idaho, 1910); and Riney (Kansas State Agricultural College, 1912). BOTANY CLUB INITIATES FOURTEEN NEW MEMBERS "We have a team made up of former football stars and we are going to practice hard and will be ready for a game any one of the Managers at this morning; challenge any school on the campus to a game of football, any old time, any old place, and under any old conditions. All the fellows are enthusiastic and as such Jayhawkers are tail on that twenty-second, we will be champions of Mt. Oread this year." The team that will enter the first game will line up as follows: left end, Dale; left tackle, Conner; left guard, Sterling; center, Cultor; right guard, Baker; right tackle, Peterson; right end, Castles; quarter, back Gillette; quarter, half Riney; left back Pooner; full back, Coleman; coach, Cappe; field physician, Dr. Sundwall; manager and cheer-leader, Levinson. Initiation for fourteen members was the feature of the meeting of Botany Club held last night in Snow hall. Miss Myrte L'Eubén does her day work, gave some of the results of her research work on "Grindela Squarosa." After the usual program and refreshments, initiation was held for the following; Ewa Bechtel, Lucile Witte, Ida Malleis, Bertha Sallee, Neva Ritter, Maureen McKernan, Louise Luckan, Mary Keith; and Messrs. Elliot, Mulsow, Dixon, Harris, Munson, and Foote. VONSCHRILTZ WRITES STORY FOR FIRST OREAD "Heroes and Hero Worship" will be the title of the Oread Magazine which will make its appearance on or about Nov. 18. The feature of this issue will be a football story by Guy VonSchriltz. Among the articles are the following; A story of the Italian Quarter in Kansas City, by Caroline Greer and stories; A biography of John Gorman and Sam Ferguson. There will be poems by Ethyln Miller and Karl Jones. Dean Russell of the Teachers' College of Columbia University spent yesterday in Lawrence visiting the University. He left last night for Topeka to attend the State Teachers' Association. The Society of Electrical Engineers met in Marvin hall last night Only routine business was transacted. Read your own KANSAN. WENT BROKE, HUNTED JOBS, WALKER 21 MILES Two engineering students living at 908 Louisiana withdrew from school last week because funds were lacking to pay current expenses. They decided to seek pastures new and journeyed to Tonganoxie to seek work pickling apples, but the "picken" in that little city was poor. After eating their scant dinner they were completely broke and walked back to Lawrence, a distance of twenty-one miles weny-one miles The students are still in town. 'HINSHAW IS GUILTY' THE JURY'S VERDICT Decision Came Yesterday Afternoon —Student Not Yet Sentenced —Laws Attend Trial Justin B. Hinsaw of Winfield, a member of the middle class of the School of Law was found guilty yesterday afternoon in the district court of having aided James Henderson, alias Roy Adams, in passing bogus checks in Lawrence and Hinsaway with $62.50 according to a verdict returned by the jury, and wrote the checks from which the money was obtained. The case has attracted an unusua amount of interest and the court room was filled to its capacity during the trial, by University students and classmates. The defense has ten days in which to appeal. It is not known when Himshaw will be sentenced. Henderson, who implicated Himshaw in theurrent state's eviwment was sentenced to an indefinite term in the state reformatory at Hutchison, by Judge Smart yesterday morning. The case went to the jury about three o'clock and after deliberating over three hours they returned the verdict of guilty. Hinshaw, defended by Dr. W, L. Burdick, S. D. Bishop and E. Rilling warred on the stand and the testimony of Henderson was what convicted him. Henderson generally thought the jury would return a verdict of not guilty or that they would be hung and the verdict came as a surprise to most of the spectators. WILSON IN "ARIZONY" LONGS FOR KANSAN DOPE Jayhawker in Desert Sands Seeks Solace in Varsity Sheet—Syfert Wishes Strong Finish. T. Scott Wilson, '12, of Tempe, Ariz., and A. C. Syfert, of Rosedale, are desirous of keeping informed of darsity happenings through the daily Kansan. The mappers do not fit the bill according to former students, and only the Kansan dope will satisfy their cravings. a letter to the business man arzer, T. Scott Wilson, writes as follows from Tempe, Ariz.: "I am very anxious to get some good old K. U. news once more. I rejoice that we beat the Aggies with such a large score. I am in the service of the U. S. Bureau of Entomology at this place. My work is very pleasant and I like the country." A. C. Syft lament the defeat dealt Kansas by Oklahoma, but hopes the "can" will come from the Tiger's tail will be twisted before the end of the season. W. C. LANDSON WILL SPEAK NEXT WEEK W. C. Lansdon, formerly manager of athletics at the University, will speak in chapel Nov. 14, the day before the Nebraska football game. The meeting will probabble a football rally a M. Lansdon bribe one of his K. U. spirit since leaving the University. He is now editor of the Salina Union. The Chi Omega sorority will entertain the following out-of-down guests this week: Elsie Pratt, White City; Frances Banker, Russell; Edna May, Newton; and Beulah Murphy, Wichita. Dora Lockett of Anthony was called home last night by the sudden death of her father. Miss Lockett was at a rehearsal of the Glee club, when she received the news. One of the two chapel periods aloted for mass meetings by the chapel committee was used before the Drake game and the other will be given over to the students before the Missouri game. All puers are requested to meet in Snow hall Tuesday at eleven to discuss the class memorial question. The Cooley club of the School of Law met yesterday afternoon in Green hall. Kansas City Man Invent Apparatus in Department of Physics to Locate Texas Treasure in Sabine Pass. SEEKS BURIED GOLD WITH K. U. MAGNETS LOOKS O. K. SAYS PROFESSOR E. F. Stimpson Thinks Mr. Halter man's Principle Correct—Can't judge Perfected Machine B. C. Halderman, superintendent of the Kansas City fire alarms has been working on an instrument to locate buried treasure, with a new tus from the former member of physics, who believes he has discovered something worth while. His instrument is a delicate magnetic affair which is supposed to locate any considerable amount of metal buried close to the earth's surface. Mr. Halderman believes he has charts in his possession that show the location of an Ottoman Santa held a treasure of $200,000 in the Sabine Pass in Texas and with his "treasure finder" he hopes to locate the cash. "Yes, I believe Bert Halderman has found something," declared Prof. Edwin F. Stimpson, of the Physics department, when asked concerning B. C. Halderman's invention of a treasure locator. "Mr. Halderman's principle is undoubtedly correct," continued Professor Stimpson, "but I haven't seen enough of his apparatus to know how far along he is in the perfection of the machine. There is no reason why the machine cannot be perfected and made to work." "Hallderman was in Lawrence this fall and we loaned him instruments with which to make his tests. While here he did not make tests as to the main idea of his invention but only as to the inventor. The inventor has been with the Kansas City fire department for fourteen years and I know him well." K. U. DAMES MEET AND ELECT OFFICERS FOR YEAR The K. U. Dames, an organization for the wives of the students of the university, met and organized at the home of Mrs. Herbert Hungerford yesterday. Those present were Medasdes R. F. Grubbs, B. J. Clawson, W. M. Dogget, A. Winsor, G. Thorpe, H. T. Gray, N. P. Sherwood, A. C. Curl, R. Yeoman, C. Watson and C. C. Stewart. The following officers were elected for the year: Mrs. Alonzo Winson, president; Mrs. J. B. Claussen, vice-president; Mrs. Glen Thorp, secretary and treasurer; and Mrs. N. P. Sherwood, Mrs. C. Watson, Mrs. Glen Thorp, social committee. Light refreshments were served. PROF. CADY DISCUSES ELECTRIC LIGHT HISTORY He discussed the lamp from its beginning to the present day. "The first lamp was put out in 1879, had a carbon filament and an efficiency of five watts per candela power. The Tungsten lamp now on the market with a Tungsten filament in an air-exhausted bulb has an efficiency of one and one-fourth watts per candle power," he said. Prof. H. P. Cady spoke on "High Efficiency Tungsten Lamps" before the Chemical Engineers at their regular meeting last night. W. H. Johnston, high school visitor, is making an effort to secure the return of the high school blanks for accredited relation with the university as soon as possible. There are many schools recently, and until all are returned in completed form, it will be impossible to revise the list of accredited schools. CAN'T ACCREDIT SCHOOLS TILL BLANKS ARRIVE Judge The Independence Club of the School of Law will meet Thursday evening at the Phi Delt house. Judge Smart of the District Court will talk to the members on "Legal Ethics." Chancellor Strong left for Topeka yesterday afternoon, to attend the meeting of the officers of the state teachers' association held last night. He will remain this evening for the University reunion. Judge Smart to Talt Alpha Delta Pi sorority expects the following alumni to attend the Washburn game: Bess Bozel, Beloit; Florence Wallace, Herrington; Lucile Yates, Junction City; and Lena Swick, Abilene. Send the Daily Kansan home. GET YOUR SEATS NOW FOR THE HUSKIN' BEE "Those Who Are Slow to Purchase Tickets for Nebraska Game May be Left Out." Warns Manager Hamilton Opeka and Kansas City Alumni, K C. A. C., and Four Varsity Fraternities Have Sent Orders 1. 500 RESERVATIONS ARE IN "Students are failing to take advantage of the opportunity to secure tickets for the Nebraska game," said Coach Hamilton this morning, "and unless they get busy they are going to be left out." At present 1800 tickets have been reserved by out of town people and more orders are coming in at an unusual rate. The Topeka alumni have asked for 120 and the K. C. A. C. men have also demanded that they under one umbrella more people in their orders by mail and thus save standing in line for five or six hours," said the manager today. "It seems foolish to miss the opportunity of securing the best seats. We are no respecters of persons but we have to fill mail orders first. Any student has the right order to receive mail only to the trouble" and Coach Hamilton smiled as he went on to tell of the prospects for the annual Cornisher-Jayhawker struggle. The seating accommodations will be the same this year as for the Missouri game last year with the exception of the east bleachers. There will be no east bleachers this year. In the stands and bleachers, 9,000 available while seats will accommodate 2000 more. The only standing room that will be sold will be in front of the west bleachers. Some of the fraternities have taken the opportunity to secure seats and the Sigma Chi, Sigma Nu, Nus. satis and satis Gamma has gamed 100 seats each. OPTIMISTIC GRAD SAYS WE CAN WHIP ANYTHING There seems to be no doubt in the minds of the alumni at least, about the result of the Kansas-Missouri game. The following letter was received by the circulation manager of the Daily Kansan this morning from C. M. Ball, who is situated at Kennett, Cal.; "Please continue my subscription to the Daily Kansan, particularly as I want the best available news of our defeat of Nebraska on Nov. 15. I remember one time when I was in school that Nebraska had two nees, we will have defeated them. I guess the boys will be able to repeat it this year." LIEUTENANTS BOX AT K. N. G. MEETING A Rifle club has also been organized for contests with other colleges and Universities, and it is expected that arrangements can be made in the near future for an interscholastic shoot. The feature of the K. N. G. meeting Tuesday night was a boxing bout between the two lieutenants. The captain had offered a prize for the winner of this bout, but as no decision could be reached as to the winner, the captain kept the prize himself. JOURNALISM DEPARTMENT TO HELP ON THE KANSAN The department of journalism will help direct the news, editorial, and business departments of the Daily Kansan beginning next Monday. This arrangement was made by the Daily Kansan board and the department of journalism last night. It will enable students to receive more valuable training in newspaper work than was possible with the paper entirely under student control. The Linn County Club will hold its first meeting of the year at the home of Prof. A. L. Corbin at 1108 Ohio street on Saturday evening, Nov. 8, at eight o'clock, important business, and all students from Linn county are urged to attend. Claude Conkey, president. Tells of French President An interesting talk on the trip to Spain of Monstier Raymond careiro, president France was given a meeting of the Circle Francs yesterday afternoon by William Ridway, president of the club. Dean Templin speaks before the teachers' association this afternoon at Topeka on "The College and the Individual Student." UNCLE JIMMYS NEPHEWS SIGH FOR A PIPEFU Smoking on the Green hall steps has ceased. That traditional puff between classes has almost entirely disappeared. Occasionally some thoughtless students, out of his hands, tilted, or calabash, and lights up—then he remembers. The Board of Administration and the new order abolishing smoking in or around University buildings are in the minds of the laws this week. 'BOOK TO BE BIGGER'SAYS ANNUAL BOARD Members Met For First Time Last Night And Outlined Plans For 1914 Jayhawker The general plan for this year's Jayhawker was outlined at the first meeting of the board in Green hall last night. All the members were there and everyone seemed enthusiastic about the prospect. Guy VonSchirltz, the manager wishes it understood that the book this year will be better than previous animals. "We intend to spend more money on the book than was spent last year, and it certainly will be something to be proud of. All we ask is support from the seniors graduate students, and the rest o' the school." The pages in the book were apportioned to the various editors who will begin their work immediately and will have a dummy prepared before Christmas, in order that the number of pages which may be devoted to jokes and personalis, can be ascertained. "This year's annual," said Editor Russell Clark, "will be the best ever put out. It will be new and original in many ways. The joy of seeing a sweet from the general run of Jayhawkers that have been previously edited." WON THRILLING VICTORY BY A 90-YARD SPRINT "Chick" Ferguson, K. U. Outlaw Quarter, Scores Touchdown on Olathe Yesterday By a thrilling 90-yard run "Chick" Ferguson won the football game for the K. U., outlaw team that played against atliteh high school yesterday at Olathe. When the former Johnson county students thought that the game was lost to Olathe high by three points, Ferguson caught a punt and torre down the field until entitlement struck, touchdown, one of thunderning thousand" present was "Stew" Lindsey. The game ended with a score of 7 to 3. Those who composed the outlaw team were; F. Whitten, right tangle; L. Allen, right end; C. Payne, center; S. Ferguson, left guard; J. Johnson, tangle; T. Hogan, tangle; G. Quell, quarter back; W. Geill, full back; R. Evans, left half; E. Tillotson, right half; J. McKay, left guard; C. Collins, right guard. LOCAL MINISTERS TO SPEAK IN CHAPEL Tomorrow is to be ministers' day in chapel and four of the Lawrence ministers will speak. Ministers of the city churches will attend chapel in a body. Next Sunday is to be University church day in chapels and the service tomorrow will be in the interest of these meetings. Rev. H. E. Wolfe, Rev. E. E. Stauf. Rev. H. E. M. Testerman, aid Rev. A. W. Powell Wisconsin Favors Tango The committee in charge of the Wisconsin Union dance on the nigh of the Minnesota game in Madison has announced that the tango will be allowed at the dance. Professor F W. Roe, chairman of the student interest committee at Wisconsin, has stated that, if properly danced, the tango will be allowed to continue a all University dances. Methodist Secretary to Talk Methodist Secretary 70 Mary Carr Curtiss, traveling college secretary for Methodist girls will be in Lawrence, Friday, Nov. 7 and will speak to the Methodist girls of the University, Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock at the Methodist parsonage. "Whispery" Crookham, a graduate student last year, is here testifying in the Hinshaw case and visiting old friends. Mr. Crookham is now city editor of the Winfield Daily Free Press. Myrian Smith, '12, was visiting the University Wednesday. Miss Smith is teaching in the English department at Eureka high school. TO REALLY START A CLASS MEMORIAL? Junior Plan Tangible Result From Much Talk and Sentiment Which Flooded Mount Oread Last Year. MEETING COMES NEXT WEEK Class Considers Selection of Chimes as Memorial to Replace Hourly Whistle or Clock The movement started last year for class memorials has been taken up by the junior class and a definite plan of assessment was adopted at a meeting of the committee this week. A large clock in the tower of the Museum building or a system of chimes to replace the hourly class whistle are the two gifts considered. The clock has been under consideration for a long time and attention to Harold Matton's chairman of the memorial committee, "the class is in favor of a large four-furred timepiece for the Museum tower." The committee is in touch with a number of clock companies and the cost of a clock will be about $400. The suggestions of the clock and chimes will be brought before the meeting of the juniors next week. If the chimes plans is adopted the chimes will be installed at some central place on the campus and will perform the duties of the class whistle. The assessment plan adopted by the committee calls for two payments, one of fifty cents and the other of seventy-five cents. One assessment will be paid this year and the second next year. As soon as the money is collected it will be deposited with Registrar George O.Foster. Each junior will receive a receipt for his money and the receipt books will be checked in for a balance. "This system will eliminate all graft and I think it will meet with the approval of the class," Chairman Mattoon said this afternoon. The junior memorial committee consists of Harold Mattoon, chairman, Agnes Moses, Clara McDowell, Allert Ross, Sam Degen, Austin bailey, Elmer Rosewurm, and William A. McKinney. A meeting will be held by the class week end, probably in the afternoon, after chap 6 to answer the question. FACULTY COMMITTEE TO REPORT ON DISCIPLINE A committee from the University Council is working on a plan to settle the question of disciplinary powers for the two student councils. No details have been given out. Professors Becker, Millis, and Mitchell compose the committee. They will probably have their report ready at the next meeting of the University Council. The student disciplinary power has not yet been given to either council this year. Previously the University Council has voted this power almost without discussion but on account of the freshman cap discussion last month the matter was deferred until the next meeting. NOW THE JUNIORS WILL GIVE SMOKERSS Plans were laid for holding four or five smokers during the school year at the meeting of the junior smoker committee, held at Myers hall yesterday. The committee intends to make the smokers this year something new and entirely different from the smokers that he therefore. Novel tales will be served, and some of the numbers on the programs will be in the nature of surprises. The date for the first smoker has not been set. The Student Council will give a dance Friday night at Fraternal Aid hall. A five-piece band will funnish music. Coach W. O. Hamilton, and Prof. C. A. Dykstra will act as chaperons. Football Schedule Nov. 8—Washburn at Lawrence. Nov. 15—Nebraska on McCook. Nov. 22—Missouri at Columbia. Chas. S. Sturtevant, a special in the journalism department is attending the teachers' convention at Topeka. The Weather Cooler tonight and Friday but generally fair over Kansas The clouds of today will all be gone tomorrow, says the weather man. 0 p. m. . . . . UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF HERBERT FLINT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Editor-In-Chief GLENSON ALVINE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Associate Editor JOHN C. MADDEN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Managing Editor LANDON LAIRD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sport Editor JOHN LAREN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . High School Editor BUSINESS STAFF EDWIN ABELB RAY EDDIBURG RAY HUERTA Advertising Manager Circulation Manager Advertising REPORTORIAL STAFF LBCT BARCODE JUNTER DYREC BANDLERD KUNNED SAN DAGEN KENNEDY published a memoir in the weeks after March 1, 1879. Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Pennsylvania, at the age of 36. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the postoffice at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. Subscriptions price $2.50 per year, in advance: one term. $1.50. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANBAN, Lawrence. The Daily Kannan aims to picture the undergraduate life of the University of Kansas; to go further than merely promote its students; to be clearer about no fraternities; to be clean; to be cheerful, to be charitable; to be courageous; to learn more; to be students in all; to serve to the best of its ability to students of the University. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6.1913 "When oil is done, human life is, at the greatest and the best, but like a flowered child, that must be played with and humored a little to keep it quiet till it falls asleep, and then the care is over." William Temple. FARCE IN STUDENT GOVERNMENT That our two student government associations have been existing this fall in name only at the pleasure (and pro-castination) of the University Council shows in brief the status of student government at the University. Practically there is none; the two associations are figureheads. Yet we believe that there is a good field open here that a student disciplinary body with the proper powers can fill with great benefit to the University. If the faculty is sincere in thinking student governing bodies are worth while, these bodies must be given a certain inviolable authority which cannot be taken away haphazard as one function has been this fall. On the other hand, considering the shifting population of student bodies, an element of permanence that can come only from the faculty must also be made a part of their organization. The needs of a student discipline body with any strength are, therefore, final authority in anything it takes up, and an element of permanence to carry it on from year to year with high ideals and clear alms. from year to year. At present the two student bodies are the disowned children of the University, lacking power and self poise, they tend to keep up largely because students instinctively tend to form such bodies, but lacking full knowledge of the problems before them are unable to push ahead to efficiency. The councils are tied with strings to the faculty, yet the faculty otherwise doesn't care much what becomes of them. Both sides are at fault and student government here will continue to be a farce until the faculty gives the two councils power and permanence. "Life is a great bundle of little things."—O. W. Holmes. —John Gay. "Life is a jest, and all thinks show it; I thought so once, and now I know it." THE PRIVATE SCHOOL A private school is a place where parents send their children when they do not wish to associate with them. Also a private school is a place where children learn things which the parents would be ashamed to tell them about at home. The private school is the best substitute for an education that money can buy. —Life. Every private school for girls is presided over by a perfect lady, assisted by several other perfect ladies. Every pupil who goes to a private school always improves steadily . The reputation of the school depends upon this improvement and the social standing of the parents. The man who put the brass in Nobraska should have been more saving with his resources—Daily Delphic. "There are in the capacities of men three varieties; one man will understand a thing by himself; another so far as it is explained to him; a third, neither of himself nor when it is put clearly before him." Machiavelli. FRESH FROM HIGH SCHOOL We are wondering whether the freshman who wrote was not more interested in preparing four hundred words the theme claiming that the Kansas spirit was a farce for rhetoric class than in painting a vivid picture of students at the University of Kansas. The fact that the whole student body does not turn out to football games and nightshirt parades as perhaps high school students would have done does not prove that there is a lack of spirit here. University students are affected by such a diversity of interests that it is impossible for all of them to get together on one thing at the same time. Surely the high school elections in which the writer may have participated must have been bloody affrays if the recent class election are to be characterized as tame. If all the cancuses, campaign literature, handbills, newspaper advertising, sample ballots, and personal workers of the last election show that very little interest was taken by the students, then we would like to see an election in which the student body really became interested. Perhaps our freshman friend's ear was not close to notice the upheavals which took Perhaps our freshman friend's ear was not close enough to the ground to notice the upheavals which took place. ALL ABOUT LIFE "Whether in Naishapo or Babylon, Whether the cup with sweet or bitter runs The Wine of life keeps oozing drop by drop The Leaves of Life keep falling one by one." —Omar Khayyam. communications to the Daily Kansan must be signed as an evidence of good faith, though not necessarily for publication. The column is open to all Daily Kansan readers). COMMUNICATIONS Dear Sir:- In reply to the "Exasperated Stude" who lays the entire responsibility for library disturbances, on the Co-ed, I would like to say that he has very evidently not been at the library on several nights. If he has, why did he not mention the young man who came in one night to audibly inquire of a co-ed, who was not making a disturbance how soon she would be ready to go? Why did he forget to tell of the boy who stopped in the doorway and coughed in order to attract the attention of a co-ed until he had attracted the attention of every one else in the room? The librarian was obliged to speak to the first young man because of the noise he was making. He must be冷 Editor of the Daily Kansan: Of course the co-eds do talk, but let us at least be consistent enough to give the boys their share of the blame. To the Editor of the Kansan: Many different views have been stated in the "comments" column of the Kansan upon the question of "cheating" and "crooking" in the class room—possibly so much that further comments will be unwelcome. Yet I can't pass the question satisfactorily without stating a few differences which, to me, seem very plausible. "Freshman" complains, in no uncertain language, that it is all the fault of the upperclassmen. In retaliation the upperclassmen contends that the first-year men are unacustomed to being placed "on their honor," and overlook the responsibility which "senior" says rests with them. Again, "common stude" blames them both in saying, "we are losing our pride in honesty." Really, as a matter of fact, are conditions as serious as that? Are we not bringing our institution into disrepute by just such agitation? Even under as elaborate an honor system as Columbia University maintains and boasts of, there is a certain amount of "underhand cheating." Unbiased critics of the University are ever ready to take at issue just such criticisms as are made by the few dissatisfied ones, who are not representative of the entire student body. Is it as just or as fair an estimate of the University of Kansas, to judge it by the small percent who do unfair work as to judge it by the very large percent who are square and above-board? The benefits, derived by society from an institution are decided, not by the smaller percent, but by the larger. To say the least, public censure of the deficient will not bring us as far in the eyes of the uninformed as praise for the students in general. We are too prone to see and expose the mistakes of others to the embarrassment and consternation of the whole, than we are to approve of the good, to the advancement of the University—in the eyes of the people at large, at least. Much better, it seems to me, to make of the "comments" column a space for praise than for lamenting, especially when we have so much more good to praise, than we have bad to lament. Satisfied Soph. Going One Better. "Bang!" went the rifles at the maneuvers. "Oo-oo," screamed the pretty girl—a nice, decorous, surprised Rttie scream. She stept backward into the surprised arms of a young man. "Oh," said she, blushing. "I was frightened by the viles. I beg your pardon." riles. I beg your pardon," "Not at all," said the young man, "Let's go over and watch the art!" —Cincinnati Times-Star. This is Awful—"I met my fiancee in a department store." store. Eye first met Adams." "That's where Eve first met Adams." "Not all all. It's just been discovered that Adam met Eva at the rib encounter. —Boston Transcript. The Lady and the Diploma* When a diplomat says "yes," he means "perhaps." When a diplomat says "perhaps," he means "no" and when a diplomat says "no," he is no diplomat. When a lady says "no," she means "perhaps." When a lady says "perhaps," she means "yes"; and when a lady says "yes," she is no la- -Berliner Tageblatt. --for everybody is the "Spaiding Policy." We guarantee each buyer of an article bearing the Spaiding Trade-Mark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. Unfamiliar Verses THE SECRET Ere I had come to three feet high, My father said to me: "You soon will be as tall as I!" Whereat we laughed in glee. "Soon you will grow, soon you will know The things I know!" said he; It seemed so long a while to grow— Ah, might it ever be! Within a year my father died; So very young was I, I did not know just why they cried; I sat and wondered why. Now years have flown and I have grown ...a poet as, tall as; he: Could I have known! He must have known, That day he laughed with me! He F Mapple —Charles F. Mapple. AT THE LAWRENCE CHURCHES Trinity Church (Episcopal)—Vermont and Berkeley. The Rev. Evan Alexander Edwards, M. A., rector, 7:30 a.m. The Holy Communion. Service over by 8; 10 a.m. Sunday School Model Kindergarten from 10-12 in charge of experienced teacher. Student classes forming in upper school. Students invited at present to attend Dean Skilton's lectures on Faith and Worship. 11 a.m., Morning prayer and sermon; 5 p.m., evening prayer and sermon. The full choir at both services. All welcome. THE COAT IS ON. THE MEN ARE WATCHING AWAY. THE WOMAN IS STANDING TO THE SIDE, AND THE MAN IS KNOWING WHAT HAPPENED. Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx Young men or young women will enjoy wearing these Hart Schaffner & Marx overcoats HERE'S a bunch of young folks in the new styles in overcoats. You get quite an idea of the variety we offer in very smart winter fashions. It's hardly necessary to mention that these clothes are absolutely reliable in quality, and tailoring; you know Hart Schaffner & Marx goods well enough to know that. Whatever you select here is sure to be just right. Overcoats $16.50 to $30. Orders taken for coats up to $75. At the left see one of our young men's double-breasted 48-inch ulsterettetes; shawl collar; slant pockets; belt and plait in the back. The kneeling figure wears our double-breasted 33-inch skating coat; shawl collar; patch pockets; belt all around. Yoke back with pluits. Peckham's At the right is a 52-inch double-breasted ulsterette, with shawl collar, and belt all around; a young man's model. Notice This is the home of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes Students The young woman wears a double-breasted 30 inch Norfolk, with adjustable collar, bellows patch pockets, belt all around; yoke and plait back. O. P. Leonard's Pantatorium is on the job again this year. Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 501, Home 180 We Give Club Rates 841 Mass. St. Upstairs. 841 Mass. St. Upstairs. Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Lawrence Pantutorum 2 W. Warren Halls Phones 5010 A. K. BUILDING CORP. TRADE SPALDING MARK A.D. 1892 A "Square Deal" A. G. SPALDING & BROS. 1120 Grand Ave. Kansas City, Mo. Send for our Catalogue. The whole University in church next Sunday-Adv. 38-3 The Folks at Home would enjoy reading the University Daily Kansan. Why not send it to them? It would keep them in touch with the University and you. Phone the address to K. U. 25 or drop a card in any University mail box. PRICE FOR ONE YEAR [ $2.50 Of course you are going to church next Sunday. Every one is.-Adv. 38-3 Next Sunday is University Church Day. Special services in all the Lawrence churches.-Adv. 38-3 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PROFESSIONAL CARDS W C MCOONNELL Physician and Assistant Psychiatrist, Residence, 1346 Tenn. House, Hom. Hospital J. F. BRIOCK, Optometrist and Specialist Office 802 Mass. Mason, Phone 616-735-3900, iPhone 616-735-3900 HARRY REDING. M, D Eye ear, nose, and thigh. Giraffe. A, B, C, D, E Home 0113, Home 0112 5 A. HAMMAN M. D. Eye, ear, and brow hair. 6 A. HAMMAN Dickson. 7 Building. Discussion. 8 Discussion. DR. H. W. IAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BRAY, Dentist, Over Wilson's Drug Store, Bell Phone 507. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D. D. O. S33 Museum a street. Both phones, office and house. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12M A. F. A. Bld. Residence 1130 Tenn. Phones 211. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diseases of Hepatitis B. Residence, 1290 B. Both pairs of residence, 1290 DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires. Studio. Both phones. DR. BURT R. WHITE Osteopath. Phones, Bell 938, Hall 257, Office, 745 Mass. 87. S, T. Gillisle, M. D. Office, corne Vermont and Warriet Sts., 728 Indiana St. E. J. Blatt, Physician and Surgeon. Office and residence. 915 Mass. St. Office hours 7:00 to 9:00 a.m. 12:00 to 4 p.m. and 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. Phones Bell 45, Home 131. CLASSIFIED Barbers Frank lint's Barber, Shop 1025, Mass Tann, good, bakers. Satisfaction assured J. C. Houk's Barber Shop, 913 Mass. Students must wear collared coats; chairs to waft to wake. Razors bounc. Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co., for Massachusetts. Mazda lamps. 987. Phone 058. Ladies Tailors Miss. Ellison Dressmaking and Ladies Phones 411,411; Phones 2411,411; Johnson & Carl. Ladies Tailoring and Dressmaking. Gowns for all occasions. All work gowns. Mrs. B. Duluth 614 Mass. Nursing cleaning establishment in connection. Phone 216-397-8051 Lawrence Sewing School, Ludies' tailoring freshmaking. Sewing school 814 Mass. Phones 550. Miss Powers; Miss C. McClarney. Hair Dressers hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-gifts, neck treatment, neck care, appoints call Bell 1373. Home : 51. The Select Hair Dress Shop, 927 Mass St. D & M sporting goods and supply supplies. D & M sporting goods and $25 Mass. Stores. Phoenix 411-369-8700. Sporting Goods Hawaiiwa Cafe for regular meals, lunch and short orders when down town. Open after 7am. Bring your shoes to Fornells, for guar- mental shoe repairing. Fornery, 1017 Mass. Prices reasonable, work the best. Indeed in terms of experience, I have worked with 423 O'Brien & Co., Ct., 316 Mass Ave. boston, MA 02115. Queen City College. System and sewing taught. Dressmaking in connection with school. Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 Ky., Bell 1764. Ed. W. Papars, Engraver, Watchmaker and Ed. W. Pappas, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweller. Bell Pinion 17 Mass. For rent. A nice furnished room, 2 chests electric lights and modern in every respect and is very quiet. One trial means no risk, small investment, good results. Smoke a smoke. T-Will have homemade cigarettes. I have a nice line of plain china for painting and already decorated. Orders taken Estelle Northrup, studio 733 Mass. St., uptown. Bell Phone 152. Eldridge House Stable W. E. MOAK, Prop. Taxicabs, Hacks, Livery Baggage Haused Both Phones 148 See the New Parker Self-Filling Pountain Pen Office Supplies, Typewriters F. I. CARTER 1025 Mass. Bell phone 100 Come on Down Come on Down to JIM'S Tonight 1101 Mass. St. PROTSCH The College Tailor Lawrence Transfer Co Trunk Hauling Phone 15 All announcements or items for the University calendar either for the coming week or for future events should be given to Mr. Cronemeyer, at the department of journalism office, by 4:30 p.m. Friday. It is desired to make the calendar a complete schedule of University events and the co-operation of those interested is requested. OUR $15 SUITS have been so popular that many sizes are broken. Instead of reordering we have put our entire line of $20 fancy suits in at $15.00 Our $20 blue serge is the best that the money can buy but for a short time we will make the special price of $17.00 You must see these to appreciate their real values. All $18 overcoats $15.00 M. J. SKOFSTAD 829 Mass. St. Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 Vermont Phones 139 BERT WADHAM The College Inn Barber A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND Fresh Oysters, Regular Meals, Short Orders, Confectionery, Cigars, Etc. PROPS. 715 Massachusetts Streer Lowney's Chocolates McColloch's Drug Store Of course you are going to church next Sunday. Every one is—Ady- vise! LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. W. H. Quakenbush. Pres.; E. S. Weatherby, Supt. SAVE THE PIECES The whole University in church next Sunday--Adv. 38-3 Lawrence, Kansas. The whole University in church next Sunday...Adv. 38-3 Both men and women are being served in Fraser hall lunch room.— Adv. 38-5c We have added Lens Grinding Machinery to our Optical department. Any Lens Duplicated Glasses Fited. HESTER Jeweler and Optician Chafing dishes, casseroles, coffee machines and percolators. The finest line of metal and wood serving trays in the Lillian Russel IN Tragic Drama ROYAL ROCHESTER KENNEDY & ERNST 825 MASS. ST. PHONES 341 Of course you are going to church next Sunday. Every one is...Adv. Student Rates: See Our Solicitors Cleaning & Housework Work a Specialty. JACK FULLERTON Phones: Bell, 1401, Home, 140 K. U. PANTATORIUM AND DYE WORKS Phones: Bell, 1400; Home, 140 High School News of Kansas Ottawa, Nov. 3.—Ottawa high school defeated Emporia high school Friday at Emporia. The score was 13-7. After a masquerade party the students marched in a snake through town to celebrate the victory. SNAKE LINE CELEBRATES SNAKE LINE CELEBRATES A VICTORY AT OTTAWA (By Ellen O. Tipfer) Masquerade Party The sophomore, junior and senior classes held their annual masquerade at the high school Friday night. Home-made candy and popearm were the refreshments. Masquerade Party WATERVILLE AND BARNES BREAK EVEN IN 2 GAMES Waterville, Nov. 3. —The Waterville high school girls' and boys' basket-ball teams opened the season by playing the Barnes high school teams at Barnes. The girl's game, fast and interesting, was won by Barnes 17 to 13. The Waterville boys took revenge and won their game by the score of 54 to 6. The feature of the latter game was the team work of Waterville which Barnes could not break up. (By Albert O'Brien) Junction City, Nov. 3.—The teachers of this city will attend the teachers' meeting in Topeka on Thursday and Friday of this week. Special interest is attached to this meeting as Mr. Huesner, the former superintendent of the Junction City schools, is president of the association. This means two holidays for the students. More Teachers To Topeka. (By Erma Yates) The Humboldt high school football team was defeated by the Normal high school at Emporia last Friday by the score of 12-8, interesting, Emporia having the advantage throughout owing to their superior weight. Emporia Defeats Humboldt (By Roy A. Woods) UNIVERSITY PICTURES ON OAKLEY'S SCREEN CIMARRON WILL HAVE NEW $14,000 ADDITION Cimarron, Nov. 3—The $14,000 addition which is being built to the Cimarron high school will be completed in about four weeks after the burial of the embalmed Cimarron in one of the best schools in this part of the state. The gymnasium is large and roomy measuring 40 by 62 feet and fourteen feet high, making an excellent basket-ball court. The gallery has a seating capacity of about two hundred. Olathe, Nov. 3—Work was started on the new Industrial Arts Building by Weast and Ekengren, of Olathe, the contractors. This building when completed will cost appximately ten million dollars to be fully equipped for manual training and domestic science work. (Pu Winifred Butcher) Alta Vista, Nov. 4—All the teachers of this school, those of the grades as well as the high school faculty, are planning to attend the State Teachers' Association meeting at Topeka the latter part of this week. The school will have a two days' vacation, Thursday and Friday. These Teachers Go To Topeka (Bu Harry H. Morgan) (By Ruth Scott) Oakley, Nov. 3—A set of slides depicting Ancient Rome was shown with our kiteascape Saturday night. The slides were obtained from the University of Kansas. Hartford Has Lecture Course (By Maude Davis) Hartford, Nov. 3.—The first number of the Hartford high school lecture course was given by Tom Corwin, polyphone imitator, Friday Nearly enough money has been rais ed to pay for the entire course. NEW $10,000 INDUSTRIAL ARTS BUILDING AT OLATHE Belles Lettres with The Marquette high school opened the basket-ball league with a game between the societies of the school, the Lettres and Athenians, resulting in a victory for the Belles Lettres 36-17. Marquette, Nov. 3.—The Marquette high school has been practicing basket-ball for three weeks, and with plenty of competition tends to have a winning team this season in all challenges received will be accepted. (By Harold Hallett) (Bv Roy Ericson) MARQUETTE WILL ACCEPT BASKET-BALL CHALLENGES Belles Lettres Win DEMOSTHENES' DISCIPLES COMMENCE YEAR'S (By Edwin Price) Wellington, Nov. 3.—The Disciples of Demosthenes, the local debating society, began active work last week. The intervention of the United States in the Mexican trouble was the cause that caused them to last Summer's debating teams were undefeated and a like record is honed for this year. School will ibe dismissed Thursday and Friday to permit the teachers to attend the meeting of the State Teachers' Association at Topeka. Eleven of the fifteen faculty members will be in attendance. STATE CONVENTION OF W. Y. C. A'S AT NICKERSON (By Elva M. Albertson) By Ben Lippert, Nickerson, Nov. 3—The state convention of the Young Woman's Christian Association for high schools will be held at Nickerson, November 14, 15, and 16. The place has been selected because the Y. W. C. A. of Reno county high school is the largest high school association in Kansas. In addition to the state officers, Miss Elisa R. Butler of New York, national secretary, and Miss Jessie Field, also member of the national board, have supervision of interests, will be present. A reception will be given to the delegates in the gymnasium on Friday night, November 14. OLD STYLE FOOTBALL IN OAKLEY-SCOTT CITY GAME (By Ruth Scott) Oakley, Nov. 3.—Saturday, in a closely contested football game Scott City was defeated by Oakley, score 8-0. The game was characterized by straight footing and no information. Scott City, however, made one successful forward pass, gaining 20 yards. Oakley was able to solve the shifts of the opposing team and in turn made most of her gains on close end plays. Scott could be called for a touchdown but was called back because of hurdling. The scoring consisted of a touchdown and a safety. Axtell Loses to Seneca (Bv Vernor Smith) Axtell, Nov. 2-The Axtell football eleven lost to Seneca Friday by a score of 33 to 0 on the former's field. Both teams used the punt successfully but Seneca was better on the forward mass. The juniors held a pie social at the school building Thursday evening. It was a success in every way. Fine program was with the junior forty-nine pies were sold. The net proceeds were twenty-three dollars. ANNOUNCEMENTS A one-reel Powers "Chivalry Days" and a two-reel Eclair feature "One of the Rabbit" will be the program at the Pattee Thursday night, all girls will have charge of the theater. All proceeds derived will go to the Y. M. C. A. Week-night date rules have been suspended for this date. The Society of Mechanical Engineers will meet with Prof. F. H. Sibley, 1607 Tennessee at seven Thursday evening. A representative of each class will speak. Gas engine technicians, uncleer and refrigerators, Joe Berwick; machinery, Charles Hagenbuck; power, Frank Beauchamp. The first sophomore class dance will be given in Robinson gymnasium next Saturday night. The date had previously been set for Friday night, but it was changed because of a Student Council dance on that night. The dance is open to all students of the University. CALENDAR Thursday 7:00 Amer. Society Mech. Eng 7:30 Orchestra practice, (Fra.) Friday 11:00 Chapel. Ministerial Alliance of Lawrence. 3:00 Football. K. U. vs. Wash- ington (Oak). 8-12. Future Events Nov. 6-7. Teachers' Congregation. To 8-12. Sophomore dance, (Gym.) Nov. 11 Violin recital. Otto Meyer. (Eraser.) (*Fraser*) Nov. 13-14. First meeting of Kansas Conference of Charities and Corrections, Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology, and Probate Judges' Association. Nov. 14. Junior Class Dance, Robinson gymnasium, 8-12 p.m. Nov. 15. Student Council Dance, Robinson gymnasium, 8-12 Nov. 18 Piano recital, Heniot Levy. (Fraser.) Bowersock Theatre FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14th THE NATION-WIDE MUSICAL SUCCESS Frank C. Payne presents the Beauty Opera of Fun and Fashion The Rose Maid 60 People 60 Cast and Beauty Chorus Beyond Criticism SPECIAL ORCHES-TRA of 12 Musicians Mail orders received and promptly filled when accompanied by money order or certified check with self-addressed, stamped envelope for return of tickets. Address: SHERMAN WIGGINS. Mgr. First 3 rows Parquet $2.00 All Balcony . . $1.00 Next 10 rows " 1.50 1st 3 rows 2nd Bal. .75 Last 4 rows " 1.00 Next 3 rows .50 BELL BROTHERS Piano Polish Nothing in the polish to harm the most delicate wood. Give it a trial. A piano and furniture polish that you need not be afraid to use. 25c a bottle. Bell Brothers Music Co. This polish has been used by the Bell Brothers Music Company for the past twenty-five years in their factory and stores. It gives a high polish and acts as a preservative. Capital $100,000 Corner Mass. and Quincy Sts. Issues its own Letters of Credit and Travellers Checks. The only way to carry your money in safety. Working of all kinds solicited. The WATKINS NATIONAL BANK THE FLOWER SHOP Cut Flowers Of Quality 8251-2MASS. PHONES 621 Banking of all kinds solicited. - * "At Home" For Men. Social Notes The men students and professors were entertained this afternoon in Haworth hall from three until fivethirty by the women of the faculty and wives of professors. Doughnuts and coffee were served to a large number, and the "get acquainted" spirit was not neglected. Mesdames Frank Strong, F. E. Kester, and M. E. Rice were on the receiving line. Miss Alice Snider, of Fort Scott, is here for a few days' visit with her sister Juliet Snider, a senior in the college. Kappa Kappa Gamma entertained Phi Gamma Delta last night from seven to eight. Woodward's "Round Corner" soda fountain. Best drinks ever upr. Adv. Hot and cold dainties.-Adv. 39-3 The Sigma Nu fraternity entered the freshmen of Alpha Delta Phi last night at a dinner party from six to eight. Alpha Chi Sigma, honorary chemical society will entertain the faculty of the department of chemistry with a smoker Friday evening at the chapter house, 1500 New Hampshire. The School of Education received the professional directory of administrators and teachers in accredited schools from the state printer this week. Sigma Phi Sigma start initiation last night for Jesse Teeters of Goodland, Lawrence Zazier, of Carbondale, Charles Gleason, of Baldwin, Sam Johnson, of Troy, and Cecil Deroin, of White Cloud. Coffee…Don't blame the coffee if it's bad. Perhaps it's the water. Make it of distilled water, McNish. Phonus 189—Adv. 39-2 The best film made is the Eastman yellow box "Kodak" kind. It gives perfectly graduated pictures of Jeboard's "the Boys" 39-ner.**Adv.** RECEIVES DIRECTORY OF TEACHERS FROM TOPEKA The book is published annually and sent by the department to all principals and superintendants in the state. It contains a classified list of books received from which they received their degrees, the school in which they have taught, their present positions and addresses, and their home address. The ministers of the city churches will have special messages for all University students next Sunday.— Adv. 38-3 LOST-Fountain pen between library and 900 block Tenn. Finder please notify Warren, 939 Tenn, 8500 Bell. 36-3t* Bully Halligan, the Nebraska tackle, showed up especially strong in the Cornhuskers game with the Ames Aggies last Saturday. Halliwell was full, Stiehm shifted him to the place in the line this year. FOR RENT--One first class room. Single or double. Price reasonable. W. E. James, Angney Club, 1339 Ohio St. The ministers of the city churches will have special messages for all University students next Sunday.—Adv. 38-3 More than four thousand students have graduated from the University of Kansas. Of course you are going to church next Sunday. Every one is—Adv. r. FOR RENT - Modern six room house. Furnished. Bell 2287. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Biggest Game of Missouri Valley Season NEBRASKA vs. K. U. Saturday, Nov. 15th McCook Field Mail Applications enclosing money received now. Tickets on sale Monday, 10.00 a.m. at Manager's office, Gymnasium. Student Tickets admit North Bleachers. Special sections for Rooters and University Girls. General admission North Bleachers and Grand Stand, $1.00. Reserved Seats South Bleachers and West Bleachers, $1.50. Box Seats, Side Lines, $2.00. $1.00 is allowed on Student Tickets in exchange for any reserved seat. Students should reserve seats now. No telephone applications will be considered. Applications should be accompanied by draft, check or P. O. order made payable to W. O. Hamilton. Where tickets are to be sent by mail. 12 cents should be included to pay for registration. Otherwise tickets will be sent at owner's risk. Remember That SCHULZ the Tailor makes overcoats as well as suits. It will be a pleasure to show you our line Foreign and Domestic Woolens 913 Mass. CROSS COUNTRY MEN LEAVE FQR NEBRASKA Seven Runners Start For Lincoln Tonight to Compete in Conference Race on Saturday The Varsity cross country team, which is entered in the Missouri Valley conference run at Lincoln Saturday, will leave tonight for the Cornusherk camp. Seven men will make the trip, Vermillion, Spreier, Edwards, Duwauall, Ross, Hazen, and possibly, Malcolmson. Coach Hamilton will not accompany the team and Captain Hazen will have charge of the team at the meet. The team is in good shape with the exception of Malcolmson, who will be out for five or six weeks. The other men should score in the race. Dark horses are always prominent in such races but Captain Hazen believes he has the perfect number of players to team to make the Kansas prospects excellent. The ministers of the city churches will have special messages for all University students next Sunday.— Adv. 38-3 New York University gained 1,200 students in its registration this year according to the official report of the registrar, George C. Sprague. The total enrollment is 5,637, not including auditors or students in the extramural division of whom there are over 1,000 in attendance. Plain caramels, nut caramels, and dipped caramels at Wiedemann's. Adv. Next Sunday is University Church Day. Special services in all the Lawrence churches.-Adv. 38-3 RAIN TIME Need A Raincoat? We now have in stock all sizes in all our big sellers. Slip ons $ 5 to $15 Gaberdines $10 to $25 Cravanettes $15 to $25 A good umbrella extra value at $1.00 Ober's HARD TO FIND SUPPETERS Sixty men at Michigan Agricultural College petitioned the faculty to offer a course in the study of the liquor problem with college credit. Morningside College is to have a new gymnasium, to be finished by Feb 1st. It will cost complete $75,000. Next Sunday is University Church Day. Special services in all the Lawrence churches—Adv. 38-3 Shortbridge, an Alaskan Indian chief has matriculated at the University of Pennsylvania. The whole University in church next Sunday.—Adv. 38-3 Caramel time at Wiedemann's.. Adv. ARM BANDS CANES PENNANTS MEGAPHONES AT GRIGGS 827 Mass. "The Store of Quality" WASHBURN ROOTERS COME OUT IN FORCE Five Hundred Topeka Enthusiasti Will Compete With "Rock Chalk" While Teams Clash on Me-Cook Field Saturday SHIFTED LINE-UP PROBABLE Hammond, Strothers, Russel, Calkins and Kane May Have Chance to Show Their Worth The Kansas team has been having some strenuous scrimmages during the past week and the coaches expect the team to be in fine shape for a good game Saturday. The freshmen have gone through the line considerably when they were given all the odds at home, but, instead of dutc, but, beyond a doubt, the Varsity, with its regular line-up, would wipe them off the map. The Washburn Ichabads will arrive in Lawrence Saturday morning with their rooters five hundred strong, with the one object, of repeating last year's slaughter of the innocents. The team is all in good shape and with its stars back in the game should make an excellent showing in the big games. In the Washburn rooters will occupy the entire south bleachers and promise to show the Varsity rooters how yelling should be done. Although outweighed nearly twenty pounds to the man, the team is fast and solid and the boys of the Red and Blue will have to hump to put it over them in this game. The lineup of the Ichabods has not been sent in but it is probable that Deaver will start the game at quarter with Ream and Beals, two stars, to back him up. Bearg and Hardy, the two speedy half backs, will start the game in the back field. Blondy Trobert will hold down right end opposite Strothers. He is a great kicker, being able to boot the ball fifty-five yards every time in a punt and forty-five yards in a drop kick, it is said. He may do some damage if the Kansas team holds as it is expected to do. As a whole, the team is much better than last year's which won ten to nothing. A few shifts in the lineup will probably be made, Hammond going to guard in place of James, who is in the hospital with bronchitis, and Strothers will be back at end, if his chanceance at quarter some time during the game and Calkins and Kane may be used as subs on the ends before the game is over. All reports as to Stuewe being out are wrong and when the whistle blows there are things that they do things. Detwiller will start the game with Greenlees if his condition permits. The game should be one of the best of the season as both teams are out for blood, the Varsity to retrieve what they lost last year and then again and the coaches promise a run for your money to all who see the game. The ministers of the city churches will have special messages for all University students next Sunday.—Adv. 38-3 Friday and Saturday will be fruit salad days at Wiedmann's—Adv. Try the lunch counter in the basement of Fraser lad.—Adv. 38-56 DISAGREE WITH AN EASTERN ECONOMIST University Professors of Language Do Not Think That Will Power Is Lessened By Study of Other Tongues S. N. PATTEN CAUSES TROUBLE Pennsylvania Instructor Declares Students Should Have Only One Set of Words For Clearness Does the study of a language hurt the will power? S. N. Patten, professor of political economy of the University of Pennsylvania, says it does. The language professors the University has does and further, that the theory offered by Professor Patten is absurd and unscientific. Professor Patten in reaching his conclusion says in part: "If one knows two languages and has a double set of words, each must find expression to relieve the subconscious memory. Concise, attractive, word construction idea is then expressed once and only once. One who has a knowledge of languages must say when desiring to speak, 'My thought is so in Greek, is so in Latin, and finally so and so in English.' This means that an ornate style is a defect and not a mark. If there is a single word set of associations, a single word will fully express his meaning." Prof. Eugene Galloo, head of the Romance Language and Literature department, said that when she spoke in French she thought in French and when she spoke in English she thought in English. According to Professor Patten's idea, she said, a child that blurted out its thoughts was the one of greatest will power. Prof. A.T. Walker of the Lathi department thought the theory absurd. "It is not at all scientific," he said. "If Professor Patten thinks that short, concise, crap words the come at first, it will power, he is mistaken. Does he think 'damm' a native word? Why. that is Latin itself." Dean卵 Templin of the College does not believe that language has hurt anybody's will power. However, he went on to say so and might have thought so and quoted the following lines from Hamlet: "Thus conscience does make cowards of us all: And thus the native hue of resolution Is sicked ər with the pale cast of thought, tough And terrifies of great pith and moment With this regard their currents trenched awry. And lose the name of action." "I never thought of the students' hurting any of the students' will power, declared a F. Engel of German department." "Governor-Builder in his lecture spoke of education as a builder of will power. The study of languages most certainly belongs to education." All of the language professors agreed that they had never observed any of their pupils that had less will power because of the study. However, there is one instructor on the hill who thinks as Professor Pattern. But he merely thinks so, he may be refused to be quoted for her. Subscribe for the Daily Kansas First Sophomore Dance SATURDAY NIGHT ROBINSON GYM Admission 50c. Open To All Students Of University PHONE 100 FOR TAXICABS PEERLESS GARAGE, Phone 100. CHICAGO U. ADOPTS NEW TANGO FOOTBALL Tango football has arrived at the University of Chicago. The new pastime, as staged at maroon practice this season at Marshall *Field* combines the graceful gyrations of the modern dancers with the der labs of the gridiron, and is designed to fit the Midway candidates for tripping the light fantastic toe titleward through the 1913 schedule. Lively footwork is the basis of Coach Stagg's Argentine invention: As in the most recent developments of the art of dancing, the performers must master the grips and the limberest joints win the cake. Wind, nerve and daring are also required for the sport. Coach Stagg did not patent the pastime with the polished floor in view, but the maroon students, many of whom are proficient in the latest wrinkles of the grapevine, hesitation, fish walk and reverse dip, find with joy that it well adapted to furthering their social advance. challenge to jump, alike pivot, block and charge are chewed without a murmur. Prof. Karl Pratheh, lecturing before the Yale University, said that the thing which struck him most in the American schools was the severe restrictions placed on the student in the selection of his courses. Greater liberty was allowed in the foreign countries, according to him. Next Sunday is University Church Day. Special services in all the Lawrence churches.-Adv. 38-3 For the fourth year, a course in the study of the liquor problem is offered by the economics department of Iowa Wesleyan University. Maple caramels with or without nips dipped at Wiedemann's—Adv. UNFAMILIAR VIEWS NO.7-TWO PHOTOGRAPHS OF GYMNASIUM 102 A REVENGE! WASHBURN vs. K. U. Game Called 3 o'clock. Special sections for rooters and University girls on North bleachers. General admission--End North bleachers, $1.00. Reserved seats, South bleachers, $1.00. With student tickets, Reserved seats 50 cents. Student tickets admit North bleachers. Autos admitted $1.00 each occupant. Tickets on sale now at Manager's office in Gymand at Carroll's. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8th. McCOOK FIELD STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. NUMBER 40. ASK ALL CLASSES TO BUY JAYHAWKERS NOW Tickets For Senior Year-Book Will Be Offered For Sale By Increased Finance Committees Next Week PRICE UNTIL FEBRUARY, $2.50 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 7, 1913. Editor Clark Says Only Enough Annales Will be Printed to Supply Preliminary Demand "Juniors, sophomores, and freshmen who want 1914 Jayhawkers must buy coupons at once," said Russ Hancock, editor of the annual, afternoon. "The presidents and finance committees of the junior, sophomore, and freshmen classes met with the annual board yesterday afternoon and adopted a new method of selling the annuals. The finance committees are to see each member of their class and discuss what will be good for an coupon which will be good for an advertising. The principal reason for adopting this method is to get some money into the empty treasury in order to meet current expenses. It will also give a line on the number of annuals wanted." No more annuals will be printed than are sold, Clark says. The seniors have signed pledged or promissory notes for their books, and a canvas will be made of the alumni to buy coupons next week, so that the exact number of annuals needed can be determined. The class presidents have increased their finance committees to fifteen or more members in order to facilitate the work of seeing all of the students. LOCAL MINISTERS TALK ON RELIGION Congratulate K. U. on It$_5$ Moral Atmosphere and Urge Attendance at "University Sunday" That the University of Kansas is better organized to do efficient religious work that the majority of the denominational schools in the state was the statement of Rev. E. E. Stauffer, of the Lutheran church in chapel today. He said further that during the ten years that he had been in Lawrence, there had been no time that the church had taken so much interest in the student at the present time. He made these statements because he wished to refute the idea prevalent over the state that the students do not take an interest in the religious part of their lives. Rev. F, M. Testerman of the United Brethren church said that the greatest thing on earth is man and any institution which has for its main purpose the making of men is highly important. "The churches and vocations are always ready willing to help to help the University in its efforts to make better men and women out of its students," he stated. That students as a class are always being wailed for the purpose of giving them advice was the reason Rev. E. A. Edwards of the Episcopal church gave for not wanting to speak as if to students. He said that the church comes with a definite purpose and therefore has certain claims upon each individual. He never asks students to attend church just because they should but come to church when the feel that they need the inspiration and comfort which can only be obtained there. "If a person does not do in college what he intends to do when graduated, he will be likely to fail," according to H. E. Wolfe, pastor of the M. E. church. He urges all to do socially what they expect to do after graduation and that they be earnest in their church work so that tey will be prepared to do the same in their life business. The chapel exercises were under the direction of the Ministerial Alliance of Lawrence for the purpose of getting a large number of students interested in University Sunday, which will be held next Sunday. The services will all be especially attractive to students at that time. The Girls' Glee club gave two en- gage numbers after the second secon- d day. "Movies" Were Popular "movies" were popular. The "movies" had another record crowd laughing as a result of week-night rule date being off. The Y, M, C. A. received the money taken in at the Pattie and Oread movies. Send the Daily Kansan home. DEUTSCHER VEREIN TO GIVE A PUPPET SHOW The Deutscher Verein will reproduce "Das Puppenspiel Von Dr. Faust," a puppet show of the sixteenth century next Monday afternoon at 4:30 in room 313 Fraser ball. Those who will represent characters are Messrs. Reese, Klein, H. F. Mattton, H. R. Brannein, and L. F. Engel, R. E. Bentley, and by E. C. Bechtold. Members of the club will be admitted free, and others will be charged ten cents. NOW THE FRESHMEN WILL GIVE A SMOKER Social Committee Thinks Freshmen Need "Get Together" Meetings More Than Others. The freshmen have joined the ranks of the other classes in giving class smokers. It is the plan of the social committee to give several of these "get together" meetings during the year. The first will be next Thursday night at Eagles' hall. Admission will be twenty-five cents. Addresses will be made by member of the Sphinx club will be on handers of the faculty, and the members to entertain with some form of a vaudeville show. The freshmen committees have admittance tags which they are selling for twenty-five cents. They say that all members of the class purchase tickets but say that first-year men should come down to Eagles' hall and pay money at the door if they don't get a tag. PROF. H, A. RICE TO TALK AT ENGINEERS' SMOKER On Monday evening, Nov. 10, the engineers will join in a jolly evening at a smoker in Eagles' hall. There will be cigars and a good feed, and a few boxing bouts, and a number of other contests of interest are planned. Prof. H. H. A. Rice will address the students. This affair is being boosted by a number of the livest members of the senior and junior classes, and they attend a good time to those who attend. REPRESENTS KANSAS AT URBANA MEETING Prof. F. H. Hodder left Wednesday for Urbana, Ill., to attend the Association of American Universities to be held there Nov. 7 and 8. The object of the association is to consider questions relating to the standardization and policies related to University work. Professor Hodder will represent Kansas University in the discussions. The Alpha Chi Sigma will give a smoker tonight at the chapter house, 500 N. H., to the chemistry faculty and students specializing in chemistry. Reception at Topeka. This afternoon the State Board of Administration gave a reception at Popeka for the heads of the different state schools and their wives. All teachers of the association and their friends were invited. Gov. and Mrs. George H. Hodges, Chancellor and Mrs. Frank Strong, the members of the state board, and the heads of the other state schools were in the receiving line. Mrs. George Hodges will give a luncheon for the ladies in the receiving line this evening. The Home Economics club met in Fraser hall at 4:30 yesterday. Naomi Light read an original story setting a story about the life of one of home economics, games were played, and refreshments served. The Chi Omega sorority entertained the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity last night from 7:00 until 8:00 o'clock. The Linn County Club will hold its first meeting of the year at the home of Prof. A. L. Corbin at 1108 Ohio street on Saturday evening, Nov. 5; students of all interest will come before this meeting, and all students from Linn county are urged to attend. Claude Conkey, president. The Beta Theta Pi fraternity will give a party at the chapter house Friday, Nov. 14. Read your own KANSAN. Miss Bess Bozell, who is teaching Latin and English in the Ness City high school, is visiting at the Alpha Delta Pi house. SOME RACE, THIS J.HAWK WASHBURN MINN SHIFT OLD STYLE OF PLAY MALOY RECEPTION-BANQUET TO STATE TEACHERS Chancellor Strong, Alumni, Professors, and Board Members Give Talks to 250 Guests About two hundred and fifty alumni and former students of the University attended the K. U. reunion held in connection with the session of the State Teachers' Association at Topeka yesterday. A general reception was given in the church parliors of the First Baptist church at 5 o'clock. The annual banquet Chancellor Strong acted as toastmaster at the banquet. Ed. T. Hackney president of the Board of Administration; T. W. Butcher, president of the State Normal School at Emporia; Mora Cora G. Lewis of the State Board; J. O. Hall, superintendent of schools at Hutchinson; Prof. Van den Dries, D.C. Crossley, Eugene Ries, and Dean Louw Templein of the Lennard University; L. W. Mayberry, superintendent of schools at Witcha, and Miss Lena Douthart of the Kansas City high school responded to toasts. SOMMERS AND LAIRD OUT FOR THE ATHLETIC BOARD The election will be held next Tuesday night at the meeting of the Men's Student Council. Petitions of the candidates must be handed to President Dodd by Monday night and signed by twenty-five holders of Student Enterprise tickets and accompanied by fifty cents. Herbert Sommers, the contestant for athletic member is a "K" man in baseball and is now playing on the ice at the Collegiate ice hockey law. Landon Laird is a sophomore in the College. At present he is sport editor of the Daily Kansan. According to an announcement in Topeka papers Prof. Merle Thorpe of the department of journalism has been appointed director of the new information bureau of the state, which will be responsible for the industrial新闻学院 department at K. C. A. C. will assist in organizing the bureau, and other members of a general board will be named from the other schools This name will be used with Proses Thorpe's duties as head of the department of journalism. Nine members of the sophomore class were initiated into the Black Helmet society at the Sigma Nu house last night. They are Joe Gatskiell, Ralph Barry, Jack Kenny, Mark Egan, Egan Nelson, "Pinkey" Bigelow, Harlan Russell, John Blair, and Ward Lockwood. Read your own KANSAN. Heads Informaion Bureau Two candidates for the vacancies on the Athletic Board have announced their candidacy. Herbert Sommers is the aspirant for the athletic member of the board to fill the place of Harry Burnham who was drowned last year, and James Hardt will fill the non-athletic member to fill the vacancy for the audrey Purcell who failed to return to the University this fall. NINE SOPHOMORES ARE NOW BLACK HELMETS ENGINEERS READY FOR BEST TRIP EVEI Seniors, Underclassmen, and Profes sors Will Board Train Nov. 17— To See Missouri's Defeat To See Missouri's Defeat Railroad and hotel accommodations have been obtained for the engineers' inspection trip next week. The heads of the various departments of the School of Engineering have also corresponded with all of the local industrial workers in the cities to be visited for aid in the inspection. Practically all of the seniors in the three divisions of the engineering school, as well as a number of underclassmen will make the trip to Bahrain. H.A. River and Dean P. F. Walker, and other faculty men will go. The party will start from Lawrence Monday, November 17, and will at once go to Keokuk, Ia., the next day for an inspection of the big dam which is located there. From Keokuk, the water will be Louis, where the large electrical distribution plant for the Keokuk dam will be first inspected. For the civil engineers the water works and the bridges will be the object of inspection for the机械ical factories offer a large field for operations. The expedition will end up at Columbia, where all of the engineers will be slightly interested in the Missouri-Kansas football game. The regular meeting of the local branch of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers was held last evening at the home of Prof. F. H. Sibley at 1607 Tennessee street, Memphis, where he hung his report a report was given by Beauchamp on the Cedar Rapids hydro-electric plant in Canada, and magazine reports were given by Cunnick, Berwick, and Hagenbusch. The next evening at seven oclock at 1301 Ohio. Discuss Power Plant Prof. E. F. Stimpson, deputy state sealer of weights and measures made an inspection trip to Lecompton Nov. 5 in answer to a complaint concerning trouble with the weights of produce at that place. A test of all the wagon scales there showed three out of four scales in need of repairs and one of them had to be condemned. Finde Seales at Fault Math Club to Meet The Mathematics Club will meet in the Administration building at four-thirty Monday. Minnie Dinge will discuss "The Development of mathematics in China" and Mr. Wood will talk on, "Magic Squares." The Sphinx held their second meeting of the year last night at the Phi Psi house. The meeting was well attended and arrangements were made to furnish the entertainments before the showhouse, the next meeting will be held at the Phi Gamma Delta house on next Wednesday. Register Geo. O. Foster will be the attraction at the men's meeting Sunday afternoon. His subject will be "To Men." The "YG Club will sing. FRESHMAN ACCUSED OF WEARING R-HEL MONOCLE Sh—They have been discovered! The other half of a pair of "Specks," commonly knows as the monocle, has made its way into the ranks of the students. Many pairs of black shoe strings have been seen, loosely hanging around the collar of a man or on the fair neck of a maiden, but 'pour' with a cloth says he actually a freshman using one in classes —please put two dots over the a and pronounce accordingly, don't you know. And indeed, 'tis too great a thing to let go by without mentioning. ANNOUNCES ARTISTS FOR '14 JAYHAWKER Maloy, Callen, Miss Cook and Miss Arnett Will Aid Lockwood With Drawings Ward Lockwood, art editor of the 1913 Jaiyhawker, announced his staff this afternoon. They are Henry Cook, and Wilma Arnett. each member of the staff has had considerable experience. Maloy's cartoons are familiar to every Daily Kansan reader. Callen comes from Manhattan, where he was a member of the art staff of the K. S. A. C. annual. Miss Cook and Miss Arnett are students in the School of Fine Arts and have had much experience in design work. this staff will do most of the work but Editor Lockwood expects help from other students. "Any contributions of cartoons, or appropriate annual material will be gladly received," said Lockwood. "We are not obliged to hesitate to hand in their work." "We are planning this year to make the art department different from that of previous annuals. We want all the pictures to harmonize instead of having several different ones, and like the black book. We will attempt to make the pictures conservative and will eliminate anything flashy." K. U. DEBATING SOCIETY ENDORSES CURRENCY BILL At the K. U. Debating Society last night Donald Joseph and Charles Meissner convinced the judges that the Glass-Owen's currency bill should be passed by the committee of Concern those on the negative were Walter Doggett and A. F. Wallack. Morton McKine and Grumpe were elected to membership. A discussion of the subjects for the intercollegiate debate was held at half of the members intended to try out for the teams on December 3. VICTOR LARSEN SINGS ON VAUDEVILLE CIRCUTI Victor Larsen, 'a student at the University last year, is now in vaudeville travelling with the "American Harmony Quartet," on the Levine Broadway where he has weeks he has been in the principal cities of Texas and New Mexico. This week he is in San Francisco and will change to the Sullivan-Conidine circuit from that point. Larsen has been doing quite a bit of chauquaqua work in this part of the country with the Victor quartet. The other members are students in the University. M. U.-K. U. GAME CONTRACT TO BE SIGNED NEXT MONDAY The contract for the Missouri-Kansas game will probably be signed next Monday. The delay until this late in the season has been caused by the uncertainty as to the place where the game will be played. If the game will go to Columbia and the Missouri management has requested Manager W. O. Hamilton to send the contract for the game next Monday. The following guests will be entertained by the Allemania club at dinner tomorrow evening: Mr. Lawrence Hazzard, "12, Miss Anna Manley," "11, Miss May Rapp of Baker, and Miss Ruth Kelly, Miss Hazel Klingamann, Mr. Dean Rogers, and Mr. Ed. Mennifer of Washburn. The Weather Temperatures: Fair tonight and Saturday and cool winds tonight. As far as the weather man is concerned tomorrow will be an ideal day for the Washburn game. The warm weather of yesterday and today will be helped some by the cool winds tonight and tomorrow. 9 p. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 7 a. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 2 p. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 WASHBURN EXPECTS VICTORY TOMORROW Trailbound of Rooters Believes Licking is Due Jayhawk—Washburn Looks Good But So Does Kevin K. U. HAS A HOSPITAL LIST Strothers, Greenlees, James, Stuewe, and Detwiler Are on Substitute List—Watch Kansas Spirit Concerning The Game Time----3:30 p. m., Saturday. Place----M.Cook field. Captains - Washburn, R o g ers larkle; Kansas, Wesley, left larkle. Officials—Referee, J. C. Grover, K. C. A. C.; umpire, Mcrearey, Okahama City; head linesman, Dr. James Reilly, K. C. A. C. Former Scarra Coaches—Washburn, "Crip" Cray; Kansas, Arthur St. Leger Mosse, Leonard Frank. Former Scores. 1891—Kansas 32, Washburn 10. 1892—Kansas 36, Washburn 0. 1899—Kansas 35, Washburn 0. 1900—Kansas 0, Washburn 24. 1901—Kansas 0, Washburn 0. 1902—Kansas 34, Washburn 0. 1903—Kansas 0, Washburn 5. 1904—Kansas 5, Washburn 0. 1905—Kansas 21, Washburn 0. 1906—Kansas 0, Washburn 0. 1907—Kansas 5, Washburn 12. 1908—Kansas 23, Washburn 0. 1909—Kansas 17, Washburn 0. 1910—Kansas 23, Washburn 0. 1911—Kansas 19, Washburn 6. 1912—Kansas 0, Washburn 10. Five hundred strong the Washburn Ichabods invade Lawrence tomorrow, prepared to clean up the Kansas Jayhawkers and confident of accomplish the task. Led by "Crip" Gray, the coach, and Rogers, their big captain, the team arrives tomorrow morning. The Ichabads look better than they did a year ago today; the Jayhawkers do too. Gray has a good bunch, strong on the defense and speedy when marching toward the goal. Bearg and Hardy need no mention of their work in the back as Coach Moser studies them too well. Trobert at end is as fast a man as there is on a state football eleven and has the additional quality of being able to punt consistently, fifty-five yards at a crack. Rogers, their captain, is a power in the line. Coach Moser today received a letter from a Kansas enthusiast tipping him up on a play. Ream the quarter, whom Gray has carefully hid from the prying eyes of the Kansas scouts. Ream is a “wonder” says the informant. The Jayhawkers, on the other hand, go into tomorrow's battle in none too good shape. The close follower of Kansas football receives a start when he looks over the names of Mosee's substitutes—Strothers, Greenlee, James, Stuewe, Detwiler, all Varsity players who are kept out of the game through injury or sickness. The Crimson and the Blue will not show a Saturday the fit but they buy a slot which represented Kansas in the Drake game, but it will show a game eleven full of fight, which, although handicapped in many ways will scrap from whistle to whistle, something the team did not do in the Conregreational game last year. Kansas will win. The team should win. The score may be low, the rooters may be in doubt to the last minute, but the Jayhawkers will come on top. The team as it played two weeks ago would have beaten the Chathabwon than them to the level, but to them eleven will send Gray back to Topeka with a full certificate of defeat, and that's all we want. The Line-up The Line-up Trobert B. R. D. Whitcomb R. T. R. Whitcomb R. G. Barrett C. Wolfe L. G. Rogers C. L. T. Billings L. E. Ream J. Berry R. H. Hardy L. H. Forbes F. Kane Burton Hammond Keeling Mulloy Weildlein, c. Ruber Wilson Marshall Sommers Tudor Substitutes: Washburn: Beegs. Jenney, Smith, Deaver, Elbe, McNeish, Beales, Champny, Myers; Kansas: Strothers, Greenlees, Detwiler, Stueve, James, Russell, Parker, Calkins, Capps. E. R. Tibbets, '11, visited the University this week. Since he graduated he has been doing paving and contract work in Iowa and southern Kansas. He is now doing work in Lawrence and Topeka. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN EDITORIAL STAFF The official student paper of the University of Kansas. HERRBERT FANN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Editor-in-Chief HOBBY ALEXEY . . . . . RUSINESS STAFF BROWN AWASA Advertising Manager HAWK JAYES General Manager JAY BUNNE Advertising REPORTORIAL STAFF REPORTORIAL STATEMENT LOYD BANKS TENNIS DUCK BILLY BROOKS DR. MARCEWICK AMD SAMSEN AMD SAMSEN Retained as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the postoffice at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1870. University of Kansas, from the press of the University Subscription price $2.50 per year; in advance; one term, $1.50 postoffice at Lawrence, Kansas, unless Published in the afternoon five times a week by students of the department of journalism. Lawrence. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, Lawrence. The Daily Kannon aims to picture the undergraduate life of the University of Kanagas; to go further horizons; to play no accessories; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courteous; to be brave; to be student; in all, to press to the best of its ability. The students of the University. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1913 Philosophic.—The difference between truth and gossip is that one is true and the other merely true to life.—Fuck. WE'RE FROM THE HOME OF THE TIGER If the junior class places on the campus a real, material class memorial in the form of a clock or chimes, it will be a class unlike any other recent class—a class which acted. Other classes have dreamed beautiful dreams, dreams of rustic walls, memorial pillars, and triumphal entrances, but have never awakened long enough to open a pocketbook or write a check. enough to open a poetic window. The juniors have even gone so far as to appoint committees to look into the matter. One especially energetic committee had plans drawn and a picture made of a pillar as it would look when completed. It is still a paper pillar. The junior class is showing the right spirit. Many believe that it means business, but we—well, when we hear chimes on Mount Oread we will be convinced that class memorials are not myths. The Jayhawker annual this year will certainly be a novelty. It will be a radical departure from books of former years. The editor shows remarkable originality in his announcements that this year's book will be the best ever. SPANK THE ICHABODS You have our best wishes, Washburn, and our respect, and our sympathy. Without wishing to appear revenge- ful, we want to say right here that tomorrow we aveague your victory over us last year. Nor do we want to seem over-confident; over-confidence lost a game for us last week. This is a fair warning; look out for the Jayhawks tomorrow. We tasted bitter defeat at your hands last year, and we are not selfish. To prove our generosity we will let you taste defeat tomorrow. "Juniors will give smokers" hisses a sibilent head line Sh! Sh! "Hypocrisy is the homage which vice pays to virtue" —La Rochefoucauld TO WRITE WELL For a man to write well, there are required three necessities: To read the best authors, observe the best speakers, and much exercise of his own style. In style, to consider what ought to be written, and after what manner. He must first think and exegote his matter, then choose his words and examine the weight of either. Then take care in placing and ranking both matter and words, that the composition be comely, and to do this with diligence, and often. No matter how slow the style be at first, so it be labored and accurate; seek the best, and be not glad of the forward concents or first words that offer themselves to us, but judge of what we invent, and order what we approve.—Ben Johnson THE KIND WE WANT In spite of all this proverb can I think *twill* be agreed It is a friend in funds we want, And not a friend in need. —New York Sun. A man can keep the secret of another better than his own; a woman, on the contrary, keeps her own better than that of another.—La Bruyere. To select well among old things is almost equal to inventing new ones—Trublet. Pa heard him give the college yell for joy he could not speak, he murmured, "Mother, listen To our Willie talkle Greek." S. C. Student. Not one bull-dog yet could eat any other bull-dog's meat; If you have a good-sized bone, let the other dog alone. —Anonymous. The man who likes to hear himself talk always has a large audience.—Life. THE ORDINARY LOT To know a little sweetness, A little woe, A little love and labor, Then to go; Remember for a minute, Soon forget— This is the ordinary Mortal's lot. Lucile Byerly Miller. COMMUNICATIONS Communications to the Daily Kansan must be signed as an evidence of good faith, though not necessarily for publication. The column is open to all Daily Kansan readers). among the Daily Kansas: It is hard to account for cheating by students. It seems incredible that such an evil could exist among a picked class of young men and women, with the advantages of good surroundings, education and training. Heredity or early environment might explain some cases, but the character of the people excludes this explanation for the situation as a whole. It is hard to understand why young people who have no definite moral sense, and are perfectly upright in their relations with all other people should deliberately be dishonorable in this respect. It seems to me that it is because they do not allow themselves to face the question squarely. It is not so much a question of moral as of intellectual honesty. They avoid the responsibility of deciding whether it is wrong or not. When a student is working hard for a grade I, and in an examination forgets some little point that he could easily have known if he had just thought to look it up, or had had a little more time; if he can get that answer and so gain his grade simply by glancing at his neighbor's paper, it will need years of training and self-direction to have him feel very strongly that such a look would be morally wrong. From such trivial occasions as this the habit of cheating is formed. Perhaps the system is somewhat at fault which makes his standing as a student depend on such trivial points. F. H. The Sequel. First bachelor maid—"I'd rather have a marriage certificate than a college diploma, for it is so much easier to get." Second bachelor maid—"True; but think of the work after you get it!" —Judge. UNIVERSITY PRIMER Monosyllabic Expositions For Primitive Minds NUM-BER TWO "Most of the stu-dents at the U-nli-si-vet-of Kansas are a-way from home, are they not, Jo-seph?" "Yes, Su-sie, the vast ma-jor-i-ty are on-ly tem-po-ry resi-les in Law-rence." they must be-come ve-ry lone-some, then, for home and me-thet." "Yes, they would, were it not for those pe-cu-il-ari insti-tuitions of col-le-ges, so-ci-e-ties or-gan-called for the pre-vention of home-sick-ness. These are called sor-or-i-ties when the mem-berm-bship is fem-i-nile, but the mascu-line or-gan-i-za-tions are known as fra-ter-nil-ties." "Do all stu-dents be-long to fra-ter-ni-ties or nor-or-i- ties, se-oph?" "Oh, no; some would not, and oth-ers could not. These are called barb-i-r-ans ias dist-disguised from Greeks or frats. They have oth-er means to com-bat lon-lil-nes, of which the most com-mon is a room-mate." "Room-mates are de-sir-a-ble, then?" Room-makers are the per-son. As a class, room-mates have their riai-son d'etre: they halve the high cost of liv-ing" the high cost of inhom- *Where do the stu-dents come from, Jo-seph?* "Where do the stu-dents come?" "Most-ly from with in-the-hide of Kan-san. The student pop-u-lation may in-the-hide in-to four class-as to res-ter the man; those who come from the lar-rer of Kan-san, those from out in the sticks, those who live, in Kan-san Ci-ty, and those who hail from oth-er parts of the u-ni-verse." "What draws this cosmo-pol-i-tan ag-gre-ga-tion to law-research?" "The de-sire for an ed-u-ea-tion, Su-sie, and for com-ani-on.ship. Man is a gre-gar-ires ani-ai.mal. He likes to roam a-bout com-par-ing notes with oth-rest lessyouths. Through this as-so-ci-a-tion with var-i-iouskinds of peo-ple the sim-ple be·come wise, and the wise be-beome or-wer-wise." More to the Dollar.—George Adc, at the recent Lamb's gambol in New York, objected to the extravagance of the modern wife. "It is true that the married men of today," he ended, "have better halves, but bachelors have better quarters." —The Mirror. Met His Match.—Railroad Attorney—"You are sure it was our Flier that killed your mule? What makes you so positive?" Going Kind. *positive?* Rastus—"He dan licked ebry other train on de road." —Puck. **Xetor.** "What is it that’s always going from editor to editor?" The kind that’s always going from editor to editor." —Woman's Home Companion. lookskimmed- "No one Editor-" "Then where did you get that black eye?" -Satire. Editor—"Have you submitted this poem anywhere else?" AT THE LAWRENCE CHURCHES Jokesmith—"No sir." Trinity Church (Episcopal) — Vermont and Berkeley. The Rev. Evan Alexander Edward, M. A. rector. 7:30 a.m. The Holy Communion. Service over by 8; 10 a.m., Sunday School Model Kindergarten from 10-12 in charge of experienced teacher. Student classes forming in upper school. Students invited at present to attend Skilton's lectures on Faith and Worship. 11 a.m., Morning prayer and sermon; 5 p.m., evening prayer and sermon. The full choir at both services. All welcome. Unitarian Church, Vermont and Hancock. Service 10:30 a.m., sermon, "The Church and the Social Question"; Sunday school 11:45 a.m. A class of University students has been formed to study Unitarian thought, under the direction of the minister. First meeting this Sunday. Come and learn what we are doing. Young People's Meeting 6:45 p.m. Leader Dr. A.W. Clark, subject, "Justice and the Law." You Can Easily Answer The Clothes-Question for it requires but a brief study of our authentic styles and handsome woolens to learn that our tailored-to-order clothes measure up to every requirement. Have S. G. CLARKE Eldridge Hotel Building 707 MASS. STREET send us a complete description of your figure and we'll guarantee a character of fit, style and service-excellence not procurable elsewhere for anything near the price. Do it today. E. V. Price Co. Largest tailors in the world of GOOD made-to-order clothes Price Building Chicago, U. S. A. Road News Notice Royal News Students O. P. Leonard's *Pantatorium* is or the job again this year. Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 501, Home 180 We Give Club Rates 841 Mass. St. Upstairs. Particular Cleaning and Disinfecting Pressing Lawrence Pantatorium 2 W. Warren Both Phones 506 FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantee each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding Trade-Mark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. A. C. BUILDING DENGE TRADE SPALDING MARK A.D. 1834 A. G. SPALDING Kansas City, Mo. Send for our Catalogue. A "Square Deal" Send for our Catalogue. K. U. PANTATORIUM AND DYE WORKS Student Rates: See Our Solicitors Cleaning and Ladies's Work a Specialty. JACK FULLERTON 1400 Louisiana Phones: Bell, 1400; Home, 140 SAM S. SHUBERT Matinice Wednesday and Saturday Lillian Russel IN Who's More Tailor? Tragic Drama Whoin't Home Tailor? W. A. Guenther Phones 226 721 Liesn Give Us a Trial Brunswick Bowling Alley Four Regulation Allies with loop-the-loop return. 714 Mass. When calling for a good brand of 5c CIGARS SMOKE Robert Hudson, Pierson's Hand Made At all first class dealers We have some good values in Pennants Pictures & Posters to close out 8. J. W. Keeler 939 MASS. ROYAL ROCHESTER Chafing dishes, casseroles, coffee machine and percolators. The finest line of metal and wood serving trays in the city. KENNEDY & ERNST 820 MASS. ST. PHONES 341 SAVE THE PIECES We have added Lens Grinding Machinery to our Optical department. Any Lens Duplicated Glasses Fitted. HESTER Jeweler and Optician Lawrence, Kansas. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. W. H. Quenbak, busz. Pres.; E. S. Weatherby, Supt. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE PROPS. Fresh Oysters, Regular Meals, Short Orders, Confectionery, Cigars, Etc. 715 Massachusetts Street McColloch's Drug Store Lowney's Chocolates Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 Vermont Phones 139 Dancing Mrs. J. L. Newhouse's Dancing School Saturday Saturday morning at 9 o'clock, Ecke's Hall. Private lessons by appointment. Bell 938 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M'COONNELL, Physydan and Brian C. M'COONNELL, University, Induction, 1346 Tenn. Hall, Horsham, Hornsby. B. FROCK, Optometrist and Specialist in Scholarly Research. Office 862 Mass. phone 608. www.mass-physiology.com phone 608 HARRY REDING. M. D Eye, ear, nose Bleach. Phone 813, Home 512. Blaise. Phone 813, Home 512. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. G. A. HAMMAN M. D. E. Eye, ear, and Satisfaction Guaranteed Dick Building. J. W. O'BRYON. Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D., D. O. 833 Massachusetts Street. Both phones, office and residence. DR. H. J. CHAMPSHER, Office Squires' RH. L. WILSON, DR. BURT R. WHITE Office, DATEpateh. Phone, fax, home 257. Office, 745 Mass. St. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12 F. A. M. Bldg. Residence 1130 Tenn. Phone 211. DR. H. L. CHAMBERLS, Office over Squires Studio. Both phones. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Dissess of Bute Rt. Bute Rt., St. Louis, Residence, 1201 S. T. Gillipie, M. D. Oller, corner Vermont 8. T. Gillipie, Residence, 728 Indiana Phones 500 N. J. Blair, Physician and Surgeon. Office 2000-11-30 to 11-34; 2000-11-35 to 11-38; 4000-9 to 4000-9, 11-30 to 11-34, m. and 11- 37 to 11-38. E-mail: blair@hhs.edu CLASSIFIED Barbers Frank liffa's Barber Shop, 1025 Mass. Two good barkers. Satisfaction assured. J. C. Honk's Barber Shop, 913 Mass. Cheryl's Barber Shop, 613 chairs; pares have to walk. Razors honed. Plumbers Phone Kenedy Plumbing Co. for, gas boats 608, Mada lamps: 197, Mass boats 608. Ladies Tailors Mrs. Ellison Dressmaking and Ladies Miss Foley Phones 2411, over Johnson and O&R. Ladies Taloring and Dressmaking. Gowns for all occasions. All work guaranteed. Mrs. T. B. Dally, 914 Mass. Santuary cleaning establishment in connection. Phone Lawrence Sewing School. Ledes' tailoring and dressmaking. Sewing school 814 Mass. Phones 550. Miss Powers: Miss C. McClarney. Hair Dressers Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-groats, Martello hair salon, hair styling call Boll Hairding, Home : S1. The Select Hair Dress Shop, 927 Mass St. Sporting Goods D & M sporting goods and athletic supplies. Kennedy & Ernst, $26 Mass. St. Phones Hiwatha Cafe for regular meals, lunch and dinner when down town. Open after show. Bring your shoes to Fornex, for guaranteed shop repairing. Fornex, 1017 Mass Price reasonable, work the best. Lot in Burton's collection. Olbern & Co., 316 Mass. 84. S. C. Porter. Queen City College. System and sewing Dressmaking in connection with school. Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 Ky. Bell 1764. One trial means no risk, small investment, then payment on a homicide smoke T-W. Williamson's homicide smoked Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler, Gold and Jewelry. Belfot Photo 17 Masse. I have a nice line of plain china for painting and I also have the white porcelain at Northeast Norfolk studio 733 Mass. St. up-close. *** For rent. A nice furnished room, 2 closets, and modern in every respect. 1317 Ohio Eldridge House Stable W. E. MOAK, Prop. Taxicabs, Hacks, Livery Baggage Haul Both Phones 148 See the New Parker Self-Filling Fountain Pen Office Supplies, Typewriters F. I. CARTER 1025 Mass. Bell phone 1051 Come on Down to JIM'S Tonight 1101 Mass. St. PROTSCH The College Tailor Lawrence Transfer Co. Trunk Hauling Phone 15 It isn't too early to see a great variety of suggestions for holiday presents at Wolf's Book Store... 40-2 Adv. Reynolds Brothers will be open after the dance.—Adv. 40-1 When you're on the hill drop in at the new Oread Tea Room, 1241 Oread.—Adv. Our Silk Guarantee We sell only the best of Silks, and will at all times make good any reasonable claim when it is the fault of the silk. We are now showing everything that Dame Fashion says is to be good the coming season. WEAVER'S FISCHER'S SHOES ARE GOOD SHOES Shoes that "Make Good" You young men are strong for style in your shoes; got to have the smart, lively ideas. You may just as well have more for your money than style alone; the handsomest pitcher in the league isn't always the one who "fans" the most batters. You want style that stays stylish; that keeps its smartness as long as you pay for. You want shoes that "make good." Style must have something back of it if it is to stay. The Fischer $5.00 special English walking Shoes in Tan or Black will fill the bill. See them in our window Otto Fischer This is not a "Just Out" Store that they can't find It is very seldom any one asks for anything in the grocery line here. Our stocks—always fresh and pure—include all the widely advertised goods, as well as the staple groceries you have daily use for. When you phone your orders you may depend upon their being filled and delivered to you promptly, and just as you have directed. And Prices Are Invariably Lowest 20 lb, Cane Sugar $1 23 lb. Beet Sugar $1 Brick Cheese Ripe Tomatoes New Figs and Dates Stuffed and Plain. Cauliflower Pimento Cheese Fresh Michigan Cider Boiled Cider Fresh Oysters TOM'S MUSEUM OF CINEMAS ON VIEW AT DUNMIRE'S PHONES 58 F L You all know Community Silver--the Plate de Luxe--with its beautiful designs and wonderful wearing quality. SOL MARKS OR a WEEK we will give to every purchaser of Community Silver this beautiful picture -a Coles Phillips "Fade-away" girl in colors. 817 Massachusetts Street BERT WADHAMS The College Inn Barber FOR TAXI PHONES 12 The art exhibit in the Administration building closed today and the pictures were packed up and sent to the University of Missouri where they will be placed on exhibition Monday. Attendance Poor—Another Planned To Open Soon. The department hardly feels paid for the trouble and expense involved in bringing the etchings here as only a small number of students took advantage of this opportunity to see what would cost a good price to see at any other place. ART EXHIBIT IS GONE FeaturingMilk Chocolates "SWEDE" The ministers of the city churches will have special messages for all University students next Sunday.—Adv. 38-3 Professor Griffith is making arrangements for a display by the American Arts' Club. The pictures exhibited by this club are some thirty in number and are all prize works of art that represents the prize work of art for a given year. The date will be announced later. When you're on the hill drop in at the new Oread Tea Room, 1241 Oread.—Adv. Next Sunday is University Church Day. Special services in all the Lawrence churches.-Adv. 38-3 Books, booklets, letters, wall mottos, and many other articles for presents at Wolf's Book Store... 40-2 Adv. Phones 540 Washburn vs. K. U. Saturday. Take lunch at the Oread Tea Room Monday, 1241 Oread.—Adv. LOST-Kappa Alpha Theta pin; plain gold. between journalism building and 1116 Idhiana or music building. Eleanor Kearn tail phone 295. 40-1* That chile at Reynolds Bros., can't be beat.—Adv. 40-1 Washburn vs. K. U. Saturday. K NOW U K U ENGINEERS The University Book Store 803 Mass. St. Carries a full line of drafting instruments and guarantees to save you on the purchase price. Alteneder Sets - - $27.00 Gem Union - - - 17.00 Richter No. 847HS with self cleaning pen at lowest price guaranteed price guaranteed. University Book Store 803 Mass. St. Sale of Real French Hair Switches Friday and Saturday Last two days An Expert Hair Dresser will dress your Hair Free Every Shade of Hair is Represented, in Beautiful wavy Qualities .95 1.95 2.95 26 in. 28 " 30 " These in Single, double or three strand. $6.00 Switches at $3.95 8.00 “ ” 4.95 10.00 “ ” 5.95 Many New Arrivals in Coats Serviceable Wool Dresses Have come to our Suit room this week. Rough Boucles, Chinchillas and Persiana Cloths in Brown, Navy Gray and Black. Bui With contrasting Collars and Trimmings of Bulgarian Colors or Plaids. Priced at $6.50. Other dresses at 8, 10 and 12 dollars. Innes, Bulline & Hackman THE FLOWER SHOP Cut Flowers Of Quality 8251-2MASS. PHONES 621 For Thanksgiving CLOTHES Let's have your order now P. H. KUHL 3 East Warren The WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Corner Mass. and Quincy Sts. Issues its own Letters of Credit and Travelers Checks. The only way to carry your money in safety. Banking of all kinds solicited. Surplus $100,000 PHONE 100 FOR TAXICABS PEERLESS GARAGE, Phone 100. Special for Saturday— Imported Austrian Velour Hats, Newest Shapes $3.50 Quality for - - - - - - $2.75 $4.50 Quality for - - - - - - $3.75 $5.00 Quality for - - - - - - $4.25 J. HOUSE & SON 729 MASS. ST. A Little Farther Up the Street----A Little Less to Pay. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WHY go down the hill when you can get everything to eat at THE OREAD TEA ROOM MRS. L. S. HAYES 1241 OREAD—NEXT DOOR TO PHI PHI HOUSE OPEN MONDAY 11:30 A. M. Starting Monday noon with home cooking and good service. We want you to feel at home with us. Entire equipment is New and Sanitary. Chef from Kansas City. Cafeteria, Soda Fountain, Short orders, Hot and Cold drinks, Candy and Cigars. SEN WINSTYLE WATCH OPEN 7:00 A.M.to 11:00 P.M. The Gruen "Wristlet" Watch The most attractive stylish as well as the most convenient and practical way for a toman to wear a timepiece. Every woman admires its charming appearance on the arm—every woman longs for one. For every occasion the Gruen "Wristlet" watch is the gift of gifts for daughter, wife, sweetheart. Come in and see it. Prices: $17.50 to $100 Other makes: $2.50 to $30.00. Gustation The College Jeweler Gustafson The College Jeweler When you're on the hill drop in at the new Oread Tea Room, 1241 Oread.—Adv. For light lunches try Reynolds Bros., it's a good place—Adam. 40-11 Try a cup of coffee and a wand at Reynolds Bros.—Adw. 40-1 ice cream for parties and church socials at Reynolds Bros.-Adv. FASHION OFFICE PRIVATE Inside information led us to favor blues and grays, so you'll find an unusual variety of these colors in our fall assortment. Prices $12 to $35 But for you men who appreciate bold colors, patterns and weaves, we have a feast. Prices $10 to $25. Fall and winter overcoats $10 to $35. New Velour Hats, Austrian and Stetson make $3.50 and $5.00 Ober's THE CHEF OF OUTLIER Our orange ice is certainly fine. Call Reynolds Bros., for prompt service.—Adv. 40-1 You are always welcome after the dance at Reynolds Bros.-Adav. 40-10 ARM BANDS CANES PENNANTS MEGAPHONES AT GRIGGS 827 Mass. "The Store of Quality" MEDIGS MAY PLAY KANSAS CITY VETS If Plans Develop a Bloody Battle Will Take Place on McCook Field Nov. 22. The K. U. Monies will pay the Kansas City Vets a game of football on McCook field. Saturday afternoon, after school, thefactory armaments can be made. Negotiations will be opened at once, provided the local authorities will allow the game to be played on McCook field. "The Vets have no game scheduled for that day," said Coleman, fullback today. "I am sure the team will accept the challenge. The date selected for the fracas is the same as the Kansas-Missouri game. "If the Doctors' plans are carried out, bulletins of the progress of the big game at Columbia will be announced on McCook field during the The Medics' challenge last night attracted considerable attention and the engineers are considering the organization of a team to meet the "We will play any team," Coleman said. "I think we can beat the Kansas City Vets and there seems to be heckle around. I've been giving the game here November 22." A practice of the newly organized squad will be held at 4:30 p.m. clock this afternoon, and the team will have training department, will take charge of the team. Coffee..Don't blame the coffee if it's bad. Perhaps it's the water. Make it of distilled water, McNish, Phone 198...Adv. 39-2 Woodward's "Round Corner" soda fountain. Best drinks ever put out. Hot and cold dainties.-Adv. 39-3 The Oreat Tea Room opens mon day 11:30 a. m. at 1241 Adrov—Adv AMUSEMENTS Lew Fields—he of the ponderous smile, mixed metaphor and feet that simply refuse to remain quiet—will greet his admirers at the Shubert theater for one week commencing Nov. 9th, in a new laughing vehicle, "All Aboard." The German comedian and his organization of merry makers come direct from an all-summer run at the Lew Fields Roof Garden and Lew Fields Theater, New York, and a six week's engagement at the American Music Hall in Chicago.—Adv. Shubert Theater First Baptist church—101 Ky. O. C. Brown, pastor; University students are urged to be in the special services at 10:30 a. m. and 7:45 p. m.; S. S. 11:45; C. E. 6:45 pastor's theme, "The Habit of Service." Special music by the chorus choir—Adv. LOST-Swedish grammar. Leave at Kansan office. Kalln. 40-7 The Oread Tea Room opens Monday 11:30 a. m. at 1241 Advil—Adv Washburn vs. K. U. Saturday. Maple caramels with or without nuts dipped at Wiedemann's—Adv. Washburn vs. K. U. Saturday. Next Sunday is University Church Day. Special services in all the Lawrence churches.-Adv. 38-3 Washburn vs. K. U. Saturday. The ministers of the city churches will have special messages for all University students next Sunday.— adv. 38-3 Friday and Saturday will be fruit salad days at Wiedemann's—Adv Washburn vs. K. U. Saturday. Try the lunch counter in the basement of Fraser hall—Adv. 38-56 Washburn vs. K. U. Saturday. Next Sunday is University Church Day. Special services in all the Lawrence churches.-Adv. 38-3 The whole University in church next Sunday...Adv. 38-3 Washburn vs. K. U. Saturday. Caramel time at Wiedemann's___ Adv. ___ Washburn vs. K. U. Saturday. Next Sunday is University Church Day. Special services in all the Lawrence churches.-Adv. 38-3 Washburn vs. K. U. Saturday. The whole University in church next Sunday—Adv. 38-3 Take lunch at the Adv. room Monday at 10:41 Oread—Adv. You are going to church Of course you are going to church next Sunday. Every one is— 38-3 The Oread Tea Room opens Monday 11:30 a. m. at 1241 Iadre -Adv. Of course you are going to church next Sunday. Every one is... 38.3 The whole University in church next Sunday...-Adv. 38-3 Washburn vs. K. U. Saturday. The whole University in church next Sunday..-Adv. 38-3 Of course you are going to church next Sunday. Every one is—Adv. Both men and women are being served in Fraser hall lunch room— Adv. 38-5c Take lunch at the Oread Tea Room Monday, 1241 Iored—Adv. First. Methodist. Episcopal—All University day, Dr. Wolf speaks in the morning at 10:30. Mrs. Mary Currals of 610, national college speaks at 7:40; great young people's meeting at 6:45; special music in both services; Miss Hughes of Topeka plays in the evening—Adv. Washburn vs. K. U. Saturday. Washburn vs. K. U. Saturday. It's the Kansas Football Team and Rooter's job to "Dress up" Washburn—and it's our job to "Dress up" all the "Rooters" in— SUITS, OVERCOATS, MACKINAWS, SWEATERS, All the season's newest wearables here for your choosing at prices that are within reason SUITS and OVERCOATS - $10 up Always Glad to Show You— JOHNSON & CARL WHERE YOU BUY YOUR BENJAMIN CLOTHES Ornamental Steins at Half Price CARROLL'S SMITH'S NEWS DEPOT Phone 608 709 Mass The best film made is the Eastman yellow box "Kodak" kind. It gives perfectly graduated pictures. Sold at Woodward's "Round Corner." - Adv. 39-3 the ministers of the city churches will have special messages for all University students next Sunday. Adv. 38-3 Jerry Simpson spent the week in Lincoln. Plain caramels, nut caramels, and dipped caramels at Wiedemann's.—Adv. The ministers of the city churches will have special messages for all University students next Sunday.—Adv. 38-3 Of course you are going to church next Sunday. Every one is—**94-8** **84-8** Send the Daily Kansan home. The Biggest Game of Missouri Valley Season NEBRASKA vs. K. U. McCook Field Saturday, Nov. 15th Mail Applications enclosing money received now. Tickets on sale Monday, 10.00 a.m. at Manager's office, Gymnasium. Student Tickets admit North Bleachers. Special sections for Rooters and University Girls. General admission North Bleachers and Grand Stand, $1.00. Box Seats, Side Lines, $2.00. Reserved Seats South Bleachers and West Bleachers, $1.50. $1.00 is allowed on Student Tickets in exchange for any reserved seat. Students should reserve seats now. No telephone applications will be considered. Applications should be accompanied by draft, check or P. O. order made payable to W. O. Hamilton. Where tickets are to be sent by mail, 12 cents should be included to pay for registration. Otherwise tickets will be sent at owner's risk. STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI URGES FRATERNITIES TO COMBAT CRITICISM UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, MONDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 10, 1913 NUMBER 41. Dr. Noble Strong Elderkin in Sermon Suggests Changes in Present System MUST AVOID CLANNISHNESS Himself a Greek, Minister Advise Students to Revise Societies to Avoid Further Attacks. Taking "fraternities" for his subject, the Rev. Noble Strong Elderkin reviewed the situation at the University of Kansas at Plymouth Congregational church last night, and suggested that "a little ordinary horse sense" on the part of fraternity men and women would successfully meet the resent hostile criticisms. Dr. Eldekin is a fraternity man, both high school and college, and he spoke sympathetically of real and apparent evils of the system and what should be done to save the situation. "The fraternity is too good a thing for you to throw away," said he. "and you men and women have got to take things in your own hands, or some one will take them out of your hands." You have to younger brother and sisters the joys that there are in this closer fellowship of fraternity." Reviewed Criticisms The speaker reviewed the criticisms made in a recent article in the Graduate Magazine by Mrs. Florence Finch Kelley, which said that there is too much extravance in dress, too much flashiness in fall, too many dances and social functions, and too much money spent in these functions. "Let me presume to make a few suggestions," said Dr. Elderin in conclusion. "When you go home, be a human being, Speak to your old friends. Don't mount a pedestal and expect the town to scam you; they simply can't understand that you are as wonderful as you know you are. "Over at the Yale dinner in Kansas Ctly the other night, Dean Brown, who spoke in Fraser, told us that all the printed advertising matter they put out there didn't accomplish a millionth part of the good that a single consumer did. I did clean life among his fellows. That was Yale's best ad. And it is likewise K. U.'s best ad. Avoid Clannishness "A second thing: Sell your dining room furniture and your dishes. Make your dining rooms over into a library or another loonging room with a great fire-place, eat with the other fellows and at least get the other point of view. Avoid the appearance of clannishness. "Make short appointments at your houses. Say a half hour. Don't run down the other crowd. See that every man sees and is seen by all the societies. Play the whole game like men and women. "A third thing: Agree among yourselves to spend nothing during the rushing season. Not a single penny. Simplify the whole system. Don't even have it in mind. Freshen them to walk. It will help them to get fit for the Adams street approach to all wisdom. Give no receptions, luncheons dinners, stages, theater parties to secure new members. They make it appear that clothes and table manners and so on. Your department are the summa bong. Cut Social Functions "A fourth thing: Cut down the number of functions during the year. Abandon the big staggering spring parties altogether. "A fifth thing: Write home and tell the folks that this year you don't want more than one dress a week, instead of seven. They may drop dead at such a letter. Break the news gradually." "A last thing: Make your fraternity experience a preparation for the larger fraternal life you must, as college men and women, live in the wonderful world toward which you are travelling." Statistics show that at the University of Montana 80 per cent of the fraternity men are working their way through college. 78 per cent of the men engaged in college activities are supporting themselves. There are 132 foreign students enrolled at the University of Illinois this year. Twenty-two nations are represented, China having the distinction of the largest enrollment with fifty-three. CO-ED, 82,HAS A CASE, HE'S BUT 90 The University of Wisconsin has an undergraduate eighty-two years old. Mrs Amy Winship, who is corresponding with Juan Brunze, 90 years old, a wealthy Spaniard living in the Philippines, has just taken up the study and will be teaching. After he was placed high, Senor Brunze completed his high school course and then took up the study of shorthand and stenography. ALL UNIVERSITY TO CHURCH YESTERDAY Students Show Unusual Interest In Special Day Planned by Ministers The presidents of the junior, sophereaster, showed their appreciation of the special services planned by the churches for University Day, by offering flowers and that some of the churches were unable to accommodate the visitors. The Ministerial Alliance of the city started the movement in an effort to lits another red letter Sunday along with Mother's day, Child Labor Sunday and Peace Sunday, as well as Sunday. On this day special services will be planned that will be attractive and instructive to college people. PRESIDENTS ANNOUNCE ANNUAL COMMITTEES Class Officials Name Students to Sell Jayhawker Tickets on Campus The presidents of the junior, sophomore, and freshman classes have enlarged their finance committee to form annual committees which will visit all the members of the various classes between now and the first of February to sell annual tickets. These tickets will sell at $2.50 each and no more books will be printed han tickets sold. Russel Gear, president of the junior class, announces the following committee which will meet in Myers hall at 4:30 Tuesday afternoon: Frand Godding, Clara Porel, Harry Ponsack, Alena Morton, Pawloski, Aileen Alderson, Harold Evans, Floyd Jackson, Una Meredith, William L Spiecer, Ray Dumire, Charles Moore, Elizabeth Lovejoy, Donale Joseph, Belen Sweeten, Katherine Tempe, Tenniel Rinn Potter, Elmer Blincoe Millie Hanson, Agnes Engel. J. M. Johnson called a meeting of the Annual Committee for this afternoon and if any of the members failed to attend they are to see him after chapel Tuesday in room 108 of the Chapel. J. R. Robert, B. M. Smith, H. K. Tran, O. Braden, B. M. Lillis, P. E. Park, D. J. Ryan, R. Pearais, W. A. Templin, W. M. Beall, P. Sitzler, H. W. Swle, A. Sterling, H. A. Hsmith, G. B. Shomber, H. B. Smither, G. G. Smith, L. G. Gloyne, N. C. Kennedy, J. B. McKay, H. V. McCollock, C. J. Eldridge, Blanche Lorimor. UNIVERSITY ORCHESTRA TO GIVE CHAPEL PROGRAM A musical program will be given at chanel tomorrow. The string quartet from the University orchestra will open the program with "Mozart's Minuet." A soprano solo, "My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice, by Miss Eun-Woo Smith, and a sextet for famed Gypsey Rondo" by Mozart, are the other numbers on the program. A new regulation at Princeton University requires that "Every undergraduate at this university must attend at least one-half of the Sunday morning chapel services each quarter. Failure to comply with this rule will render him liable to suspension." Owing to the exceptionally large freshman class at Princeton this year more than 150 men were turned away from school last Sunday. An agitation has been started for a new and larger building. BOOSTS CHAPEL CROWDS BY SUSPENSION THREATS The journalism school of the University of Missouri is installing an engraving plant. THE BEAR DIDN'T BALK WE KEEP UP TILL JUST AT THE FINISH. OH, WE COULD HAVE PASSED YOU ANY TIME BUT THEN IT WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN INTERESTING. MALLOY INDIA'S SHORT INDIA'S SHORT Read your own KANSAN. 358 STATE TEACHERS A FIVE DOLLAR BILL HOLD K. U. DEGREES SEES TURKEY GAME But There Is Woeful Lack of Plan to Start Special Fr Preparation Among Lawrence to Eliminate Many Others Changing Trains Complaint has been made that a student of the University of Texas punctured an automobile tire with a knife during the night shirt parade held there recently. Three hundred and fifty-eight teachers of the high schools and academies of Kansas hold degrees from the University of Kansas. A report issued today by the K. School of Education gives the high schools 108 awards and give other statistics concerning the school situation of the state. Of the 1638 teachers included in the report, 597 have never received degrees, while the entire corps represen- tive every type of training imaginable. Among the nations represented in the student body of the University of Iowa are: British Guinea, Canada, China, Germany, India, Hawaii, the Netherlands, Japan, the Philippines, Russia, and Turkey. "Many of the teachers have failed to make any preparation for the serious work of teaching," points out Prof. H. W. Joselyn, who had charge of the bulletin. "Many more have prepared themselves for other professions and vocations and have drifted into teaching, possibly after failing to make a success in their chosen field of work. Freshies Musn't Indulge "The number of superintendents with degrees, 148, and the number without, 90, indicates very clearly the lack of any adequate system. When the training of teachers, superintendents and principals is considered, it is evident that our high schools are, as a rule, below the standard in their teachers. It serves to explain also some of the reasons for the lower efficiency of our state as compared with some others." The student conference of the University of Wisconsin recently passed a resolution forbidding freshmen to enter saloons. A great many upper-classmen have moved to eject the saloons if they are found there. "An utter lack of efficient organization was found in the assignments of subjects to the teachers," Professor Josseylson says. "There seems to be a great need for more of the schools in this respect. It is hoped that the material and statistics of the bulletin will stimulate the schoolmen of the state with a desire to bring about any changes that are likely to raise money and school administration in the Kansas secondary schools." It was found that 79 per cent of the teachers in the ten cities of the first class were actually teaching the subjects they prepared to teach in their cities, as than half were teaching subjects they had prepared for. A spectral train from Kansas City to Columbia, for the Missouri game, similar to the one run in 1911 will probably be put on by the Wabash, according to the city ticket agent of the road in Kansas City. Definite announcement will be made next week. If the special is run the rate of $3.75 for the round trip from Kansas City will probably be in effect as for the former game. The 1911 special left Kansas City in the morning arriving at Columbia in time for the game. The Wabash this year is trying to arrange with the Santa Fe so students can leave Lawrence the morning of the game, thus avoiding the trip to Kansas City the night before. This was the obstacle which reduced the "Thundering Thousand" in 1911 to a whispering one hundred. FOUR MEN FOR 2 JOBS Two Candidates Are Out for Each Vacancy on Athletic Board Two new candidates are out for the vacancies on the Athletic Board. These are "Dutch" Stearns and William Weidlein. Four candidates are now trying for the two vacancies on the board. Herbert Sommers and Weidlein would fill the place of Harry Burnham, who was drowned last spring and Stearns and Landon Laird would occupy the vacancy of Audrey Purcell, who failed to return to the University this fall. JUNIORS TO CONSIDER A CLASS MEMORIAL The latter are the non-athletic candidates, and the former the athletic. The election will be held to determine of the Men's Student Council. Weidelin and Sommers, the athletic candidates, are both "K" men. WILL ISSUE TREATISE ON THE HONOR SYSTEM The University of Iowa has thirty seven students from foreign coun tries By direction of the department of education of Swathmore College, a comprehensive study of the honor system in institutions of the United States is being made by Bird T. Baldwin, of Swathmore. A series of questions as to the extent and practice of the honor system is sent to each college of the United States with a request for any available information or literature pertaining thereto. The investigation will be completed by December and the results published for the benefit of the colleges of the United States. The sophomores of the University of Nebraska have voted to wear caps. Committee Will Suggest Re placing Whistle With Chimes HISTORY OF THE MOVEMENT Idea Born Last January Found Favor at Once With Various Classes of the University Russell Gear, president of the junior class, announced today that a meeting of the class will be held in Snow hall Tuesday after chapel to consider definite plans for a class memorial. The memorial committee of which Harold Mattono is chairman is considering two plans to place before the class, that of erecting a firehouse building, or of replacing the hourly class whistle with a system of chimes. The idea of erecting class memorials started in January 1913, after an editorial appeared in the Daily Kansas urging the president of the classes to start the definite movement. "Who wants the awards of coming year?" Ages?" asked the Kansan editorial Committees Appointed Later residents of the three lower classes called meetings of their classes. Harry Wilson of the sophomores appointed a committee with Harold Matton as chairman. The Chancellor and Dean Olin Templin expressed their approval of the plan and the deans of the various schools followed the lead of the Chancellor. Prof. Erasmus Haworth suggested that the classes use Marvin Grove as a place for the memorials and thus make the lonely nooks more attractive. Prof. A. M. Wilcox of the Greek department suggested gift of sculpture and paintings to be given and hung in the various buildings. From these suggestions and other the sophomores has selected a plan to hold a clock in the Museum building, a clock that the students could depend upon. It was to cost $4600. Stone Wall Proposed Stone Wall The senior class then got busy and the Skull K society of that class proposed a stone wall on which senior students would be permitted to touch. The fence was to be of native stone and run between Snow hall and Fowler shops. Each succeeding class was to add on a few rods of fence each year. To this plan Chancellor Strong, Superintendent Crocker, and Prof. W. A. Griffiths gave approval. At a meeting of the class, this plan was voted down for that of erecting an arch at the north entrance of the University on Oread avenue. Professor Griffith who had charge of campus decorations, refused to let the proposed arch go in unless the class would use better material. The class agreed to do this and later erected two wooden dummies on Oread to give the class an idea of what they were going to do. For a time the memorials were forgotten because of the Jayhawker troubles, but it did revive and struggle along until college was over and then it died, so far as the senior class was concerned. The only class memorial on the campus up to date is the sun dial, put in by the class of '99, ten years SENIORS PROD MULE Uncle Jimmy, Mose, Frank, Kennedy, "Pat" Crowell—"Swede" Plays Bianio Plays Banjo. Inasmuch as the mule is the senior class symbol the class plans to liven up and show a few of its gals to light at a smoker in Eagles' hall. A bunch of such attractions as will be sure to draw is announced to appear on the program. Coaches Mosse and Frank will be there as also Coach Kennedy of the ever-victorious team of 14 of them. "Undie Jimmy" will be there to lend dignity to the occasion. Two boxing and wrestling matches will be staged and a quartet will furnish the music. Apples and cigars will keep the spirit of revelry on the move. Last but not least "Sweed" will wangle some wang of his banjo masterpieces. The following men are selling tags for the senior smoker: Dingman, Dingman, Season, Starnes, Lodge, Boddington, Cherry, Davis, and Cobbison. Dodd, Davis, and Cobbison. CRIPPLED K. U. TEAM DEFEATS ICHABODS Jayhawker Substitutes Play Heady Game Against Aspiring Washburn Team CLOSED PLAY TILL FINAL BOUT Then Kansas Gets Revenge For Defeat Last Year at Topeka and Scores Two Touchdowns To march steadily down the field toward their opponents' goal line twice, only to be turned back by costly fumbles; to play the ball on the opposition's side of the field for three whole quarters, and not be able to push it over; and then to come back in the fourth and final session and with two touchdowns and an equal number of place kicks goals wipe their rivals off the map—such was the feat accomplished by the Kansas Jayhawkers Saturday over Washburn. After the first five minutes of play there was no doubt in the minds of the rosters to the final outcome, but the horde won and it seemed as if the better team would have to be content with a tie score. They Outkicked Kansas For the Jayhawkers outclassed the Ichabads. There was no doubt of that. In but one way did Washburn show its superiority over Kansas—in kicking; and it was only the steadiness of the great Trobert's toe that enabled Crip Gray's men to fight off defeat until the fourth quarter. Twice, standing under his goal posts, the blonde punter received the ball and unmindful of the charging Jayhawk sailed it 55 yards into the line field. Outkicking Russell, the game little Kansas booter, on every exchange of punts, Trobert was practically the whole show for the Topeka eleven. The game was beautiful for the spectators. The weather was just right and aside from a northerly wind which swept over the field of play, conditions were ideal. And the two teams furnished a hard-fought game. There was but one difference in the style of play used by the two elevers. The Ichabods, in a desperate effort to win, used every play in their repertoire. Their sole intent was to beat the Jayhawkers. Mosse Conceals His Hand Mossse's crew, on the other hand, was conservative. Nebraska and Missouri scouts were hidden in the bleachers, and both Kansas coaches and Captain Weidlin knew it when attending the game was to get a line on the Jayhawker manner of attack, and Coach Mosse recognized the fact. When the team trotted out on the field for the opening quarter, until in the last half, Kansas did not show a single play. The only difference was the rival spies a line on the team's best attack, and it was this lack of "opening up" that carried the result to the final quarter. Had the Jayhawkers shown the variety of plays that they did in the Oklahoma game, or not, the Aggies, the Ichabods would have been snowed under early in the first quarter. The opening quarter was the most evenly contested. Each team, acting under orders from the coaches, was bent on feeling out the other, and caution was the predominant element of each eleven's attack. First Quarter Tame Kansas seemed to have a shade the better of the Ichabod eleven in the first quarter, Russell even outkicking Trobert. The session ended with Washburn in possession of the ball on her own 35 yard line. Early in the second quarter Trobert sent the ball into Kansas territory by a pretty 40 yard kick to Russell. After another exchange of a weak spot in the Washburn line, Starting on their own 20 yard line, by pretty runs by Sommers, Martin, and Greenlees, K. U. quickly took the ball over the goal, only to lose it. He Russell missed a drop kick. Washburn then scored two first downs by line bucks by Bearg and Beales only to lose the ball to the Jayhawkers on the way back. The players having to be measured. Parker went in for Sommers at left half. Twice the ball was given to him and twice he pierced the Ichabod line for good gains. Tudor hit again. It was a Kansas first down on Washburn's 20 yard line. The rooters demanded a touchdown. But luck was against the Jayhawkers. On a line buck, Martin, the Kansas on a half, fumbled and a (Continued on page 4) UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The official student paper of the University EDITORIAL STAFF HERBERT FUNT - Editor-in-Chief GLENDON ALLYNK - Associate Editor JOHN C. MADEN - Managing Editor MARSHAL A. SMITH - High School Editor GLENN SUMMER - High School Editor BUSINESS STAFF BENNY ANKERSON - Advertising Manager ALEXANDRA ABBEY - Circulation Manager JUSTIN BUSH - Advertising REPORTIAL STAFF LUCUS BAGGER RANDOLPH KENNEDY JUSTICE FUTCH SAM DUGEN HAYESERON HAYESERON Entered in the second-class mail matter Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance, one term, $1.50. Phone, Belf K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kamaan aims to picture the undergraduate students for a further more printing the news by standing for the final vote on whether they be clean; to be cheerful; to be more serious problems wiser heads; to be more students of the University. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1913 Assistant editors for today's paper, Fran B. Henderson and Gilbert Clayton. new editor, Loen Hop. Assistants, Henry Maloy, Lucy Burger, Jack Greenbies and Jason Exchange editor, John M. Henry. Exchange editor, John M. Henry. Society reporter, Lucille Bildinger WHY NOT NOW? Solomon says: "the horse, a bridle for the ass, and the rod for the fool's back." The announcement of Editor Clark that only enough Annuals will be printed to fill the orders, should make us all dig down in our pockets for the necessary two-fifth before the committeeman comes around. FAIRLY OBVIOUS A certain amount of money is necessary to cover the numerous current expenses of the editing, and unless this is cared for by an advance sale the editor will "hold the sack" for the entire year. A large advance sale also aids in the matter of determining the size of the edition We'll all buy them in the spring anyway. Why not buy now as a matter of accommodation? PRACTICE HOSPITALITY FIRED. The theory that the K U football team team were worked before the game with Oklahoma may and may not be correct, but it is certain it was overworked during the game.—Joplin Globe. "Winter Course in Agriculture," reads a headline in an agricultural paper. We also have one next Saturday when we "Shuck Nebraska's Corn." Why not urge some old grad to come back to the Homecoming? Why not write to the folks a home inviting them to come up for the big game Saturday? If you were an old grad yourself, wouldn't you appreciate it to have some of the boys tell you that you were being remembered and expected? Why not try to get everybody to join the big Home-Coming movement and help cheer the Jay-Hawk to victory? If your folks are alumni, they will want to come back to their Alma Mater for old time's sake. If they have never been here, they will want to come anyway through curiosity. Bring them here at all events. Promise accommodations even if you have to double up in that little seven by nine; you can stand it for a night or two. Will not every student join the big movement to make the crowd of visitors here Saturday the biggest, jollest, and fightiest crowd that ever attended a football game in Lawrence? Will not each student write ten letters today? TOO MANY STRANGERS That over-numerous class of Mysterious Strongers in the student body is to suffer a tremendous thinning out this week when the various class and other organizations hold their "get together" meetings. The first blow of the series is to be dealt Monday evening when the engineering boys step into the ring against Mysterious Stranger. Tuesday morning the M. S. will be in less evidence at the west end of Mt. Oread and his sad work will be confined to the other schools. But in rapid succession after Monday evening the several classes of the university are going to hold "Get together" meetings to banish the M. S. entirely. These "Get-together and get acquainted" meetings will put M. S. into the proper condition to take the knock out blow. The knock-out is to be dealt with a "Stay acquainted" attitude on the part of every student who meets another student. Appoint yourself a committee of one to help deal this knock-out blow. Go to your get-together meeting, get acquainted, and stay acquainted. DISCOURTESY IN CHAPEL If you, Mr. Student or Miss Student, should be called back to your University some day for a chapel address, what would be your attitude toward those students who came, and wishing they had not come, noisely departed in the middle of your endeavors? The University invites its speakers to Mt. Oread and they come as guests. The students have a chance to express the hospitality of their school by remaining to chapel—even after the Glee Club has sung. If you haven't time for chapel or cannot see why it will interest you it is your privilege to stay away. It is better to stay away than to go for the music and then withdraw, to the discomfort of the speaker and the annoyance of those who are interested. A display of thoughtlessness and selfishness such as occurred at last friday's chapel is humiliating to very student who knows the rudiments of how to behave well. Statistics of the University of Columbia recently published include the addresses of 16,965 of the total number of more than 19,000 living graduates. The others are supposed to be still trying to reach up to the bottom rung of the ladder. A new scholarship requirement has gone into effect at Yale. The academic student must not only cover a certain amount of work, but will have to keep a considerable part of this above a certain grade. Thus do college authorities lose sight of the real activities for which universities are maintained. OUR DAILY QUIZ Use honor system and grade yourself I. ETHNOLOGY 1—What is Ethnology? it is the branch of knowledge which treats of the varieties or different race of men, their masters, and their women; it is from the Greek, *ethnos*, a nation. **intro** "In what respect is man at the head of he animal creation?" *** He is so as regards superiority of structure and intelligence, and as possessing a moral nature, or consciousness of right and wrong. There are usually said to be five varieties—the Caucasian, the Mongolian, the Malayan, the American Indian, and the Negro. The Caucasian variety of man is white, or nearly so, and is the most common Caucasian variety which inhabits the greater part of Europe. What are the varieties in the races of pen? a - Why is the race called Caucasian? Because it was supposed to have originated in, and spread out from, the mountainous district of the Caucasus What is it that is the other branch of the Caucasian island, which settled in the British Islands, in France, and in other parts of Europe, at a very early period. It is that branch of the Caucasian variety which takes its name from certain German or Teutonic tribes who settled in Great Britain. Serfs were persons held in perpetual jonage, sometimes as a seminary serf, or in family units usually dwarfs, who were sold along with the states on which they lived. A slave is a person deprived of his civil rights, and who, being bought like one of the lower animals, is dependent in all respects on the will of his owner. 6—What is the Anglo-Saxon race? 10—In what state are mankind at present? A large number are in the condition of civilization, and they are a half-civilized state, and in the way of improvement; and lastly, there are nations, such as those of the Mongolian and Indian states of civilization and refinement. Jack—The Badgers play the Gophers today — The Wisconsin Sphinx Bettie--See here, why do you have that iron fence around the field? Or healthful store. —John Keble. EXAMPLE We scatter seeds with carmine hues. And when we see them, see them more; more. CAMPUS OPINION more. But for a thousand years Their fruit appears. In weeds that mar the land. (Communications to the Daily Kanan must not be published unless the publication 'the column is not necessarily a publication. STUDENT SENTIMENT THE CURSE Editor the Daily Kansan: The discussion of the honor system has interested me very much, and having had six years of experience in an institution whose students adopted the honor system years ago, I intend to bear testimonial to the efficiency of the plan. Transylvania University has an organized body known the Honor Council before which all cases of dishonesty coming up to it are tried. The presidents and secretaries of the four regular college classes constitute the main body of the council, while the president of the Honor Council is elected from the student body at large. This office is prized there as the highest within the gift of the highest and none but the most type of man ever held the office while I was connected with the university. I made careful inquiry among the students themselves, and had confidential knowledge of actual conditions. A number of students told me they had never seen a single case of cheating in their whole college course. Others had seen but one or two cases in the four years. During the six years I was there I never found anything to make me even suspect that the pledge had been violated in any way whatsoever. In all cases where dishonesty was proved before the student council, public sentiment sent the student home without any faculty action. Very few cases have ever come before the student council and the council has never failed to be involved and impartial in its actions. Conviction rarely occurred if dishonesty were factured, and it was most difficult to convict unless the evidence warranted it. The honor system there, modeled after the plan of the University of Virginia, has given entire satisfaction. CHAS. A. SHULL, Assistant Professor Botany RISIBLE REMARKS FOR THE SOMBRE STUDENT Pensive Stude (to man at cigar counter)—Give me a cigar; make it one without a band; I like a quiet smoke.—The Wisconsin Sphinx. "What happened when Bumps fractured his skull in yesterday?" "Pa. what are cosmetics?" "Cosmetics, my son are peach preserves."-California Pelican. "The other side immediately forged ahead."-Purple Cow. 一 Fair one“Sir, how dare you call me that?”Yale Record. I hear you were in a fight today. Charley—"Did you see those autos skid?" You mean I had a bug. I was in it at all—Princeton Tiger. Jack Rose—Hello, old boy, how's the world treating you?" A monocle is a pane of glass worn in one eye in order that its wearer may not see at one time any object. It can be understood. - Penn Punch Bowl. 'Helen—"I get fussed even when I take an examination.' Fred.—"It's hard for a popular girl to make her mark when fellows dote on her."—The Wisconsin Subinx. Klover Klub—Very seldom—Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. A stich in time saves embarrassment.—Stanford Chaparral. Junior-Have you a Greek grammar. Fall Fashions Bellboy—"I reckon him, because I ain't no good without a tip." —Ex If you know a girl well enough to have a hand don't waste time doing hat.—Eraser A Girl's Boarding School—An Institute of Yearning - Smart Set. Guest—"Boy, why does the clerk call you "Billard Cue?" Frosh—No'm, both my grandma's were Scotch. Purple Cow. Freshman Finance committee meets in 311, Fraser Tuesday afternoon at 4:45. "Jahawker" business. A. Walters, chairman. ANNOUNCEMENTS LOST—One student enterprise ticket on athletic Saturday. Return to Webster W. Kimball, 745 La All seniors gathering promissory notes for the annual will meet in Fraser chapel following the exercises. CALENDAR 3-4 Chancellor's open hour to Week of Nov. 10-15, 1913 3:4 Chancellor's op students. 4:30 Deutscher Verein (313 Fra.) 4:30 Mathematical club (103 Ad.) 4:30 Orchestra practice, (Fra.) 7:30 University Debating Society, (110 Fraser) Monday 1:100 Chapel, Musical program. 2:30 Entomological Club, (Mu.) 3:40 Theater Club. 3-4 Chancellor's open hour to faculty 7:30 Glee Club, Parkside, 7:30 Christian Science Society, 7:30 8:15 Violin recital, Otto Meyer, (Fraser) ethnicity Wednesday Thursday 7:30 Mandolin Club rehearsal, (116 Fraser). 4:30 El Ateneo Club, (306 Fra.) 4:30 Mining journal, (201 Ha.) 7:30 Band, Bearsuit; 7:30 Hawk Dramatic Club, (110) 4:30 Cercle Francais, (306 Fra) 7:30 Band rehearsal, Fraser) 7:30 Orchestra practice, (Fra.) 7:30 Amer. Inst. Elec. Eng. (101 4:300 Chemical Club, (Chem. 203). 7:00 Amer. Soclecture Mech. Eng. 8:10 7:30 Greek Symposium, "Why We Admire Homer," Professor Wilcox, (1965 Vt. St.) 7:30 Amer. Inst. Elec. Eng. (for Mavin) 7:30 Amer. Inst. Elec. Eng. (for Mavin) "Whey" 8:00 K. U. Debating Society, (313 Fraser) Friday Friday 11:00 Chapel, Mr. W. C. Lansdon, 8-12 Junior class dance. Saturday 8-12 Student Council dance. (McCook field) Future Events Nov. 15 Student Council Dance Robinson gymnasium, 8-12 p. m. Nov. 18 Piano recital. Heniot Levy (Fraser.) Nov. 22 Sophomore Bum, 8-12 Nov. 23 Y. M.-Y. W. joint meeting in chapel, 3:30. Football Schedule Nov. 15 Skokna on McCook. Nov. 33 - Marissa at Columbia. Nov. 15—Nebraska on McCook. Nov. 22—Missouri at Columbia. All announcements or items for the University calendar either for the coming week or for future events should be given to Mr. Cronemeyer, at the department of journalism office, by 4:30 p.m. Friday. It is desired to make the calendar a complete schedule of University events and the co-operation of those interested is requested. Miss Regina Ford of Brooklyn, was given a $2,000 Carnegie award for saving the life of three girls last summer. The purpose of the award, according to the Carnegie Commission for Life Saving, was to furnish an enclave for the regina But Miss Regina. She will put it in the bank, she says, and use it to buy furniture when she is married. WOULD RATHER MARRY THAN GO TO UNIVERSITY At a mass meeting of 350 students of the University of South Dakota a truce was declared in the trouble over the expulsion of two students who was agreed by the collegians to play the football game scheduled with Denver University. White Flag at South Dakota According to Harper's Weekly football was played in China one hundred years before the Christian era. It says that an emperor of the Han dynasty bought football his sheet and so that literary studios fell into disreputue". Football 2100 Years Old University Suffers by Fire The main administration building of the Ohio Northern University was totally destroyed by first last week. The library and many valuable records are lost. The great pipe organ is ruined. The origin is unknown. The authorities of the University of Oregon have offered a prize of twenty-five dollars for the best Oregon "alma mater" song submitted to them before December 10th. The honor system will be voted on nat Cornell University next week. Change to Accommodate Students Leaves Henry and Mass. 15 and 45 minutes past hour. (Old time 20 and 50). Leaves Henry and Mass. 25 and 55 minutes past hour. (Old time hour and 30). TENNESSEE CAR MISSISSIPPI CAR INDIANA CAR Leaves Henry and Mass. hour, 15,30 and 4. (Old time 5,20,35 and 50). F. BROOK, Optometrist and Specialist Staff. Office 602 Mass. S. Bank phone 906. PROFESSIONAL CARDS Lawrence Railway & Light Co. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. E. eye ear, and Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Building. W. C. 'M' COONNEL, Physician and Hospital Director, Indiana. 1933-84; incidence, 1404 Tenn. St. and 264 Ave. Chicago. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12 F. A. K. Residence 1130 Teen. Phones 211. DR. H. L. C. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires' Studio. Both phones. HARRY REDING. M - D Eye, ear, nose and pharynx. M - D Eyes. A - A A - A. Biceps. B11. Head. B13. Limb. J W. ©BRYON. Denist. Over Wilson's Drum Bell. Bell Phone 507. J. R. BECBITEL, M. D, D. O. 833 Mass J. R. BECBITEL Street, M. D, phones, office and public address. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diseases of Rutee. B. Thoughts on Rutee. Readiness, Rutee. Both phthots. DR. BUR R. WHITE Osteopath Phones, Bell 938, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. St. E. J. Blair, Physician and Surgeon. Office and residence 915 Mass. St. Office hours from 7:00 to 9:00 a.m., 12:00 to 4 p.m. and 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. Phone bell 85.1 Home 131.1 S. T. Gilligan, M. D. Office, cornell Vermont T. Gilligan, M. D. Office, cornell Vermont Phone 5601 Phone 5609 Barbers CLASSIFIED Plumbers Frank Ili's Barber Shop, 1025 Mass. Two good barbers. Satisfaction assured. J. C. Houk's Barber Shop, 913 Mass. Chairs never have to walk. Razor honed. Mellon, Ellison Dressmaking and Ladies Tailoring, Milton. Phones 2411, over Oasis, Carl. Ladies Tailoring and Dressmaking. Gowns for all occasions. All work guaranteed. Mrs. B. Dally 914-836-7060 establishment in connection. Phone 421 Belf. Ladies Tailors Lawrence Sewing School Leduc's tailoring School 560 Miss Powers: M. C. McClairy Phone 556 Miss Powers: M. C. McClairy Hair Dressers Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and faci massage, shampooing, hair-grows. Ma- nual attendant. Mail attendant call Bell 727, 51. S1. Select Hair Dress Shop, 927 Mass B8. Sporting Goods D & M sporting goods and athletic supply Kennedy & Erast. 225 Masc. St. Phnom Nam. Bring your shoes to Forneys. for gunman teed shoe repairing. Forney. 1017 Mass Hiwathea Cafe for regular meals, lunch and short orders when down town. Open after 11:30 a.m. shed shop repair. 1005 W. 42nd St. Prices reasonable, work the best. Let us figure on your furniture for everything In- dustrial & Barn & Co. 816 Mass. St. Phone 423. Queen City College. System and sewing tails. Dressmaking in connection with school. Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 Ky. Bell 7164. Ed. W. Parsons. Engineer. Watchmaker and Jeweller and Jewelry. Bell Phonet. 717 Mascot. One trial means no risk, small investment. The goods, package and home-made cigar. smoke W-T-Wilhite homemade cigar. I have a nice line of plain china for painting: a blue plaid wallpaper in 725 x 335. St. uprooted. Estelle Norbourn, 725 x 335. St. uprooted. For rent. A nice furnished room, 2 closets, and modern in every respect. 1315 Ohio Ohio K. U. PANTATORIUM AND DYE WORKS Student Rates: See Our Solicitors Cleaning and Laundry's Work & Specialty. JACK FULLERTON Phones: Bob, 430, 496, Home. 140 Phones: Bell, 1400; Home, 140 FeaturingMilk Chocolates "SWEDE" Phones 540 W. E. MOAK, Prop. Taxicabs, Hacks, Livery Baggage Hauls Both Phones 148 Eldridge House Stable Subscribe for the Daily Kansan. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND PROPS. JOHNSON & TUTTLE Fresh Oysters, Regular Meals, Short Orders, Confectionery, Cigars, Etc. Lowney's Chocolates 715 Massachusetts Street McColloch's Drug Store Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 Vermont Phones 139 SAVE THE PIECES KENNEDY & ERNST 828 MASS. ST. PIJONES 314 ROYAL ROCHES TER Chaing dishes, casseroles, cc flee machines and percolators. The fixt line of metal and wood serving trays in the city We have added Lens Grinding Machinery to our Optical department. Any Lens Duplicated Glasses Fited. HESTER Jeweler and Optician LAWRENCE Business College lawrence kansas Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. W. H. Quakenbush, Pres.; E. S. Weatherby. Enu Notice ). P. Leonard's Panatorium is on the job again this year. Students Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 501, Home 180 We Give Club Rates 841 Mass. St. Upstairs. Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Lawrence Pantatorium Lawrence Pantatorium 2 W. Warren Bath Phone 506 A. SOLDING LINGER TRACE SPALDING MARK A.D. 1925 A "Square Deal" for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantee each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding TradeMark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. A. G. SPALDING & BIROS 1100 HAMILTON Ave. Mo. SEND for our Catalogue. SEND for our Catalogue. Send the Daily Kansan home. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN All of the Song Hits of the Rose Maid For Sale now at BELL BROS. PROVE THAT GHOSTS WORSER'N WITCHES Forum Burden High School Debaters Settle Vexatious Question on (By Carrie Flynn) (By Carrie Flynn) Burden - — students of the Burden high school have organized literary societies, the Classical and Literati. Friday, the Literati gave their second program. The assembly room was appropriately decorated with witches, black cats and jack-o'-lanterns. The program was one of Halloween stunts. The following question was debated: "Witches are more harmful than ghosts." The judges' decision was given in favor of the negative. BOTH HANOVER TEAMS CLEANED UP GREENLEAR (Bv Harry B. Harris) (By Harry B. Harris) Hanover, Nov. 7—The fast Hanover high school basketball teams, girls and boys, defeated the Greenleaf aggregation on the Greenleaf court, Saturday night. The Hanover boys now lead in the series of games to be played by the Washington. County for the Basket-ball victory over Greenleaf this season. MANKATO HIGH TOOTS ITS OWN HORN A LITTLE BIT (By Clarence Emery. Mankato, Nov. 7.—The Mankato high school is a district school in a town of 1200. It has five instructors and an enrollment of 168. Besides the regular Latin, English and normal training courses it offers domestic science, manual training, and voice culture. YES SIR! ALMA CAN WIN WITHOUT FORWARD PASS (By Leo Horne) Alma, Nov. 7.-By a score of 15 to 7, alma defeated the Manhattan high school football team at Manhattan. The Manhattan boys had the weight but lacked the knowledge of the Alma backs. Manhattan completed the forward pass six times out of eight, while Alma did not try the forward pass at all. Brown, Stueve, Umbreh and Lutz starred for Alma and Currey and Hutto for Manhattan. The Alma boys were served a fine supper at the Y. M. C. A. and were well treated in all respects by the Manhattan students. TELLS 'EM NOT TO SAY "I WENT AND DONE IT." Kansas City, Nov. 7—Prof. E. M. Hopkins, head of the department of English at the University of Kansas, addressed the Teachers' Institute of the public schools of Kansas City, Saturday morning on "Problems of Elementary School English." Professor Hopkins made the address on the invitation of Supt. M. E. Pearson. COUNTY CLUB PLANS A BIG CHRISTMAS BANQUET Plans for a K. U. banquet during the Christmas holidays with high school seniors as guests, were discussed at the first meeting of the Linn County club Saturday night. Last year the club gave a similar entertainment in conjunction with the Linn county alumni, and more than ninety students, alumni and high school seniors attended. Officers for the year which were chosen Saturday are: Melvin Evans, Pleasanton president; Will Barnes, Blue Mound, vice-president Jenna Hemsley, Blue Mound, Courtney Marie Madden, Mound City, treasurer. W. S. G. A WILL STAGE MAY FETE THIS YEAR The W. S. G. A. will give the May Fete this year, the W. Y. C. A. having had charge of the fete last spring. There are no definite plans made as yet for the fete, but it is thought that it will be one of our special occasions. Several members of the association are now at work looking up material. Miss Maude Lourey, president of the W. S. G. A. said that "Alice in Wonderland" is being considered. Nothing will be decided definitely until the next meeting of the W. S. G. A., which will be held next Thursday. to be used to meet the cost of new equipment for the dermatological section of the Vanderbilt clinic. Egg sandwich, beet sandwich, ham sandwich, cream puffs, coffee. Basement of Fraser at the lunch counter. —Adv. 41-1 cancer research, $900 to meet the cost of equipment in the gynecological clinic and $250 for books on the "Near East" were announced. Read your own KANSAN. K. U. EXPERTS TO TESTIFY IN DICK BROTHERS CASE Columbia University is richer by $261,400. At the meeting of the Board of Trustees Wednesday it was announced that a donor whose name must be withheld from the public had given $250,000 to be the principal of a fine arts endowment fund, the income to be expended in a way not made public, but indicated to the trustees. The second largest gift-$1,750 from Dr. Charles W. McMurtry-is own Dean L. E. Sayre, L. D. Havenhill, and George N. Watson went yesterday to Atchison, where they will appear today as expert witnesses in the Daniels-Dick trial before the district court of Atchison county. order court The Daniels family is suing Dick Brothers, Lawrence drummists for $30,000 alleged damages caused by an error in filling a prescription. The case was heard last summer and resulted in the failure on the part of the jury to agreed. At the University of Wisconsin a freshman is to be ducked before the entire University, for disobeying the freshman green law. The committee appointed a ducking committee. This one man was the only freshman to violate the rule. By dint of much sweat and done, in which Notre Dame Colgate, Yale, Maine, the Army, and Harvard figure, the University of Texas has it that the championship of the world lies between that University and Harvard. BLACK HAND LETTERS TO BLACK HAND LETTERS TO EDITOR OF PRINCETONIAN QUARTER MILLION DOLLARS TO COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY "Black Hand" letters from students at Princeton University have been received by James Bruce, vicepresident of the senior class and editor of the city's primary Prison, who has kindly deposited cigarettes more harmful than pipes and advocating abolition of the rule forbidding freshmen to smoke. Forget your breakfast? Go to the lunch counter in Fraser-Adv. 41-1 Professor William Mitchell Ramsay of Aberdeen University, Scotland, will begin a course of six lectures at the University of Illinois, beginning next Thursday at 4 p.m. on "The Missionary Journeys of St. Paul." Bowersock Theatre, Friday, Nov. 14. Prices, $2.00,$1.50,$1.00, 75c, 50c A The Rose Maid THE NEW ORIGENAL OF FUN AND FASHION ROSE - E.S. BLOOM FOR LOVE, ERS NEATH A SKY OF BLUE YOU THINK EVERY AMERICAN GIRL IS ADORABLE IF SHE IS CARLESS WITH HER CHECK BOOK THE TEDDY GIRLS ACT I THE BARON AND THE COUNTESS THE ROSE GIRL AND THE DUKE THE DANCE ON THE STAIRS FORT ST. KATHLEEN, FLORIDA THE DANCE ON THE STAIRS The Rose Mo THE ROSE GIRL T WHERE LOVE IS BETWEEN FOOTBALL AND RUSSIE CINEMAS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPECTATORS BARRED FROM TIGER PRACTICE Missouri Team Prepares Secretely for Jayhawker Game and Plays After Dark in Electric-Lighted Field Bv O. N. Gingich By O. N. Gingich Columbia, Mo., Nov. 10—The Missouri football team will practice behind closed gates for the rest of the season. Spectators have been allowed on Razorback on Wednesday at 5 p.m., but from now on the practice for the Tigers will be secret. secret. C. G. L. Brewer and Coach Schulte are developing the finer points of the game for the Varsity. The game which the Tigers played Rolla, while it did not show many of the Tigers' formations, or the coach's staff, could weaken the weak spots in the team. The practice this consequently has been used to eliminate these weak points and to develop other plays of the Tigers. A number of the Varsity squad are not able to get on the field for early practice, so in order darkness will not cut show the practice from now on. We have complete electric lighting, and it has been enlisted to another field. As soon as it gets too dark for the Tigers to practice on the regular field they have to go but a few yards to the breadfield. The players will also be able to go through work-outs in the afternoon after the regular hours of practice. practice. The Tiger eleven came out of the Rolla game in good shape. Clay was the only player who did not report for the first practice after the game. He has a sprained neck, but will be all right in a day or two. The Tigers' trainer is not taking any chances on making even a slight injury worse, and the practice for the last day or two has been light. From now on the Tigers will be send teams in hard scrimmages. The against the scrubs and freshmen scrubs and freshmen have been drilled on plays to be used against the Varsity. Varsity guard substitutes have been placed on the Varsity squad. These men Wicoff, Dougherty, and Drumm, are being used best regular Varsity players and developable substitutes for the squares. Under Other Goal Posts It is not expected that Professor Brewer and Coach Schulte are going to overlook anything that will be in a line for the game with Kansas. The Tigers performed as they were expected to Saturday by defeating Drake 10 to 0. Handicapped by the loss of McHeenry, and Killian two of their stars, the team failed to make the showing against Missouri that their supporters hoped for. McWilliams starred in the Missouri offense. We agree with the K. C. Star, "Iowa must have some team." Indiana State went down before the Iowa City lads 60 to 0. Wow! 60 to 0. We didn't know the rules allowed it. Poor old Washington! After leading the Rolla Miners for three quarters to 0, in the last session her defense cracked and the Missouri engineers piled up a 19-point total. Hard luck! The Yale Bulldogs came back and showed their followers a glimpse of old time form Saturday, by snowing Brown under by 17 to 0. That much had been expected of their new defeat at the athletes' game against Colgate the week before, but citrician coaching seems to have had its effect on the easterners' play. Harvard got past the hardest game on its schedule Saturday when it defeated Princeton in a 3 to 0 battle. Playing in a sea of mud, conditions were impossible for good football, and Brickley, the Prism star, took the only chance that came his way, and gave a field goal through the Orange and Black cross from the 20-year line. It was the only time that the Harvard athletes had won on Princeton ground for a generation. The loyal Northwestern inn-keeper who offered every inhabitant of Evanton, Ill., a free dinner if the Northwestern athletes defeated the Chicago Maroons Saturday can sit in peace and count his shekels. Evanton will have to pay for its "ham and" Chicago won 14 to 0. The Ohio State Buckeyes, Leon McCarter's school, bled up Saturday before the Wisconsin Badgers in a 12 to 0 game. The Columbus athletes fought gamely, and died gamely, but had little or no chance before the superior weight and speed of the Madison aggregation. ©1938JW.P.H. WE can fit you Mr. Tallman. "Fit and dandy" as we make a big stab at having big sizes for big men from suits to socks. This week is a big selection-as our fall showing is now at its biggest. At any price $12 to $35 Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS KANSAS WINS (Continued from page 5) Blue and White athlete recovered it. Trobert dropped back, and booted it 55 yards. Russell returning the ball to the middle of the field. The half was soon over, Kansas holding the ball in the center of the field when Dr. Reilly called time. immediately after the kickoff, Kansas gained the ball, and started across the chalk lines. From their 20 yard line, Sommers and Martin sifted through the Ichabod line for first down. Tudor made 10 through center. Greenlees, by great broken field running, raced 15 yards around left end, the whole Washburn eleven after him. The cell wall was just over the field of the infield in terrain territory. Sommers rammed the line for four, and Tudor hit exactly the same place for another "first and ten." Fail on 15 Yard Line Fall on 15 FIELD TIME The Jayhawkers signed 5 yards on the play, but Greenbush behind 5 yards behind the first lineman, received the ball and raced 10 yards around left end, making up the 5 penalty, and adding an equal distance to it. The stands went wild when Sommers again punctured the Washburn defense for a first down. Tudor received the ball, and climbed over center for 10 yards, advancing the ball to Washburn's right. On the next play, Greenbush needed Martin's rumble of the first half and Rogers, the Ichabod captain, recovered. Trobert punted the ball out of danger. Undaunted the Jayhawks began their work over. Shifty runs by Sommers and Greenleaves returned the ball to the Ichabods' 25 yard line, Greenleaves hit center field for the quarter ended with the Jayhawkers in possession of the ball on their opponents' 15-yard线. Wilson now relieved Russell, and in desperate effort to put one on over the Washburn men, pulled off K. U's first open play, a forward pass from him to Hammond netting 20 yards. Stiehm, high in the stands, industriously worked his note book. Another forward fling was tried, but went wild, Elbe of Washburn intercepted it, and returning 15 yards. Ichabods Rally at Goal The fast-tiring Ichabods got their breath during the minute interval. Standing beneath their own goal posts, they held the hard rushing Kansas and took the ball on downs. Trobert kicked—50 yards and Kansas had to begin its march. Under hit the line for a 10-yard gain and Russell again missed a hard luck goal, his kick from the 40 yard line being deflected slightly by the wind. Washburn took the sphere on their head in an attempt to kick out of danger. Kansas recovered on her own 20-yard line. Sommers fakes 'ta baw Tessert kicked Wilson, but Tessert returned the pigkin thirty yards, and Kansas stood on Washburn's 25-yard line, holding THE OREAD TEA ROOM, Mrs. L. S. Hayes, invites your closest inspection regarding cleanliness and a variety of foods properly cooked. An entire equipment of the latest and most sanitary fixtures. TO THE PUBLIC Oyster Soup A few of the things for Tuesday Pouree Tomato Soup Fried Black Bass French Oyster Pattiee Fried Channel Cat Fish Prime Ribs of Beef (Au Jus) Fresh Ham with Apple Sauce Leg of Lamb With Corn Fritters Fried Chicken Maryland Style The crowd which turned out to witness the game Saturday was the best on McCook field this year. The entire north stand was packed, and the south bleachers nearly so. Good guessers put it at 3,500. We wshurb's backfield was easily distinguished. A tall bionde, a negro, and a "guy with a shiny helmet,"—you couldn't miss them. Trobert, Washburn's star athlete, lived up to his kicking record. Lifting the ball once for sixty yards, wice for 55, and averaging 50, the ootting end saved the Ichabods time and again. Rogers, the Washburn captain, stood by his team in time of need, when in the third quarter, he recov- Russell hit the prettiest goal of the season at the close of the game, when from behind the result angle, he shot up to win between the cross bars after the second score. the ball. Russell returned to the game, and sent Greenelees fifteen yards through 'the line. The ball to the Ichabods' 10 yard zone. Sommers grabbed the oval, and tucking it beneath his arm, lugged it over the goal line and Russell kicked goal. Notes of the Game Immediately Washburn opened up. On the first play after the kickoff a long forward pass, Ream to Bearg; gained 40 yards. Kansas intercepted a similar pass, however, and scored it quickly. It sounded touchdown by a pretty forward fling, Russell to Hammond. Russell kicked goal. Soda Fountain, Short Orders, Hot and Cold Drinks, Candy and Cigars. Get Acquainted With the Chef. Washburn Opens Up Washburn Opens Up Washburn then became desperate. Fourteen points behind and realizing that time was nearly up, Ream the Topeka quarter, used ever one team knew. Dropping back if for a forward man he held the ball behind, body in his hand, and Rides, swinging around, grabbed it for a thirty yard gain straight down the field. A similar play brought fifteen yards. The Ichabods got away for the third time, and raced the ball down to the 15-yard line just as the game closed. Between halves the old formality of toosing a freshman in a blanket was creditably performed. The freshie seemed decidedly averse to the performance, and the crowd was correspondingly pleased. The Line-up The Line-up Deaver L. E. Rogers, c. L. T. Wolfe L. G. Barrett C. R Whitcomb R. G. C Whitcomb R. T. Trobert R. E. Elbe Ream Q Hardy Beales L. H. Bearg R. H. Forbes F. Reber Hammond Weidelm, c strothers, Hammond Keeling Mulloy Burton Strothers, Kane Wilson Russell Sommers, Parker Greenlee, Martin Tudor 1241 Oread Directly beneath the press box stood Jumbo Stiehm and Dick Purdy, Nebraska's coach and captain, looking over the Jayhawkers on his way up his first forward pass, Stiehm's little notebook worked overtime. ered Greenlees' fumble on the 15 yard line. Practically all of the Sunday papers "missed fire" on this touchdown proposition. Some named Greenlees and Hammond, others Greenlees and Weidlein. None gave Sommers credit for the first Kansas score. "Don't go, Jumbo, don't go," shouted a fan from the press box as the big Nebraska coach, soon after the first touchdown, gathered his wraps about him, and slowly to descend to descent. Ten yews in account" apple that Jumbo lingered on the sidelines long enough to witness that second score. Harl Russell the second string quarter, gave a pretty exhibition of drop kicking just before the game. Hitting about four out of five from 25 yards, Russell punched him to scratch in his notebook the rather cryptic remark, "Russell." The Washburn rooting was well meant, but rather erratic. At times the cheer leaders would go through certain indescribable motions, and south stand would roar out with sponses. On other time the same dance would glide through the same dance, and all would be silent as the tomb. A Topeka visitor, whose office is in the state house, shivering on the south bleacher, we can hear to surge through. We can have fire, bring on the water." EAVESDROPPING GEORGE AND SADIE AT THE GAMB EAVESDROPPING GEORGE AND SADIE AT THE GAME "Oh, George, what are they all hollowing for?" "The men are just coming out on the field, dear." "Do they wear those stripes because they have been in jail?" "No, darling, that is a sign of rank." "Well, I think the other side is just as rank as we are." "Well, do look at that referee—what he is he shoots at?" “Oh, George, look at that big bite of lilinement they are taking out.” what he is is in the air. "He's probably trying to stop Greenlees from going through the line." "What makes Mr. Frank beat his hands together so for?" --- "Oh, I simply adore that Bill Weidlein. Just look at him prancing up and down out there." "Well, I don't care—I think it's eal mean to treat a freshman like hat. If I were a boy I'd fight before 'd let them toss me up." Get a ham sandwich at the lunch counter in Fraser—Adv. 41-1 A scholarship fund of $10,000, the first to be established here by one not connected with Stanford University, has been founded by the will of the late W. J. Dickey, of Fresno, for the benefit of students residing from Fresno. The trus- ture of the fund decided, with the consent of Mrs. Dickey, to use it to help Stremo students attending Stremo—Daily Polo Alto. Coffee, coffee, coffee, luncheounter in Fraser...Adv. 41-1 KRESS Music Department Dream Days Peg O' My Heart Trail of the Lonesome Pine When it's Apple Blossom time in Normandy Kiss Me Good Night My Skylark Love Some Boy You Made Me Love You When I Lost You When it's Spring Time in Virginia Conductor Man Floating Down the River My Dream Girl As the Years Roll By Snoopy Ookumks Till the Sands of the Desert Grow Cold You're a Great Big Blue Eyed Boy Sing Rock A Bye Baby To Me Mammy Jimmys Loll All the Latest Popular Music 10c copy KRESS THE FLOWER SHOP Cut Flowers Of Quality 825 1-2 MASS. PHONES 621 The WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capitol $100,000 Sumner 2111 Capital $100,000 Corner Mass, and Quincy Sts. Issues its own Letters of Credit and Travellers Checks. The only way to carry your money in safety. Books of all kinds solitized. Establish "School" as a primary in the public schools, in which boys can learn to set type, print school papers, booklets and the like has been recommended to the board of education by Dr. C. Jordan,endent of schools of Minneapolis, in a plan to increase vocational training work Propose School Printery McKim, a former member of the University of Illinois tennis team, won the tennis championship of Japan tis summer. Chewing gum and Hershey's chocolates at the lunch counter in Fraser. —Adv. 31-1 A vote on the adoption of the honor system has been arranged for at the University of Wisconsin. A new rule adopted by the University of Pennsylvania prohibits smoking on the campus. Dr. Montague James Jones, F.B.A., provost of Kings College since 1905, has just been elected vice-chancellor of Cambridge vice-president of the current academic year, in succession to Dr. S. A. Donaldson, who has resigned Pensions For Brown Faculty Honorary degrees have never been given at the University of Virginia. Pensions For Brown Faculty An annual pension of half pay and $400 additional will be granted to any member of the Brown University faculty who has served 25 years and is eligible for retirement See the New Parker Self-Filling Fountain Pen Office Supplies, Typewriters F. I. CARTER 025 Mass. Bell phone 105. Come on Down Come on Down to JIM'S Tonight 1101 Mass. St. PROTSCH The College Tailor Lawrence Transfer Co. Trunk Hauling Phone 15 SAM S. SHUBERT Matness Wednesday and Saturday LEW FIELDS IN "All Abroad" The freshman class and all classes entering hereafter at Brown University will be required to learn to swim before graduating. I STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. JUNIOR CLASS VOTES TO LEAVE MEMORIAL UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 11, 1913 Goes on Record in Favor of Plan and Levies Assessment FAVORS CLOCK ON MUSEUM Proposal to Buy Chimes Loses Be cause Suitable Set Would Cost From $800 to $1000 NUMBER 42. The junior class will leave a memorial behind when they go. This was finally decided at a meeting of the children in Snow Hall after chapel today. An assessment of 75 cents to be paid by each member of the class was voted. Harold Matttoon chairman of the memorial committee, said that it was the opinion of the committee that the most suitable memorial hat could be obtained reasonable face-faced fur-faced placed in the tower of the Museum building. The clock will cost $400. The proposal to have chimes to take the place of the whistle in dismissing classes was practically given up on account of the cost of a set of chimes that would be loud enough to be heard at the engineering building. Such a set would cost from $800 to $1,000. The present memorial committee will continue to have charge of all matters pertaining to the collecting money and getting the plan started. ANNUAL SOARS MONDAY $2.75 Price of Book Aviates Then to the Altitude of 82.75 Annuals may be had for $2.50 if the students purchase their tickets before Monday evening. After that time the price will be increased to All of the members of the various class annual committees were today supplied with receipts which will be used for the coming week. HAWK DRAMATIC CLUB TO ELECT STATE OFFICERS The election of officers and making of plans for the year will be the purpose of the Hawk Dramatic Club which will meet tonight at 7:15 in room 110 Fraser hall. The meeting was scheduled for Wednesday night, but on account of the senior smoker which will be held at that time it was changed to Tuesday night. "All who are now members of the Masque and Thepian clubs should be present at this meeting in order to," said Clarence Sowers today. DATE ANNOUNCED FOR DEBATING TEAM TRYOUT The date for the first try-out for the debating team was announced by Professo Hill for December 17th. Professor Hill is corresponding with Missouri, in regard to changing the wording of the question in the Missouri-Kansas debate. Missouri has not been heard from. PHARMACY ASSOCIATION HONORS PROF. HAVENHILL Dean Sayre has been a member of the Committee of Revisions of the United States Pharmacopia for twenty-five years. This national institution is closely connected with the American Pharmaceutical Association. Prof. L. D. Havenhill has been notified of his election as first vice president of the American Pharmaceutical Association. Freshman Football Player Back J. C. Priest of Sabeth, one of the husky foot-ball players of last year's team came back to see the New England game and to see the Nebraska game and to be back in college next semester. Two greets R. C. Athens here Bobby Roberts, W. A. U. a champion track, 1911, and "Pat" Crowell, captain of the '08 ever-victorious football team, are visiting at the Acacia house. Two Great K. U. Athletes Here Ruth Thomas, who has been visiting her sister, Helene Thomas, a sophomore in the College, has returned to her home in Waterville. K U. EDUCATIONAL SORIORITY FROLICKS SOME AT TOPEKA Members of the Pi Gamma Sigma sorority, the educational sorority of K. U., got together Friday noon, November 7, at the teachers' association in Topeka, and had a real old time feast. These present were; Anna D. Becktol '13, Mytte I. Dolbree I. Millie Mille '14, Velma Shelley I. Minnie Dingee I. Juliet Snider I. Eva M. Cook I. Veta Lear I. Elizabeth Kennedy I. Dorothy Ward I. Annabella Crawford I. Ruth B. Rule I. Mary Sealy I. Mary G. Reding I. Catherine McCreath I. Mildred Brown, Frances McCreath I. Miriam Smyth I. Helen Rhena Hoopes I. Bernice Edmund Schultz I. Esther Drake I. Mary Grant I. Lois Harger I. Elsie Fleeson. Lina Coxedge, Helen I. Davidson, Helen Hodgson, Letitia Blakey, Hrush Rarger, Miss Howitt URGES UNIFORM RULES TO GOVERN ATHLETICS Chancellor Advocates Central Board In Each Conference To Settle Disputes Special to the Daily Kansan. Special to the Daily Kansan. Washington, D. C., Nov. 11. Chancellor Frank Strong of the University of Kansas, among the launching the Network of State Universities yesterday on "Control and Management of Athletics" advocated uniformity of interpretation of athletic rules. He suggested that it might be possible to have in each conference a central board of interpretation with final authority to call all tests of eligibility might be submitted. "The great diversity of practice in regard to control of athletics and the close relations that institutions have to each other make it very desirable that some uniformity of approach be achieved, my opinion decrease the friction often occasioned by the necessary administrative oversight of athletics and conduce to general good-feeling if all univertices that have interconnections should operate their athletics on substantially the same basis." Dr. Strong said that while it was true that the real control of athletics at Kansas was in the hands of the Board of Administration and the faculty, it was also true that it is operated with the most careful consideration of student interests and reasonable student desires. "Athletics is exceedingly important in the life of an institution," said the Chancellor in conclusion, "and I am extremely proud of our spirit and discipline. A wrong spirit in athletics will permeate a whole institution, lower its morale defective and fill the whole institutiorum." This is extremely difficult to eradicate. "The surest way to avoid the abolition of intercollegiate athletics or to avoid the excesses with it is to correlate it with the other departments of college management, control and management. For it seems to me unwise and dangerous that such an important factor in University discipline should in any way be outside of the same authority and knowledge of all other parts of our University life." MUCH FUN AND FOOD TO FEATURE FRESHMAN SMOKER Speches, a quartet, solos, a play by the Sphinx club entitled "A Ragtime Boxing Match," monologues, and eats guaranteed to produce the gout, will feature the freshman smoker Thursday, according to Boyd Marquis, chairman of the social committee. A variation from the usual chapel program was made this morning by substituting an entire musical program. This is the second time this has been done and it proved popular with the students. Tickets to the smoker cost 25 cents. To buy tickets, contact the members of the Sphinx club. VARSITY ORCHESTRA GIVES CAPHEL MUSICAL PROGRAM A string quartet composed of Miss Dorothy Keller, Miss Blanche Simons, Mr. Meredith Robbins, and Mr. John Martin played the Minuet by Mozart; Miss Etta Smith assisted by Miss Fay Blair on the piano sang a soprano solo, and a sextet from the orchestra composed of Miss Charles Krohn, Professor Krohn, Mr. Emil Schumann, Mr. Meredith Robbins, Mr. John Marin, and Mr. William Hoyt played the Gypsy Rondo by Mozart. Read your own KANSAN. O RATTAN AND CORN-SILK DAYS! NO NEVER AGAIN 1917 MALOY MEMORIES AT FRESHMAN SMOKER THURSDAY RECORD TICKET SALE MARKS OPENING DAY Student: Crowd Into Gyn For Nebraska Seats; Demand is Great The advance ticket sale for the Nebraska game has already gone far beyond the fondest hopes of Manager W. O. Hamilton and from present appearances the crowd which witnesses the big game with the Cornhuskers Saturday will be the largest seen on McCook field this year. Without doubt the attendance which will crowd the stands Saturday will rival that of the Missouri game last year in size. Hamilton's office was opened for the first time yesterday morning to the ticket-seekers and a trifle more than $2100 was taken in before 6 o'clock in the evening, when the limit in its efforts to provide for the wishes of the flock of students which lined up in the gym early in the morning Hamilton and Albert Randolph, his assistant, were kept at the ticket desk, and outside help to be sought to take care of the routine business. One thousand dollars' worth of seats have been sold at Lincoln and the Cornhusker students are demanding more. The exact amount is uncertaintely attained from the receipts of the sale, as many have Student Enterprise Admission and the amount which they have to pay is smaller correspondly. It is estimated that 3,000ROOTS have been sold to Lincoln's men down from Linehuk. Kansas City has taken care of $700 worth of seats and Topeka $500 more. The tickets were placed on sale in the Missouri city yesterday morning in the stores of Gordon & Koppel, Lowe & Campbell and A. G. Spalding, and by noon the reserve supply was exhausted and demands were being made on the K. U. athletic management for more. McCook field can accommodate approximately 13,000 people. This includes standing room of 2,000. There are seats for exactly 11,100 rooters, and all but 900 of these were filled at the Missouri game. The dove of peace was turned loose at the meeting of the University Debating Club last night. The nations of the would should reduce their armament sufficient only for police duty, the society decided. E. M. Johnson and G. B. Shomber supported the affirmative, and B. L. Blaisdell, A. V. Durbon, and W. O. Hake the negative. Ambassador to Speak K. U. Wants No War Ambassador Curtia Guild who has recently returned from a Russian embassy will appear in chapel December 12, according to information just received by Prof. D. C. Croissant of the extension department. The ambassador will speak on "The Diplomatic Service." KAW POTATOES STAR IN DEUTSCHER SHOW Spuds Presents Classic Drama Of Faust A La Punch And Judy Dramatic Personae Manche Kleinen Teuffelen Helen von Troy "Erhalten sie sich! Ich glaube das sie six in ihren Kopfe haben jetzt" "Vas sagen sie? Sie Spitzobochen, ich will ihrem head smashen mit meinen火. Ich been ein honorable man." Ja so went it at the reproduction of Dr. Faust yesterday by the Deutsche Verein. What mattered it if the heads of the Dramatis Personae were whitttled from Kaw Valley potatoes? What mattered it if the stage was only four feet across, and the actors entered by come up through the floor in their way? Dr. Faust swapped his soul to the devil for twenty years of power and magical influence just the same. Der Teufel deserves special mention. Not only was his interpretation of the lines technically high class, but his make up was especially good. His potato head was shapely, his "eyes" expressive, (get this) and in his red "jacket" he ap "pealed" to the audience as he "spud"dered defiance at the other dramatic personae. The play covered the period when Bathory in possession of this magical power. One of the most remarkable things was the ease with which the characters spoke the German tongue. It was wonderful because of the fact that they were all made out of Irish potatoes. Edmund Bechtold manipulated the characters because he had had considerable experience with the Burbank tuber on the farm, while Mattoon, Branine, Reese, Kline, and Engle made the talks. The Philosophy club will meet this evening at the home of Prof. Edmond H. Hollans, 1536 Tennessee street at 130 Miss Alice Hall in the Conception of Religion' and Mr. Alvin Babb will give a review of periodical literature. Philosophy Club to Meet Complifying with orders from the Adjutant General the First Provisional Company K. N. G. will parade or inspection tonight. Guardsmen to Parade Postpone Violin Recital The violin recital by Otto Meyer which was to be given tonight in Fraser hall has been postponed because of the inability of Mr. Meyer now. The evening of November 24th has been selected for the recital. Ednum Hall, '16, was the week-end guest of Jessie Ingraham. UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS TO TALK IN HIGH SCHOOL The extension department of the University now has five lectures scheduled for this month and two for next month. The lectures are on matters of public interest and are delivered before various public enterprise clubs. The present schedule follows: Thursday, Nov. 13--Prof. C. A. Dykstra at Leavenworth. Friday, Nov. 14—Prof. D. C. Croissant at Lansing. Friday, Nov. 21—Prof. C. A. Dykstra at Lyons. Prof. H. P. Cady at Enterprise. Tues. 8:30am, C. G. Dunlain. Lewisworth. Friday, Nov. 28—Prof. H C. Allen at Nesta City. December 5—Dean A. S. Olin at Chanute. CHRISTIAN SOCIETIES KEEP PRAYER WEEK Y. M. and Y. W. C. A. Take Part in Observation of International Service This is an international week of prayer. Starting with November 9, and ending with November 15 men and women all over the world will meet together to express appreciation for their fortunes on this earth. Our students at University of Kansas are observing the week on the camus. Each day this week at 5 o'clock students will meet in the Mission room at Myers hall. Thursday night the annual banquet for Y. M. C. A. workers will be held. All men actively engaged in religious work at the University will attend their Hall of Honor members who are in charge of Bible student classes will be present. Chancellor Frank Strong will preside. Many preparations have been made by the Y. W. C. A. for the observation of this world's week of prayer. Booths representing different nations where Christian Association work is carried on are being shown at Myers hall. Today girls play in the basketball hall, booths, Trinkets and novelty from China, Japan South America, and India, especially will be displayed. Mrs. Mary Carr Curtis, National Secretary of Methodist student girls, Miss Marie Russ, and Miss Lucy Dunbar will speak on prayer at the meeting in the Y. W. room in Fraser hall this afternoon. FOUR MEN COMPETE FOR ATHLETIC BOARD OFFICES Landon Laird, Sandy Hamilton, Bill Weidlein, and Herb Sommers are the candidates for the two positions held tonight. The election will be held tonight. ADD ABSENT TREATMENT COURSES FOR ENGINEERS Five new courses were added to the extension department of the School of Engineering last night at a faculty meeting. The new courses are in "Works and Management," in "Railway Surveying," and in "Recruitment Correcrete," for the group of graduate engineers, for the group of vocational studies in engineering for coal and salt miners were worked out. AMID DOUGHNUTS AND SMOKE ENGINEERS REVEL "Squis" Newby Dan Hazen, and "Bolly" Bolinger appeared as a "Trio Lately From Londor" gorgeously out in queues, old boots, and pajamas. To the thrill of "Hyperbolic" and the tune of "Clementine," 275 engineers assembled in Eagles' hall last fall to celebrate the frolics of the engineers' smoker. During the evening two boxing matches were staged, the first between Vic La Mer and Don Joseph, both Juniors in the College, the second in the Junior engineer, and Wayne Fowler, a junior College. Prof. H. A. Rice delivered the address of the evening: Apples, cider, and doughnuts were The local branch of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers will meet next Thursday night at 1801 Ohio at 7 o'clock. A sphinx weighing eleven tons, fourteen feet ong, six feet wide and six feet high will be placed in the third ward of the University of Pennsylvania Apples, cider, and doughnuts were served. Mechanicals to Meet WALLOP CORNHUSKERS IN SIGNAL PRACTICE Jayhawker Fight Imaginary Foes In Good Monday Workout THREE STILL ON SICK LIST Stuewe, Detwiler, and James on Side Lines But Hope Springs Eternal in Jayhawkers' Breasts "Cameron's next!" "Come on, fellows, snappy. Let's eat Harrigan!" Seven _yards_ were reeled off around right end. Like a flash the Jayhawker eleven, running signals last night, hit left tackle for ten yards. Cameron's next: Ten yards through right tackle piled the Kansans, and another first down was scored. it was getting dark. Only Leonard Frank's white sweater could be seen, and the Varsity was dog-tired. The usual time for closing practice had passed. But the coaches were not content. The ball stood ten yards from the goal line, the big crossbars rising high into the air two spans away. One plunge would push it over. A Touchdown Through Ross "Now, fellows, who are we going o get? Who are we going to push his touchdown through?" shouted he coach. The Varsity considered. But 'rank beat them to it. "Make it loss, fellows," he yelled. The ball was passed, Wilson, with a savage nap, slammed it into Sommers, and he shifty half race through the eft guard for ten yards and the duchdown. This was but a sample of the "pep" which characterized the Varsity play last night on McCook field. The whole team was working hard, showing little effect of the Washburn tame, and the coaches were well satisfied with the result of the night's workout. The team as a whole emerged in good condition after a gruelling contest with Crip Gray's eleven. Stueve's shoulder is slightly injured, Detwiler's game leg still bothers him James had not yet recovered from his attack of bronchitis, but the team as a whole loked well. Freshmen Taken On After an hour of strenuous drill in drop-kicking, punting, signal practice, and defense work, Jay Bond's bunch of tyranny huskies were sent for and made to bear the brunt of the attack of the Varsity line for the event. After a few minutes the freshman offense immediately after the first kickoff the regulars took possession of the oval, and worked it in their opponents' territory for the rest of the evening. Two touchdowns were made but it was not touchdowns which the Jayhawker team did. The Jayhawker a whole showed pretty fair form for a "Blue Monday" workout, and Mosse and Frank were satisfied. THIS IS OLD DUKE HE GOES LONG WAYS Duke Jerome is visiting at the Acacia house on his way from Chamailg, Illinois to Gallup, N. M. Duke is an old, battle-searched warrior, and the victorious hero of many a bloody battle. He is the pride of the Acacia fraternity in Champaign. The trip from Champaign to Gallup is too long to be made without a rest; accordingly the visit was aranged with the Kansas chapter of the Acacia faternity. A tag on the crate in which Duke was shipped was address to the Express Messenger and read: “This is Duke; he is a good old dog and is goering down to the water his can and give him some of the feed attached to his crate.” By the time Duke has reached his master H. H. Bartlett at the U. of. He has passed through seven states and traveled nearly two thousand miles. Instructor Called Home H. L. Liechtenstein, instructor in chemistry at McPherson today on account of the serious illness of his mother. The Weather Fair tonight and Wednesday Warmer. 9 p. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 7 s. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 5 a. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN EDITORIAL STAFF The official student paper of the University Kawasaki HERBERT FLAINT - - - - - Editor-in-Chief GLENDON ALYZIE - - - - Associate Editor JOHN C. MADDEEN - - - - Managing Editor MARGARET JURR - - - - Editor Editors LAMINERBER - - - - High School Editor RUSINESS STAFF EWAIN AELLE Advertising Manager CIRCULATION - Circulation - Advertising JE BOANRY Advertising REPORTIAL STAFF LUCY BAMER RANDOLPH KENNEDY SAD GAMEN HANKE HUNKEMOH Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the postoffice at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price $2.50 per year, if advance, one term, $1.50. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kans. Published in the afternoon five times a week by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of journalism. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate in a more mature way, so he will go further than merely printing the news by standing up for it. The university also play no favorites; to be clean, to be cheerful; to be kind and helpful; to be more serious problems to user heads; to all, to serve the students; to actually University. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1913 Assistant editors for today's paper, Glendon Alvine and Frank O'Sullivan. Newseditor, Henry Mulya assistant Joe Howard, Baird Lager, Burger Green, Leon Jeon Exchange editor, John M. Henry Society reporter, Lucille Hildinger Solomon says: "Let another man praise thee, and not thine own mouth; a stranger, and not thine own lips." TO OUR READERS Members of the football team receive valuable training from professional coaches just as members of debating teams get valuable training from faculty coaches, yet no student feels that these teams do not represent the undergraduate body of the University of Kansas. Through arrangements made last Wednesday night the University department of journalism is going to coach the students who are editing and publishing the Daily Kansan. We believe that both these students and our undergraduate readers will profit thereby. Yesterday the coaching began. The Daily Kansan will remain the official organ of the student body. Its policy will continue to be determined by the student Board; the news will be gathered, written and edited by students; any student in the University will be eligible to the Board; the paper will be financed as at present by students; and its columns will ever be open for student opinion on any subject. Herbert Flint, editor-in-chief, University Daily Kansan. Kansas teachers, not already in possession of one should obtain a degree. If nothing else is available take Fahrenheit or Centigrade. A cool day is coming for the teacher without a degree. GREEK REFORMATION GREEK SALE Wholesale condemnation of the Greek letter societies at the University sit because they are not what they were thirty years ago might be consistent in a stand pat community, but hardly in the progressive state of Kansas. The fraternities and sororites have kept pace with other Kansas institutions though they have, possibly, exceeded the speed limit. But nevertheless the suggestions offered by Doctor Elderin in his sermon on fraternities Sunday evening are worthy of consideration. Hardly anyone will deny that the excesses of the rushing season can be done away with. Rushing can and should be "sanitized." His suggestion that the societies sell their dining room furniture and eat at the restaurants and boarding houses is one that does not meet favor among the Greeks. If the minister had ever had to eat day after day in some of the student boarding houses or some college restaurants he might have greater sympathy for those students who hire their own cook and cheat the boarding houses of their profits. However, when the fraternities realize how strong is the feeling against secret societies among some of the good people of the state and learn that there is danger of "an enraged army of tax-payers storming Mount Oread and cleaning things up," it is reasonable to believe that they will be willing to make some of the changes suggested, in the interest not only of self preservation but also of usefulness to the University. FACTS FIRST. Jay E. House in this morning's Topeka Capital mentions the alleged "roughing" of Hardy, the Washburn negro halfback in the game last Saturday. Perhaps Mr. House should first see some of the Washburn players or perhaps Hardy for his side of the affair. McNish, a Washburn substitute, told a Daily Kansan reporter that Hardy went into the game with a bad knee, and that Hardy himself said the injury he received was not intentionally inflicted, and that he did not wish such an impression to get out. get out. We certainly agree with Mr House that if Hardy was intentionally put on Saturday a woeful lack of sportsmanship was shown. But the facts seem to point otherwise. KEEPING OUR STRIDE The Saturday matinee with our near neighbor Washburn enabled our "Shifters" to strike again the stride which is to give us supremacy over our conference rivals. True, the battles with Nebraska and Missouri will command from the Crimson and Blue warriors the exhibition of their best talents acquired from coach and foreign foe but the task, while requiring the best from the team, is far from being formidable. November 15 Kansas will prove on McCook field that the Jayhawkers are in the fight to win the Missouri Valley Championship Meanwhile, let us not underestimate Nebraska. To win from our guests next Saturday may tax our resources to the utmost, but we will win and win cleanly. certainly. Between now and Saturday, students should exert the "Moral suasion" that makes of an eleven a thorough fighting machine. A wholesome influence must be manifest, for from the student influence the football squad receives its mandates whether for good or ill. Oh! You Incandescent Tiger! Missouri in its frenzy to beat Kansas is frisking the cubs on an artificially lighted field. OUR DAILY QUIZ Use honor system and grade yourself II. CHRONOLOGY io Cronolono? It is that department of knowledge which relates to the reckoning of time; the term is "the Greek crono time," or discourse. 2—When did the era of the ancient Greeks and Moses. What were they when Did the era of the ancient Greeks begin? It began with the first year of the first Olympiad, which is calculated to have commenced at midsummer, 776 B. C. 3-What is the Mohamedan era? It consisted in the adoption by Julius Caesar of the Greek plan of reckoning, that the year should consist of 365 days. To dispose of the earth was doubled every fourth year; the day so interposed being called bissextile. It commences with the 13th of September, 622 A. D., the date of the flight of Mohammed from Mecca to Medina. What was the Julien Calendar? Until 1582, when Pope Gregory XIII abolished it, and instituted a new and improved calendar, which from his name, is known as the Gregorian calen- 5-What was the defect of the Julian calendar? It made the year about 11 months long and this extension amounted to three days in nearly 400 years. The date of the Didan calendar regimen in 1932 was 7 - When was the New-year's day changed from the 23rd of March to the 1st of January? This change was effected gradually. The lst of January was adopted legally by France, by land and Ireland, by England and Ireland at the change of the style, 1752. Because stars are fixed points in the heavens, while the sun daily shifts a little in its relative position, clocks invented for measuring time? When were the months named and arranged? The calendar months, twelve in number, received their names from the Romans, and were arranged by Julius Caesar almost as they now appear. The earliest known clock was invented by Henry de la Rue, Weyk, a German, during the 17th century, and powering in clocks was introduced by Huygens, a conceived Dutch astronomer. 9- Why should the earth require 24 hours to return to be opposite the sun, while it returns to be opposite a star in 23 hours, 56 minutes, and 4 seconds? Hark, hankt the lark at heaven's gate HARK, HARK! THE LARK -Shakespeare Hate, hark! the lark at heaven's ga- sings, in singles, the gins arise; His steel to water at those springs On chalked flowers that lies; And winkling Mary-buds begin To ope their golden eyes; Writing in script with pretty bin. My lady sweet arise; Arise, arise! shoot. "This are not Aviation," snib Noi, "It are Feetball." "Are you not equally dead when killed?" require Nogi who admire my educational replies. FROM THE LETTER BOX OF THE DAILY KANSAN "Than I am no longer shock," I deliver "Feetball are merely a playgame for boys while aviation are a severe science." Englewood, Nov. 7, 1913. Editor Daily Kansas; "O shocks!" I lolla. "Aviation should be stopped by law." In the issue of the Daily Kansas for the sixth is a statement from Prof. S. N. Patten with which I agree perfectly. I am fully convinced that the study of the languages weakens will power but strengthens tenacity of purpose. The loss results principally in that after a person has acquired some skill in translating he begins to translate the thought or idea and to express his thought or idea in the idioms or thoughts of other tongue, making a smooth translation, but in nine cases out of ten, failing to translate the spirit of the original; this failure to transcribe the spirit will-power is lost. Good examples both as to men and translations are furnished by Pope's Illiad and Dryden's Aeneas. "Early in afternoon 10,000 spectators enjoyed a very amusing accident. Hon. Fingers, who was lying part and was pitted down to field with loudly serrish. Nothing was injured except his bones, which was all broken." . . . My Cousin Nogi who studies newspapers for American education every morning (a m.) read me this itemized paragraph with alarmed eye- 10. 14 Second: The work is not strenuous enough. Will-power cannot be strengthened except in physical struggles or in the clash of a living active mind with mind. Tenacity of purpose can be strengthened without this, and this the study of language may do. More can be said in this line, especially against the modern languages. As a rule, the weak-willed seek these in the school work, though I do not mean that strong, active-willed persons are not found pursuing them for there are plenty of such. "FEETBALLING" N. F. Daum, '99. Hashimura Togo (per Wallace Irwin) writing to "Life" asks whether "feetballing are the most fashionable form of death," and proceeds with the answer in the following words: Dear Sir: “Not similarly,” I depose chivalrously “There is something fancy & famus about being killed by airships. But when you are murdered by feetball there is no excuse, but Bassararth earth is more glorious than any other disease. When a taxi-cab graduate pay 550$ to Shaughterac Aviation School his course of instruction should include one pair leather pajamas and one handsomely engraved death certificate. With immediate quickness he comes favorite host. Obituary Editor John Gowle who come out into grounds frequently for see how he is getting along. This hero go uply and downly in sight of Newport who expect to go to his funeral. In meantime he meets and married blondish lady who will look well in black and Life Insurance takes away his potency already supposed to die. Thusly even the audience are deliciously prepared. Newport who give flighty exhibition before Annual Clamakeh and Ghost Dance of Physical Research Society he gains 5000$ prize by showing how airships can be flew upside down and burst neck while doing so. Great excitement to telegram your morning portrait of dead aviator, portrait of inventor, portrait of widow, portrait of Harold McCormick, Count Zippelin, Harry Thaw and other famous flights are published in 5 languages. ‘Yesterday’s accident,’ says news-print, ‘show that aviation are rapidly approaching perfection, because Hueckleback, Huckleback, came greatly than any other death this week. Prof. Alec Graham Bell, when interviewed about it, say, “A temendous improvement!” Hon. Huckleback’s life were devoted to science and his death was enjoyed by all. He were the 11,292nd man killed by aviation this year, ready passing proud record of 1913 Thaw do move in spite of muck knives. 100 Hart Schaffner & Marx YOU'LL realize, as soon as you see these dress suits, that the best way to get the exactly-right thing in such clothes is to buy them ready made. Without considering the fact that, for similar quality in fabric,lining,tailoring,you'll have to pay about double our prices if you get the clothes made to measure, the truth is that you'll get better clothes better style,better finish better fit. dress clothes are here ready to wear; made for young men in special styles, with all the new features. The best clothes ever made. Dress suits $35 to $50. ANNOUNCEMENTS PECKHAM'S Hart Schaffner & Marx Freshman Finance committee meets in 311, Fraser Tuesday afternoon at 4:45. "Jahawker" business, A. Watters, chairman. This store is the home of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes Barker Linen Collars CALENDAR Week of Nov. 10-15, 1913 Tuesday 1:00 Chapel, Musical program. 2:30 Entomological Club, (Mu.) 3-4 Chancellor's open hour to faculty 3:30 Economics Seminar, (Lib.) 7:30 Glee club Session, (Fra.) 7:30 Christian Science Society, (Myers hall) 8:15 Violin recital, Otto Meyer, (Fraser) Wednesday 4:30 Mining journal, (201 Ha.) 4:30 Cercle Francais, (306 Fra) 7:30 Band rehearsal, Fraser) 7:30 Hawk Dramatic Club, (110 Fraser) 7:30 Mandolin Club rehearsal, (116 Fraser). Thursday 4:30 Al Eteneo Club, (306 Fra.) 4:30 Chemical Club, (Chem. 203.) 7:30 Amere Social Mech. Eng. (101 Ohio) 7:30 Orchestra practice, (Fra.) 4:30 Amer. Inst. Elec. Eng. (101 Murray) 7:30 Greek Symposium, "Why We Admire Homer," Professor Wilcox, (1605 Vt. St.) 8:00 K. U. Debating Society, (313 Fraser) Friday 11:00 Chapel, Mr. W. C. Lansdon, of Salina 8-12 Junior class dance. Saturday 3:00 Football K. u. vs. Nebraska, (MCook field) 8-12 Student Council dance. Future Events Nov.15 Student Council Dance, Robinson gymnasium, 8-12 p.m. Nov.18 Picnic recital, Heniot Levy. (Fraser). Nov.22 Bophum Bomber, 8-12 Nov.23 Y. M.-Y. W. joint meeting in chapel, 3:30. Football Schedule Football Schedule Nov. 15—Nebraska on McCook. Nov. 22—Missouri at Columbia. The seniors at Chicago have all agreed to grow mustaches and use a uniform class pipe with the numerals "14" upon them. All announcements or items for the University calendar either for the coming week or for future events should be given to Mr. Cronemeyer, at the department of journalism office, by 4:30 p.m. Friday. It is desired to make the calendar a complete schedule of University events and the co-operation of those interested is requested. The Glee Clubs of the Universities of Minneapolis and Nebraska are planning to take trips to the World's Exposition at San Francisco in A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE PROPS. 715 Massachusetts Street Fresh Oysters, Regular Meals, Short Orders, Confectionery, Cigars, Etc. Lowney's Chocolates McColloch's Drug Store Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 Vermont Phones 139 ROYAL ROCHESTER Chailing dishes, casseroles, coffee machines and percolators. The finest line of metal and wood serving trays in the city. KENNEDY & ERNST 829 MASS. ST. PHONES 341 - SAVE THE PIECES We have added Lens Grinding Machinery to our Optical department. Any Lens Duplicated Glasses Fitted. HESTER Jeweler and Optician LAWRENCE Business College Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. W. H. Quakenbush, Pres.; E. S. Weatherby, Supt. W. E. MOAK, Prop. Taxicabs, Hacks, Livery Baggage Hauled Both Phones 148 Eldridge House Stable The College Inn Barber BERT WADHAMS LA SALLE LA SALLE A New lightweight, Deep Foilated ARROW COLLAR 2 for 24 Cents Body & Co. Arrow Shirts A New Lightweight, Deep Foled ARROW COLLAR 2 for 25 Cents Cinnett, Peabody & Co. Arrow Shirts Notice Students Notice Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 501, Home 180 O. P. Leonard's Fantatiorum is on the job again this year. We Give Club Rates 841 Mass. St. Upstairs. Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Lawrence Pantatorium 2 W. Warren Both Phones 500 A. P. CAMBRIAN & CO. TRADE SPALDING MARK A. D. 1824 A "Square Deal" for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantee each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding TradeMark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. A. G. SPALDING & BROS. 1120 Grand Ave. Kansas City, Mo. Send for our Catalogue Send for our Catalogue. FOR TAXI PHONES 12 We have some good values in Pennants Pictures & Posters to close out J. A. Keeler 939 MASS. Both men and women are being served in Fraser hall lunch room— Adv. 38-5c UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN STUDENTS LOAFED IN ANCIENT GREECE TOO Leisurely Resting on Parkbenches, They Listened to Lectures, Prof. M. W. Sterling Says. That the word "student" is derived from the Greek word meaning "leisure" seems to throw some light on the attitude of the students in general these days, thinks Prof. M. W. Sterling of the Greek department. "The choosing of such a name was perfect logical because in the ancient days students carried on their work in parks, lying down on the grass, Professor Sterling today "Moreover, only people of leisure could afford to be students. "The word by which these benches were known means the 'place where people spent their leisure time.' Hence, the word for school might be derived from the word expressing the place where the school was held." Social Notes Pi Beta Phi has announced a chocolate for Saturday morning from 10 to 12 in honor of the visiting Pi Phis from Nebraska. --p. m. until 7 p. m. Short orders at any hour from 7 a. m. until midnight. Club dinners served to any number at any time. Lunches delivered when you want them. The freshmen members of the Alpha Delta Pi sorority will entertain their upperclassmen Wednesday night. Misses Lucile and Olive Brown entertained the members of the Alpha Delta Pi sorority and their guests Saturday evening with a dance at Brown's farm. After the 6 o'clock dinner the evening was sent at whist and dancing. About fifty guests were present. . . . . Miss Greissinger entertained the members of her fresh music classes informally Saturday evening. Professor Dunlap entertained the Fortnightly Club at his home Saturday night. . . . The Achoth sorority entertained the members of the Acacia fraternity with a dinner whist Friday evening at the chapter house. The Sigma Chi fraternity entertained with a party at the chapter house Friday night. The guests were Helen Crane, Irma Wilhelmi, Irene Johnson, Mabel Thornton, Maud Miller, Ethel Keeler, Rowena Wilkinson, Edith Cubbison, Julian, Senhouse, Doris Isles, Alice Coors, Mary Russell, Cora Shinn, Betty Brown, Blanche Simons, Margaret Hughes, Linnie Sheets, Agnes Engel, Virginia Lucina, and Elfrida Fischer. The out of town guests were Miss Katherine Albaugh, Topeka; Misa Muriel Whitney, Kansas; Ruth Foster Moissier, Miss Dorothy Newton; Newton; Mita Id Glaen, Topka, Mr Frank McFarland and Mr, Hall Somers of Newton. Prof. and Mrs. C, C. Young and Prof. and Mrs. De Witt Croissant were the chaperones for the evening. Professor and Mrs. Arthur Mitchell entertained the members of the logic class, Saturday night, at their home on West Pinkney street. Have You Visited * * The Sigma Delta Phi fraternity entertained with a dancing paty at the chapter house Friday night. The guesses were Ruth Lillis, Gertrude Russell, Erba Kaull, Gern Wilson, Helen Stout, Agnes Moses, Genevieve Huffman, Helen DeMuth, Vianm Hammond, Celebe Eriah, Laura Stewart, Aldine Cady, Mona Smith, Lilligan Mae Nelson, Pearl Smith, Lilligan Lerman, Clara Powell, Zema Goes of Gas City and Bernice Benson of ElDorado. Prof. and Mrs. E. T. Stimpson chaperoned. Thetas Initiate. The Kappa Alpha Theta sorority held initiation Saturday for the following; Helen Topping Ida Perry Mabel Brewell, Irene Henshall, Louise Hedrick, Marjory Hires, Katherine Keiser, Barbara Barah, Caroline Mcp. m. until 7 p. m. Short orders at any hour from 7 a. m. until midnight. Club dinners served to any number at any time. Lunches delivered when you want them. THE OREAD TEA ROOM Mrs. L. S. Hayes A new cafeteria conducted along modern lines. We cater to University trade and are equipped to serve you a meal for 4c or up to any amount. Dinner is served from 5 We have the largest variety of foods in town We feature our sandwiches. The cleanest place you ever visited. A place where ladies and gentlemen Get Acquainted With The Chef Nutt, Mary McClure Lila Atkinson, and Francis Sawyer. are waited on by ladies and gentlemen. Soda fountain, candies and cigars. Ou of town guests were Miss Lois Harger, Abilene; Miss Vert Atkinson; Mrs. Claude, Sowers, Kansas and Miss Helen Gleisner, Abilene; Sigma Nu Party. The Sigma Nu fraternity gave a party downtown Friday evening. The guests were Francis Rigly, Helen Topping, Cora Shim, Elizabeth Matthew Thomas, John Mahan, Jobhath Dawson, Irene Henshall, David Dawson, Rose Der, Dena Davis, Nellie May Schall, Edna Bigelow, Nannette Ferguson, Grace Wilson, Dorothy McKown, Blanche Simons, Lucile Sage, Irene Lucas, Herlen Hersberger, Lillian Helms, Mary Atkinson, Lena Follet, Amis Wilson of Tonganoxie and Miss Ryan of Olatte were out of town guests. * * The Alpha Chi Sigma fraternity entertained with a smoker Friday night at the chapter house for the chemical engineers, the students specializing in chemistry in the College and the members of the chemistry faculty. Sixty guests were present. Sigma Kappas Initiate The Sigma Kappa sorority held initiation for the freshman girls Saturday night. They were Violet Dunn, Concordia; Nicky Smith, Burlington, and Bertha Anderson, pendant to out of town guests Ruth Lambert, Mabel Anderson, Alma Estep, and Marguerite McClellan. Out of town guests: Belle Meade, Marion Ellis, Genevieve Riley, Marjorie Crooks, Anna Carpenter, Lucille Lambert, Dorothy Bandy, Mary Vant Vector, Frances Perry, Wintifred Vanuch, Macleay Fred Haddock, Laymont Way, Charles Shaeffer, L. Wuey, and Wayte C. Lytle. The other guests included Thomas Boyd, Hazel Gould, Davida Sawtell, Charlotte Smart, Helen Herberschger, Hassell Templeton, Bernita Elgin, Marie Singh, Michael Peirson, Rebecca Cooper, Ruth Pears, Heen Pears, Lilian Kirkchoff, Thelma Welsh, Bérence Butts, Glavius Gibb and Isabell Gibb. The Sigma Alpha Epsilon frater- nity entertained with a dance Satur- tum S. A. E. Dance. The patrons and patronesses were Mrs. and M.A. J. Bandy. Managed City by Frank H. GIRLS' TAM O'SHANTERS We Invite Inspection bart of Topeka; Prof. and Mrs. Kester; Mrs, Sinclair of Larence and Mr. Chas. L. Carter, of Kansas City, Mo AMUSEMENTS Shubert Theater JOHNSON & CARL "Where you buy your guaranteed gloves." We only bought two dozen so you better hurry $1.50 In this morning. Exclusive patterns in SCOTCH PLAIDS Lew Fields—he of the ponderous smile, mixed metaphor and feet that simply refuse to remain quiet—will greet his admirers at the Shuibert theater for one week commencing Nov. 9th, in a new laughing vehicle, "All Aboard." The German comedian and his organization of merry makers come direct from an allsummer run at the Lew Fields Roof Garden and Lew Fields Theater, New York, and a six week's engagement at the American Music Hall in Chicago.—Adv. CARL The Oread Tea Room opens monday 11:30 a. m. at 1241 Adrew—Adv. Hawk Dramatic Club meets tonight 7:30, room 110 Fraser, election of officers. The Cooley Club of the School of Law will meet tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 in Green hall. All members are requested to be present. University Council meets in Fraser 110, Thursday 4:30 p. m. Frank Strong, Chancellor. LOST—Conklin self-filler fountain pen with two gold bands around barrel, Saturday on campus. Call 1574 Bell Gee. P.O. Bunn. 421- The Men's Student Council will meet tonight at 7:30 instead of 7 o'clock. Coffee--Don't blame the coffee if it's bad. Perhaps it's the water. Make it of distilled water, McNish, Phones 198—Adv. 39-2 LOST-Swedish grammar. Leave at 40-3 Kansan office. Kalin. This is Pennant Week at Griggs! It isn't too early to see a great variety of suggestions for holiday presents at Wolf's Book Store... 40-2 Adv. The Oread Tea Room opens on Monday 11:30 a.m. at 1241 Iadre —Adv Reynolds Brothers will be open after the dance.'-Adv. 40-1 When you're on the hill drop in to the Oread Oread Tea, Room 124. Oread. —Aadw This is Pennant Week at Griggs! maple caramels with or without nuts dipped at Wiedemann's.—Adv. REPAIRING The College Jeweler Gustafson We like to do little jobs of repairing Call for our catalogue of K. U. and fraternity novelties. We have the most complete line in Lawrence Bowersock Theatre Friday--Nov.-14 THE The Nation Wide Musical Success Franc C. Payne Inc., presents With 60 people 60 Special Orchestra, 12 Musicians A Rose Bud Garden of Girls Each Girl a Fashion Plate ROSE MAID Cast and Beauty Chorus Beyond Criticism PRICES: Velvet THE SMOOTHEST TOBACCO Parquet $2.00 $1.50 $1.00 Balcony $4.00 $1.00 Balcony $7.75 NOTE:-Curtain 8:15 p. m. Those come in after curtain goes up will not be seated until after the first act. Seats on Sale at Woodward & Co. Thursday, Nov. 13 at 8 o'clock See the New Parker Self-Filling Fountain Pen Office Supplies, Typewriters F. I. CARTER 025 Mass. Bell phone 108 1025 Mass. Bell phone 1051 Come on Down to JIM'S Tonight 1161 Mass. St. Come on Down Woodward's "Round Corner" soda fountain. Best drinks ever put out. Hot and cold dainties--Adv. 39-3 WA.E. 1913 Velvet TOBACCO A CHECKMATE to your smoke that bites and burns! Velvet—the selected tender middle leaf—aged in the leaf over two years—producing a mellowness that only the measured pace of time can encompass. A flavor and smoothness tremendously good. Pipe smoking with Velvet is a revelation—proving that time only can make tobacco what we would all have it--smooth. "Your Movel!" At all dealers. Leggitt's Myers Tobacco Co. Full $10^{c}$ 2 oz. Tins PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. MCGONNELLE, Physician and Homer. Home of Dr. Henderson, 1436 Tenn. Hall, Houston, TX. Residence, 1436 Tenn. Hall, Houston, TX. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist Office 862 Mass. St. Phone 800-795-3456 HARRY REDING M. D. Eye, ear, nose Bones. Phones 513,生活 513,A A Bldg. Bones. Phones 513,生活 513,A A Bldg. G. A. HAMMAN M. D. E.eye, ear, and satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Building. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BRYAN, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. J. R. BECHTEL, D. M., D. O. 833 Mass Abbottstreet Street, M.D., phone and office Q. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Dissase of Burl St. Phone 205-734-1231, Residence, 1201 Burl St. Phone 205-734-1231 DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over squires Studio. Both phones. DR. II T JONES, Room 12M A. A. Bldg. Residence 1130 Tenn. Phone 2115. DR. BURT R. WHITE Oregon Osteopath Phones, Bell 938. Home 257. Office, 745 Mass. 8t. CLASSIFIED T. Gillippe, M. D. Ouse, corner Vermont 905. Residence, 728 Indiana St. Phones 906 Barbers E. J. Blair, Physician and Surgeon, Office and residence, 915 Mass. St, Office hours: 7:00 to 9:00 a.m., 12:00 to 4 p.m. and 7:00 to 8 p.m. Phones B4, Bell 45, House 131. Plumbers Frank Illar's Barber Shop. 1025 Mass. Two good barbers. Satisfaction assured. J. C. Houk's Barber Shop. 913 Mass. Barber shops with chairs; chairs; never have to wait. Razors肩。 Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co., for gas Phones 659, Mazda lamps. 637. Mass. Phones 658. Ladies Tailors Mrs. Ellison Dressmaking and Ladies Miss. Josephs & Cars. Phones 2411, over Johnson & Carli. Ladies Tailoring and Dressmaking. Gowns for all occasions. All work guaranteed. B. Daily, 014 Mass. Sanitary cleaning establishment in connection. Phone 421 Bell. Lawrence bowling School. Leadley 'tailgating' for the state championship. Power 500. Miss Powers; M. C. McChernison. Phone 500. Hair Dressers Sporting Goods D & M sporting goods and athletic supplies. Denied & Ernst, $25 Mass. St. Phones. $40 per person. Miscellaneous Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-gifts, "Martiello menu" preparations, haircuts 51-51. The Select Hair Dressing Shop, 927 Mass St. Bring your shoes to Fornells, for guaranteed shoe repairing. Foremel, 1017 Mass. Hiahawa Cafe for regular meals, lunch and dinner when down town. Open after the show. Prices reasonable, work the best. List us at: 351-248-2671 or info@thebrownco.com. 493 Barn & Co. or 816 Mass. Inc. 493 Barn & Co. Queen City College. System and sowing machines. Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 K. School, Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 K. Bull One total meal no risk, small investment, William W. T. Williams and homemade cigar. Ed. W. Parsons, Engrener, Watchmaker and Tel. 717-717. Males and Jewelry, Bell Phone 717-717. Males I have a nice line of plain china for painting; I buy some from the East Side Northport 783 Mass. St. at upstairs. I also buy some from the East Side Northport 783 Mass. St. at upstairs. For rent. A nice furnished room, 2 closets, and modern in every respect. 1317 Ohio. 1318 Ohio. K. U. PANTATORIUM AND DYE WORKS Student Rates: See Our Solicitors Cleaning and Ladies's Work Specialty. JACK FELLERTON 1400 Louisiana Phones: Bell, 1400; Home, 140 FeaturingMilk Chocolates "SWEDE" Phones 540 W. A. Guenther Phones 226 721 Liesn Give Us a Trial Brunswick Bowling Alley Four Regulation Allies with loop-the-loop return. 714 Mass. 714 Mass. When calling for a good brand of 5c CIGARS SMOKE Robert Hudson, Pierson's Hand Made At all first class dealers Lawrence Transfer Co. Trunk Hauling Phone 15 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OVERCOAT 1913 BYWEN- On the overcoat question we're the wise bird we know it from A to Z because we've studied the output this season of the best overcoat manufacturers just as you study your business problems. The best is not confined to any one maker, but THIS PARTICULAR overcoat contains more good ideas for the price than any overcoat on the market this fall. The price is $20. Others $10 to $35. Ober's HEAD TO TOE OUT FITTERS SAM S. SHUBERT Matinees Wednesday and Saturday LEW FIELDS IN "All Abroad" PROTSCH The College Tailor KANSAS RUNS LAST IN CROSS COUNTRY MEET Crippled Team Takes Dust From Ames, Missouri, And Nebraska Handicapped by the loss of Jack Malcolmson one of their star twomilers, and by the fact that they were forced to race five men in the Missouri Valley Cross-Country race at Lincoln Saturday to the other schools' six, the Kansas Jayhawkers went down into a deficit before the hands of Coach Angies and were forced to content themselves with fourth and last place in the big event. The team returned to the campus last night. A week before the time set for the big contest, Kansas looked to have a team individually as strong as any other five in the Missouri Valley. With Edwards and Malcolmson as leaders, and Vermillion, Spreier, and Dewaual to back them up, Captain Hazen's squaw appeared ahead of them, and they bunch. But the Jayhawkers were overtaken by misfortune. Malcolmson, the gamest little sprinter in the Valley, fractured his ankle. Vermillion was seized with a bad cold. Hard luck was on the trail of the Kansans. But this wail of woe should in no way take the credit away from any of the more fortunate contenders. Ames deserves the victory—and won it. Missouri took second, and Nebraska third. Snyder the Iowa captain, virtually won the race for his men when he led all the runners into the stadium at the close of the run. Goetze, a Cornhusker, finished second, but a few yards behind the Ames man. Then came two more Iowa Aggies in quick succession, and the result of the race was no longer in doubt. The finish was extremely close, but a few yards separating the first four candidates. Edwards was the first Kansas man to finish, the blonde athlete pulling in eighth behind Snyder. Dewauo so narrated, eleventh in rank, Ross came twentieth, Spreier two-first, and Vermillion twenty-second. The last three Kansas runners fought it out between themselves. The course was not difficult, consisting in the main of straight stretches along a country road, varied by a single lap across a viaduct. The finish was in the middle of the strait at the beginning of the intermission between halves. The course was five miles long. Read your own KANSAN. The final standing of the teams was: Ames, 22 points, first; Missouri, 52 points, second; Nebraska, 58 points, fourth; Kansas, 68 points, fifth. FISCHER'S SHOES ARE GOOD SHOES Yes, They're Here Those Patent Leather low heel, hand turn sole, Party Pumps, so popular among young ladies this season- Fischer's $3.50 SPALDING SWEATERS are exclusive. They look right and they are all wool. See our special garment for ladies. CARROLS SMITH'S NEWS DEPOT 709 Mass. Phones 608 Take lunch at the Oread Tea Room Monday, 1241 Iored—Adv. Take lunch at the Oread Tea Room Monday, 1241 Iadre—Adv. Caramel time at Wiedemann's— Adv. This is Pennant Week at Grigsby This is Pennant Week at Grigsby This is Pennant Week at Griggs! K. U. pennants, arm bands, football buttons and banners for the game Saturday at Boyles, 725 Mass. —Adv. 42-2 New lot of Nebraska and K. U. pennants just in at Boyles—Ay- dys. This is Pennant Week at Griggs! This is Pennant Week at Griggs! LOST—One student enterprise ticket on athletic field Saturday. Return to Irene Howart, 1234 Tenn. Bell 1784. 42-1 LOST—Pair noseglasses in black Case. Return to Florence Shade, 1224 Ohio. Bell 2079. 42-1 K. U. and Nebraska pennants for the game Saturday at Boyles, 725 Mass—Adv. 42-2 This is Pennant Week at Griggs! Books, booklets, letters, wall mottoes, and many other articles for presents at Wolf's Book Store.—40-2 Adv. Try the lunch counter in the basement of Fraser last—Adv. 38-56 This is Pennant Week at Griggs! The Kappa Sigs will give a dance at the chapter house Friday, Nov. 14. Mrs. C. P. Schmidt spen Sunday with her daughter, Willa, at the Achoch house. This is Pennant Week at Griggs! be beat... Adv. 40-11 that chile at Reynolds Bros, can't Take lunch at the Oread Tea Room Monday, 1241 Oread—Adv. When you're on the hill drop in at the new Oread Tea Room, 1241 Oread.—Adv. Plain caramels, nut caramels, and dipped caramels at Wiedemann's.— Adv. LOST-Kappa Alpha Theta pin; plain gold. Between journalism building and 1116 Khiana or near Fowler shops. Eleanor Keith, Bell phone 295. 40-1* This is Pennant Week at Griggs! IN THIS MORNING A big shipment of "De Luxe" caps--in the new Scotch Plaids" and plain greys. $1.50 Pleased to show you JOHNSON & CARL The WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Corner Mass. and Quincy Sts. Issues its own Letters of Credit and Travellers Checks. The only way to carry your money in safety. Banking of all kinds solicited. Surplus $100,000 P We Invite Comparison We KNOW We Have The Finest Pennants Made We Want You to Know It Also. GRIGGS 827 Mass. T S KANSAS—NEBRASKA GAME Seats Are Selling Fast Get Your Seats Now A Record Crowd Will Witness This Big Game Box Seats, $2.00. With Student Ticket, $1.00. Owing to the great demand for reserved seats, general admission tickets ($1.00) will be sold for for grand stand only. Capacity about 900. Sections GG and HH are held for University Girls and Ladies with escorts, student ticket holders, and Faculty, student ticket holders. Tickets will be given at the gate, which will entitle holder to seats in these sections, in exchange for coupon 5. Sections AA, BB, II and JJ have been thrown on reserve at same price as south Bleachers. $1.50. Each ticket has the number of the gate admitting to that section and each gate is indicated by a number above it. Entrance to Sections I to R inclusive through gate 1 Entrance to Sections A to H inclusive through gate 2 Entrance to Boxes Section 1-20 inclusive through gate 3 Entrance to Boxes Sections 21-40 inclusive through gate 4 Entrance to Bleacher Sections AA to JJ inclusive through gate 5 Entrance to Grand Stand through gate 5 Present Tickets at Proper Entrance Gates open at 1:15 p. m. Game starts at 2:45 p. m. Get your tickets now. On sale at Manager's Office in Robinson Gym, room 201; and at Carroll's. First come, first served. No tickets held. Mail orders will receive prompt attention if accompanied by money or negotiable paper, including 12 cents for registering return of tickets. STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 12.1918 COME ON, BOYS, WE'RE WITH YOU! NUMBER 43 DEMANDS FOR TICKETS COME IN BY HUNDREDS Application For Nebraska Seats Keeps Manager Busy Till Late NO TRAINING TRIP FOR TEAM Team Will Not Go To "Hunter House" This Year—Hamilton Wants More Ushers Buried under hundreds of applications for tickets to the Kansas-Nebraska game, Manager Hamilton worked until 11 o'clock last night in his office, trying to accommodate the large crowd of seat-seekers, and at the same time not to overtax the sitting capacity of McCook field. His prophecy that the attendance Saturday would exceed that at the Missouri game *last fall* seems already borne out, and now the sole worry of the athletic management is to provide for everyone. "Standing room only" will probably be the order of events by tomorrow. The Varsity eleven took a comparatively light workout last night; today and tomorrow harder work will be the rule. Signal practice was held followed by a workout of the two punters, a light drill in running back kicks, and serimage with the freshmen. Team Takes Light Workout UNIVERSITY TO EXAMINE TOPEKA WATER SUPPLY Manager Wants More Ushers What is probably the largest under- taking for the University laboratories up to date will be the analysis of water of all the wells at Tapka. The Kansan Board members were guests of Mrs. Hayes at the Oread Tea Room last night at six o'clock dinner. The members were royally entertained with a good dinner and music in the new cafe. From the doors of their private room, came sounds something like nine rahs for the hostess, the same for the eats, and the chef, Clairne and candy fini- tured to treat and the board adjourned to meet later at the Kansan office for the regular weekly meeting. Fourteen members were present. KANSAN BOARD DINES AT HAYES' OREAD TEA ROOM There will be no training trip this year before the Missouri game, it was announced yesterday. In seasons past it has been the custom for the coaches to take the eleven to some out of the way place in the country two days before the big battle, and give it a chance to take a thorough rest. In 1911 the squad went to Coach Mosse's farm, just outside of Leavenworth. Last the "huanted house" three miles northwest of town accommodated the athletics it has been decided, howar, that this season the boys will stay at home, and will probably leave for Columbia Friday night in a special car, as they did for the Oklahoma trip. manager. Marmal Hamilton today issued a call for more users to handle the crowd at the Nebraska game. The Kansas National Guard has valiantly performed in this service in every game so far this season, but Saturday's crowd is expected to be filled by aspirants for these positions should report at the Manager's office in Robinson gymnasium at 8 o'clock Thursday evening. Prof. C. C. Young will cooperate with the Board of Health in this work and with University assistance several thousand dollars will be saved from its expenses of $2000 or more well from which samples must be taken. Frank Schneider who is in charge of the social survey in Topeka will be here Saturday morning to con- nounce the University men to plan the work. GLEE CLUB WILL TOUR KANSAS OVER HOLIDAYS The Glee club will make a tour of Kansas and a part of Oklahoma durin the holidays according to Manager Sowers. It is probable that a part of the team also made the trip. Definite plans, however, have not been fully made. NO NEW DRAMATIC SOCIETY NEED APPLY University Council Limits Campus Thespian Activities To Hawk Club TWO ORGANIZATIONS UNITED THE DOMINANT STRAIN Masque and Thespian Become Hawk —First Request Under New Arrangement Denied The University Council approved the union of the Masque and the Thespian Dramatic Clubs into the Hawk Club at its meeting last night and will refuse to recognize any other dramatic society. This limits University dramatics to the activities of the Hawk club. PUNCH SPOT MERMAXXA PAY TO STUDY BUT NOUSE AT MEALTIMES WE CAN THINK OF ONLY IT WHO BEDS NOT AFERN BUT OF THE GAME AND A AND A AND A! PROPS FOR OVERTAL THINKING, ABOUT THE GAME WITH ONLY ONE THOUGHT MALLOY The action of the University Council is in accordance with the stand taken by Chancellor Frank Strong in his opening address this The request of a group of men students for permission to give a male musical comedy on the campus and over the state was refused by the Council last night in accordance with the new ruling. TO TELL GREEK STUDENTS WHY WE LIKE OLD HOMER Prof. F. R. Hesser left for Concordia last night to investigate sewer conditions. Professor Blackmar is a member of the society's advisory board and is prominent in the affairs of the organization. The congress will take up the question of the conservation of lands, forests and water power Officers for the Hawk Dramatic club were elected last night at a meeting in Fraser hall. The officers are Clarence Sower presidents, president; Donald Burnett, vice-president and stage manager; Helen Woolsey, secretary and treasurer; Russell Clark, general manager; William Howden, assistant general manager, and Albert Teed, advertising manager. Dean F. W. Blackmar has been appointed a delegate to the Fifth National Conservation Congress at Washington, November 18 to 20. He will represent the American Economic Society. "Only a general outline of this year's work was discussed at the meeting," said Russell Clark this morning, "Another meeting will be scheduled and by that time a constitution and by-laws will have been prepared." The Greek Symposium will meet tonight at Prof. A. M. Willecox's residence, 1050 Venice street. Profesors are invited to lecture on "Why We Admire Homer." A suitable pin is planned for the club. ZOOLOGY STUDENTS ORGANIZE SOCIETY Mrs. S. B. Johnson of Frothburg, Maryland, is visiting Mrs. C. A. Haskins for a few weeks. Scientists Form New Club And Elect Ralph Swarts President A new zoology club composed of professors and advanced students was organized last night at Fasen hall. It will be known as the Snow Zoology Club and will meet once a month. Ralph Swarts was elected president, Vic householder, vice-president, provence Hagau secretary paper on the subject of biology was read by Vic Householder. DEAN BLACKMAR TO VISIT CONSERVATION CONGRESS The following persons are charter members of the club: Remington Kellogg, Inez Smith, Lucile Witte, Amanda Neuschwanger, Florence S. Hague, Nell Taylor, Sarah Neuschwanger, Mimie Himpel, Professor Robertson, Dix Teacheron, Chas. G. Williams, Professor Baugartner, V. Householder, Nadine Nowlin, Cora Downs, and Ralph Swarts. STUDENTS TO RALLY AFTER SENIOR SMOKER All Classes Are to Gather In South Park at 10:30 Tonight A big football rally for the Nebraska game is planned for tonight, after the senior smoker. The seniors will go in a body to south park after the smoker is ended about 10:30 o'clock, where they will meet the members of the other classes. The band will be out and singing, the crowd will sing and cheering. A big bonfire downwille will finish the rally. "This will be the big rally for the Nebraska game," said Webb Holloway, president of the senior class, "and everyone should attend." "Uncle Jimmy" Green, the best football fan of them all, will conclude the senior smoker with his great prophecy. "Uncle Jimmy" is sure he can't be mistaken this way, but it coaches Mosse and Frank, and ExCoach Kennedy, will also speak on football at the smoker. The smoker will begin at 7:30 in the Eagles' hall. Apples and good cigars will constitute refreshments. Vic LeMar and Don Joseph will stage a boxing match, Early and Humes will wristle, Dingman and Smith will box, and a quartet from the Glee club will furnish vocal music. Sweed Wilson will be present with his banjo, "Parson" Spotts and Russell Clark will speak. The football talks will close the evening. The University Council laid down definite rules yesterday to apply to the student government organizations. FACULTY FIXES POWER OF STUDENT COUNCILS Following are the faculty rules: 1. That the Student Council may pass general rules with respect to student conduct, provided such rules do not conflict with any action which has been or may be taken by the University Council, and provided that all legislation by either University Council involving a punishment shall be appealed by the Chancellor or Board of Administration before becoming effective. 2. That the Student Council shall have and it shall be its duty to investigate all cases of violation of general rules relating to student conduct, whether such rules have been made by the University Council or by Student Councils and to decide in such case what penalty shall be imposed. All such处罚 shall be reported to the decisions shall be reported four hours, Chancellor within two hours, it shall then become the duty of the proper authorities to execute them. ALL TOGETHER, PULL! Adopts Rules That Outline Privileges Of Organizations For First Time That it be understood that these rules do not preclude the rights of the Chancellor to exercise disciplinary authority in case of emergency It's up to you, Mr. and Miss Student, to wake up this week and pull for victory over both Nebraska and Missouri as you have never pulled before. The psychological effect of the united effort of more than two thousand loyal students is beyond estimation. Shall we beat them both? Just watch us! Although hopes for an "All-Victorious" were dimmed by the Oklahoma disaster, we still have the inside track for the Missouri Valley Championship. Incidentally we are basing our hopes on the best lot of beef and courage that has ever represented Kansas. Of course, it will not cause any wonder if we beat both Nebraska and Missouri. We might do it and still be tolerated in the best of society. But the glorious thing about football is that just before the big games every student has his mind centered upon one thing. The students get together and pull together; every atom of student strength is pulling the ball toward our opponents' goal. Our one thought is victory. Now that Kansas students have seen what a crippled team can do to the Ichabods, it is high time that we "whoop it up" for the Nebraska and Missouri games. The Cornhuskers are due on McCook field Saturday, and a week from that date we struggle with the Tigers at Columbia LEGAL SOCIETIES WILL CONVENE ON OREAD It's up to you students to boost during these two weeks: as you never have before. Cheaply bought victories are never valued. Get into the game as the boys in the boys in the padded suits do! Criminologists, Lawyers, and Jurists To Hold Three Days Session. Begins Thursday Beginning tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock and continuing through Saturday, Lawrence will be hostess to three of the most important legal societies of the state of Kansas. The organizations which will hold their joint session in the various buildings on Mt. Oread are the Kansas Conference of Charities and the Copehack Society of Criminal Law and Criminology and the Probate Judges' Association of the state of Kansas. Dean Frank W. Blackmar, head of the Graduate School will preside at the joint session Thursday evening in Snow hall. At 12:30 o'clock on Friday the only full day of the conference, a luncheon will be served to the members and invited guests of the oratory. The event is under the organic science department under the supervision of Dr. Edna Day. The session will close with a business meeting of the three associations on Saturday morning leaving the remainder of the day free for those who desire to see the Kansas-Nebraska football game. Y. M. C. A. TO BANQUET Active Workers Will Respond to Toasts at Dinner of Com- mitteemen The committeemen's banquet of the University, Y. M. C. A. to be held in Myers hall tomorrow night will be one of the big events of the year in Y. M. circles. Only those men who are active workers in the Association will be guests and a general rehearsal of the year's plans will be made. The following toasts will be given Chancellor Frank Strong, toastmaster; "Knowledge is Power," Harold Grafton; "Committeemens Must Act," Con Hoffman; "Why Are We Here," Registrar Geo. O. Foster; "Men are Vital Problems," Ralph Yeeman; "Christian Men, the Solution," Prof. Raymond Schwegler; "Association Responsibilities," H. L. Heinzman. Read your own KANSAN. Two minute reports from each of the committee chairmen will be given and the Y. M. C. A. Glee club will sing. NEBRASKA DELENDA EST. ROOTERS SHOUT Miss Martha Land of Lexington, $ K_{Y_{1}} $ , and Miss Franc Banker of Russell, sent the week-end at the Chi Omega house. Or Words To That Effect; For Night Rally Time Strikes Mt. Oread THEY'RE ALL YELLING NOW Tennessee, Adams, Ohio and Other Streets Shuck Northern Corn Each Evening "Won't she weep, won't she mourn, When we shuck Nebraska's corn?" Boys, get up your "pen," forget your troubles for a while, tack an extra inch of sole leather onto your foot. When waited is at hand; rally time is here. The first part of this school year, while fruitful in athletic prowess, and great in athletic deeds, was not full of "pep," aroused by student enthusiasm. While the team was winning, and it won four games straight, the Jayhawker rooters showed in terrace, and now they then McCook who was eventually evinced, but the cheer leaders were worried. The old offescensing, unbound Jayhawker rooting spirit was not there. Something was lacking. How The Ginger Grew How The Ginger grew The Oklahoma game served in a measure to arouse the students to a sense of their neighbor. A good crowd escorted the team to the train left for Sooner soil; a mighty loyal bunch met it at five o'clock in the morning, when it came home defeated. And Morris and Luke no longer worried. The "boys" were coming into their own. Nebraska Delenda Est And they "came"—fully and completely—Saturday. The team entered the Ichabod contest none too certain of victory and the student body was none too certain either. But they got behind the "boys" on McCook field that afternoon, and the result is history. NEW YORK And that the Cornhuskers, the hated Cornhuskers, the dreaded Cornhuskers, are about to invade Kansas soil after a year's respite, "pop" is evident—more than evident. And midnight rallies express it. A lone undergraduate stood on the corner of Adams and Tennessee streets, late yesterday evening. The accustomed quiet lung over Lee's corner. He was enjoying the warm day. And then suddenly—from far in the northwest up on the hill-came a faint but resonant cry— "Won't she weep, won't she mourn, When we shuck Nebraska's corn?" Various affirmative answers resounded from the southeast in answer to an entirely different question. "The boys have a little "pep," though undergrad. "But it will sit down." He was mistaken. They All Cheered South Tennessee boomed out with a "Stand Up and Cheer," Oread Avenue responded with a "Rock Chalk." Ohio street gave a "Sky Rocklet," and (last, but not least), out broke Massachusetts, stained old Massachusetts, and "blacked the Tiger's eye" with a vengeance. The undergrad thought of "home and mother," he thought of a warm comfortable bed awaiting him a little further down the street; he took off his oclock and went to the morning; he considered Dykstra's ten o'clock "quic." "Guess I better go home and get some sleep." he said. some sleep, he said. He paused, irresolute. Twenty students passed, singing at the top of their lungs. Prepare For The Invasors "Shall I go out and have a good time with the boys? Shall I? Shall I?" he asked. The spirit was too much and he started off "Hallalujah, Nebraska's bum, bum, Hallalijah, bum again, Hallalijah, bum again," Mr. Robert Waters of Bonner Springs is a guest at the Phi Gamma Delta house. The Weather Forecast: Cloudy and warmer Temperatures: 9 p. m . ... 58½ 7 a. m. ... 55 2 p. m. ... 65 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF HERBERT FLUNT - - - - Editor-in-Chile. GLENDON ASSOCIATE - - - - Associate Editor. BLANCOIN MANNER - - - - Sports Editor. LAMON LASSESSER - - - - Sport Editor. JOHN GLEISSNER - - - - High School Editor* BUSINESS STAFF EDWIN ABELLS -- Advertising Manager BRIAN BOWLER -- Circulating Manager JOE BENHADLE -- Advertising REPORTIAL STAFF BAGGER BANGER RANDOLPH KENNEDY JUNIOR YOUNG SAM DUGEN THE HARPER HISTORY Entered as second-class mail matter in connection with the lawsuit, Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of Mar- chus. Subscription price $2.50 per year, if advance; one term, $1.50. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kannon aims to picture the students in Kansas; to go further than merely printing the news by including them in play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful to have fun; to help learn more serious problems to user heads; to abide by the rules of the students of the University. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12. Assistant editor for today's paper. Lucy Barger. News editor, Joe Howard; assistants, Jack Greenlee, Leon Howe, Charles Gibson. Exchange editor, John M. Henry. Society reporter, Lucile Hildinger. B NICE TO 'EM AND—WIN! "Hollow trees are always the stiffest, but the mightiest oak, if sound, can bend." —Magoon. Three days from today Kansas meets Nebraska on McCook field. Both teams are strong contenders for championship football honors in the Missouri Valley. At this game Kansas rosters will be given plenty of opportunity to show what they have in them. Kansas cannot forget the antics of the "Stiehm Roller," nor the fact that she has suffered three successive defeats from Nebaska in the last three years. Nevertheless, we are going to act the part of good sportmen Saturday just the same. We are going to show Nebraska there is no policy like good sportsmanship and true politeness, and that a good spirit can prevail in spite of unforgettable rivalry. The sport statistician says that $5 will see the game at Columbia. Let's go! If we win we shall not miss the money; and if we lose—well everybody says riches are no consolation in sorrow. AN IDEA THAT CAN NOT DIE The class memorial movement is again progressing. Since last spring it has been sleeping, but this fall it has revived with renewed vigor, and class memorials can almost be seen lifting their heads on Mt. Oread. It is only a question now as to which class will be the first to claim the glory. --the men. Really the girls ought to devise something they can shut the men out from—and get even, while at the same time, filling the place that is waiting for them in University affairs. The class to place a memorial of some kind upon the campus of the University will be building for itself a double memorial because of the credit due itself for initiating the movement. Let's by all means install the honor system. Then we can leave our lockers open and our bedroom doors unlocked and our knives in the pockets of our trousers when we send them to the pantatorium. TWO GAITS Thisisthewayherushedupthehill Tomakehisighto'clockclass— This is the way he walked back home With a pretty lass. LET THE WOMEN RALLY! If the women of the University are looking for an opportunity for displaying the K. U. spirit why shouldn't the W. S. G. A. or the Y. W. C. A. hold a girls' camp fire on the campus, to get the girls together before the Nebraska game? Now is a good time for the girl to start something all their own Why not a camp fire rally? The season offers every advantage for wenie and apple roasts and the smoke of the camp fires would remind us of those smokers, dear to the heart of THE SPIRIT THAT WINS Oceasonally college students act aburably and make jokes of themselves and their school. Then occasionally they act otherwise. An instance when sort was recorded is the Kansas state University the other day. The Kansas school was very desirous of defeating the Oklahoma university eleven this year. For one thing it wanted to wipe out the sting of two consecutive defeats. For another, it wanted to keep in the running for the Missouri valley championship, as Missouri already had defeated Oklahoma. For a field, it needed to win simply because it always prefers to win, and this season so far it had done nothing else. On top of this, the followers of the Kansas crowd were fairly confident of victory. So when the results of last Friday's contest at Norman were charged up on October 30, Sunflower's state's leading school there was a wealth of disappointment and chagrin that could hardly have been greater. Under these circumstances it might have been expected that the defeated players would have been allowed to trail back home with scant notice. But not so. In the early hours Saturday morning a student with a megaphone made the rounds in the university district, announcing that the train bearing the team would arrive in town shortly before that result was that a big bunch of valiant, loyal supporters gathered at the depot and gave the eleven a rousing welcome when it arrived. This demonstration tends to partially explain why the "dope" about the annual Kansas-Missouri game so often goes wrong. The Jayhawker crowd is never whipped until the referee's whistle blows for the close of the last quarter, and that fighting spirit is instilled into the team mostly by the support it gets from the student body. It needs no imagination to dip a little deeper and say that the success of Kansas, the ability of its citizens to withstand droths and grasshoppers and cyclones and floods is but the grown-ups' exemplification of this omnipresent college loyalty and optimism.—Joplin Globe. OUR DAILY QUIZ Use honor system and grade yourself III. ENGLISH LITERATURE —What is the nature of the English annotae? It is a composition of Anglo-Saxon, Frisian, Danish and Scandinavian words from various other languages. 2- How many words are there in the English language? There are upwards of 42,000, of which 13,000 are Anglo-Saxon, and 29,000 French and Latin the Latin being held in itself with respect to What words are employed in speaking? use our employees. In ordination, employment, Anglo- Saxon words are almost exclusively used; uneducated persons employ only a few employers—soldmen more than a few thousand. - w nat words are employed in literature? Some writers employ more Anglo- sonic words than Greek or simple and nervous Anglo-saxon are found in the works of Bunyan, and in the authorized version of the Bible. The author of the profuse use of words from the Latin? It properly begins with the works of Chaucer and Gower in the 14th century when the language had settled into its present composite form, although still uncoutn in its orthography, and in some of its expressions. (CW203) Addison, Samuel Johnson, Gibbon, and some others of the 18th century. 6- When does English Literature commence? Geoffrey Chaucer was the earliest English poet. He was born in London, 1328, and was employed at the court of Edward III; as an ambassador to Genoa, he visited Petrarch, with whom he had congenitally learned about his Canterbury Tales, which are an ednuring monument of his genius.—Died 1400. They are tales in verse, purporting to be related for mutual amusement by a party of equestrian pilgrims from the Tabard Inn, Southwark, to County. These tales are read and read on account or in an old orthography; but their merit places Chaucer in the first rank of English poets. 8- What is the nature of the Centerbirty Tales? 7—Who was Chaucer? John Gower, a contemporary of Chaucer, was an English gentleman of property, who wrote several poems, some in Latin, and some in English; those in English are admired for their lively expression of natural feeling.— 9—Who was Gower? Some wrote in Latin; others wrote in the Scottish vernacular. The latter was most prominent to the English of Chaucer, and which, with some mobilization, now constitutes what is known as the English translation. 10 — English Literature 10 — When language was employed by the early Scottish King William I. 10—What language was employed by the earl Scottish writers? III. English Literature Early English Writers GOOD LIFE, LONG LIFE In is like growing into a better beer; Or standing long an oak, three hundred To fall a log at last, dry, bald, and sears: A lily of a day —Ben Johnson. Is farther in May. Although it is the day that night, It although blooms and flower of Light. n small proportions we just beauties see, and in short measures life may perfect It is not growing like a tree Hip, hip hooray! Oh happy day! I want to throw my hat away! I want to shout, I want to sing, I want to do the Highland fling; I want to yell to beat the band; I want to tell it through the land. Hip, hip hooray! Hooray, hoooroo! Once more the Sooners买 K U. BRING THE LID—QUICK Twice they trounced the Fearsome Jayhawk; twice they made him crine and yield; twice they left a far from gay ham hulking on his native field. Then the land of Sooner trembled with the tread of cleated feet, as the Kansas horde assembled there to take a vengeance sweet. Tell their deeds in song and story; put them in the Hall of Fame; honor them with endless glory; shout aloud each mighty name; crown each man with wreathes of laurel; such as greeted heroes old; deck each one with tributes floral; let their prowess oft be told. Bennie, taught by Fielding Yost, did send his valliant Soonets down 'gainst the team that Kansas boasted; the Jayhawk to a brown. Score? 'Twas twenty-one to seven when the smoke of battle cleared. How they told it to high heaven! How those Sooner Rooters cheered! Ah me, I'm an ouest, I fear. It's a long way to Norman from here. But I tell you I eyed with a feeling of pride that score against Kansas this year. I remember distinctly, I do, when my days spent in college were few, that the Jayhawker won—the old son-of-a-gun—every time that he tackled O. U. But now that's all over, it seems; the Sooners have realized their desire and I have forth a challenge to the Fearsome and a series of horrible screams. I know that we'd win soon or late; 'wastes ordained in the volumes of fate; but I'll have to confess that I never did guess or hope that we'd make it three straight.—Daily Oklahoman. RISIBLE REMARKS FOR THE SOMBRE STUDENT Our Advice to Freshmen—Beware of the Greeks bearing bargains. —Yale Record. No man can face the world with a good heart unless it is backed up by a good liver,-N. Y, Times. When it comes to in an argument a man generally gives in, but a woman sometimes does not. Egotism An egotist is one who thinks he lives as much as you do, and doesn't deny it. On styles for freshmen, just a word: Their neckties should be seen not heard. —Ex They say Ella's fiance has money to buy it. Clothes "Well, he has met his match." Town Topics. "When shall we three meat again?" quotet the tramp of tramps as they go down to Stockholm. First English Militant--Do you believe in rocking the erdle? Second Militant Militant—Sure where are the rocks? —Judge. First Fair Co-ed-What a lot of style Clara is putting on. Why do the girls out at the house call Mabel Jurez? —The Coyote. Second f. c. e—What a lot of creditors she is putting off. "B. V. D.'s" retorted the practical one. —The Coyote. Because she has been captured six times this season. "What's worse than a staw hat in December?" declared the authority Nebraskan. -Nebraskan. (It has been found that this drowns out) On Singing Hymns 1917—Why does the Professor al- way look over the top of his glasses? 1916—Oh, he’s so stingy. He’s afraid of wearing them out. In Chapel sing with lusty shout , With zeal and adoration. The Seniors' conversation.) —Yale Record. Yale Record. Wanted—20 extra ushers for Nebraska game. Those wishing to user sher report at Robinson gymnasium Thursday evening, 8 o'clock. Definite assignments will be made at that time and every man must be present. This includes National Guard men. W. O. Hamilton. The meeting of the College faculty which was postponed from last week will be held Thursday at 4:30 p. m. n' Green, 105. The Sphinx will hold a meeting onnight at the Phi Gamma Delta house to make arrangements for the freshman smoker tomorrow night. The meeting will be very important and it is urged that all members be present. The meeting will start at 130. Freshman Finance committee meets in 311, Fraser Tuesday afternoon at 4:45. "Jahawker" business. A. Walters, chairman. CALENDAR ANNOUNCEMENTS Week of Nov. 10-15, 1913 Wednesday 4:30 Mining journal, (201 Ha.) 4:30 Cercle Francais, (306 Fra) 7:30 Band rehearsal, Fraser) 7:30 Hawk Dramatic Club, (110 稿) 7:30 Mandolin Club rehearsal, (116 Fraser). Thursday 4:30 El Ateneo Club, (306 Fra.) 4:30 Chemical Club, (Chem. 203.) 7:00 Amer. Society, Mech. Eng. 8:50 Amer. Society, Mech. Eng. (1301 Ohio) 1:30 Orchestra practice (Fra.) 7:30 Orchestra practice, (Fra.) 7:30 Amer. Inst. Elec. Eng. (101 Marvin) 7:30 Greek Symposium, "Why We Admire Homer," Professor Joseph D'Amico 8:00 K. U. Debating Society, (313 Erase) 11:00 Chapel, Mr. W. C. Lansdow, of Saline. Saturday 3:00 Football K. U. vs. Nebraska. 8-12 Student Council dance. Future Events Nov. 15 Student Council Dance Robinson gymnasium, Dance 8-12 Nov. 18 Piano recital. Heniot Levy (Entrance) Nov 23 Y, M-Y. W, joint meeting Nov 23 in chapel 3:30 (r Raser.) Nov. 22 Sophomore Bum, 8-12. All announcements or items for the University calendar either for the coming week or for future events should be given to Mr. Cronemeyer, at the department of journalism office, by 4:30 p.m. Friday. It is desired to make the calendar a complete schedule of University events and the co-operation of those interested is requested. The school of business training of the University of Texas, is preparing, with the assistance of the leading commercial club of Austin, a survey of business conditions in the city. Particular stress is to be laid on the possibilities of promoting new lines of business. Football Schedule Nov. 15—Nebraska on McCook. Nov. 22—Missouri at Columbia. The much-discussed Iowa Union, composed of the men of Iowa University, has been organized. Plans for the administrative department of the body were passed at a meeting of Iowa men held last week. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology has recently received $600,000 from two anonymous donors. This makes a total of $3,150,000 which this institution has received from such sources. The University of Wisconsin could furnish an entire regiment of 1,500 soldiers with its complement of 51 officers, for immediate service in Mexico, if President Wilson should issue a call for volunteers. After a vigorous campaign among the students and the alumni, the Y. M. C. A. of the University of Wisconsin now announces that it will accept $85,000 which it set out to raise on the mortgage and debt of its building. WORKING STUDENTS OF MICHIGAN HOLD MEETING A mass meeting of all the working students, boarding house keepers, and others interested in the health, working hours and the standard of work of the working students in the University of Michigan will be held next week. All phases of the meal may be discussed during conditions be discussed, and representatives of the employment bureaus, the boarding houses, the university health service and student workers will be invited to speak. Subscribe for the Daily Kansan. A MAN IN A SUIT AND A WOODEN CAP EVERYBODY will be wearing the smart longpoint collarstyle a year from today. Get your 'SHADOW' collar now-while the clever dressers are wearing it. Ask your dealer for 'SHADOW' – the style with the "Pliable-Points." on 57c-or as usual 2 for 25c. UNITED SHIRT & COLLAR CO., Makers, TROY, N. Y. The College Tailor PROTSCH SAM S. SHUBERT Matlinie Wednesday and Saturday LEW FIELDS IN "All Abroad" Lion Collars Oldest Brand in America Lowney's Chocolates McColloch's Drug Store 812 Vermont Phones 189 Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage ROYAL ROCHESTER KENNEDY & ERNST 829 MASS. ST. PHONES 341 Chafing dishes, casseroles, coffee machines and percolators. The finest line of metal and wood serving trays in the city. SAVE THE PIECES B We have added Lens Grinding Machinery to our Optical department. Any Lens Duplicated Glasses Fitted. H E S T E R Jeweler and Optician Lawrence, Kansas. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. W. H. Quakenbush, Pres.; E. S. Weatherby, Supt. Eldridge House Stable W. E. MOAK, Prop. Taxicabs, Hacks, Livery Baggage Haued Both Phones 148 BERT WADHAMS The College Inn Barber FeaturingMilk Chocolates "SWEDE" Phones 540 Holiday For Janitor? This is Pennant Week at Griggs! The entire faculty and student body of Beloit College Wisconsin made November sixth John Pfeffer Day. John is the head navigator. He has been with the college fifty years. The chapel exercises were eliminated for ceremonies in his honor. He was given big clusters of American beauty roses and substantial souvenirs from the students. Take lunch at the Oread Tea Room Monday, 1241 Iored—Adv. LA SALLE A New Lightweight, Deep Pointed ARROW COLLAR 2 for 25 Cents 2 AFS AT CENTS Clinett, Peabody & Co. Arrow Shirts Notice Students Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 501, Home 180 O. P. Leonard's Pantatorium is on the job again this year. We Give Club Rates 841 Mass. St. Upstairs Lawrence Pantatorium 2 W. Warren Both Phones 3061 FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Particular Cleaning and Pressing A "Square Deal" A. B. SALING TRADING SPALDING MARK A.D. 1934 for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantee each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding TradeMark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. A. G. SPALDING & BROS. 1120 Grand Ave. Kansas City, Mo. Grand Ave. Kensig City, NY Send for our Catalogue. FOR TAXI PHONES 12 We have some good values in Pennants Pictures & Posters to close out J. A. Keeler 939 MASS. See the New Parker Self-Filling Fountain Pen Office Supplies, Typewriters F. I. CARTER 925 Mass. Bell phone 1051 Come on Down to JIM'S Tonight 1101 Mass. St. This is Pennant Week at Griggs! Read your own KANSAN. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Anniversary Of F. H. Snow's Memorial Comes This Week Five years ago yesterday, November 10 memorial services, presided over by Chancellor Frank Dr. Strong, were held in chapel for Dr. Francis Weldon of the University Kansas, who died Sept. 21, 1908. "Dr. F. H. Snow was the link that bound the present University with the beginnings of a nation. He Strong when asked about his predecessor in office C. W. H. BURNS . today, "and with the ending of his life, that period of the University life may be said to have come to a close." Dr. Francis Huntington Snow, Chancellor of the University of Kansas in the transition period from 1890 to 1901, was born in Fitchburg, Mass., in 1840. His ancestors were the Rogers and Warriors of the Mayflower. His early days faced a Fitchburg public schools. Pictures of that time show him to have been a round faced bigeyed youngster. Graduated from the Fitchburg high school he entered Williams College, where he was given his degree in 1862. In 1866 he was graduated from the university getting his master's degree from Williams the same year. When at Andover he preached in nearby pulpits every Sunday. Between terms of school work he spent two seasons with the Christian college at the front with the Union army, and was present at Lee's surrender. To Chair of Mathematics 10 Chair of Mathematics In 1886, at the recommendation of Gov. Charles Robinson, he was elected to the chair of mathematics in the University of Kansas. During his service he could be found every Sunday in some neighboring pulpit. In 1868 he married Miss Jane Aiken; in 1876, became professor of natural history; in 1890, the president of the faculty; in 1890, the Chancellor of the University; and on his retirement in 1901, professor of organic evolution, systematic entomology, and metrology. Professor Snow organized the expeditions which resulted in the collections for the museum. He started the publication of the "Observer of Nature" and was, for several years, the editor of the scientific journal "Psyche." In 1881 his Alma Mater conferred upon him the degree of doctor of philosophy and in 1890 Princeton University made him a Doctor of Laws. Through his instrumentality, in 1890, the University received the funds for Spooner Library and the Chancellor's residence from Wm. B. Spooner, of Boston. Mr. Spooner was Doctor Snow's uncle. Fought The Chinch Bug Perhaps the most conspicuous on Doctor Snow's services was the discovery of a fungus fatal to the chinch bug and methods of its propagation and distribution. In his later life he was made a member of his faculty at North Carolina University as honorary member of the Sigma Xi and Phi Beta Kappa. He died at Delafield, Wisconsin, September 21, 1908. At school Doctor Snow was the hero of his fellows. His two hundred scholmates never tired of singing his praises. The college hero of those days was Tiggy Olsen, but of the classroom. The college course was a prescribed one. There were no "snap" courses. Each student had an equal footing and to be the first man after four years' mental struggle was an honor indeed. He destowed this honor on Doctor Snow and the students heartily acceded. Not a Book Worm But however much Dr. Snow succeeds a student, he could never be classed as a "book worm." He was interested in all college life activities. His attractive personality made him the subject that his intellect and perseverance made him in the class room. His associates in his early connection with the University of Kansas remembered him and his little pony, always on the gallop—Doctor and pony. The pony still two, office work from two till five and class preparations at eight. During the trials and vicissitudes of the University he never faltered. When the hot winds came and money was dear he always found a way to tide over and help the farmers. When the legislature cut down his salary he supported himself on his savings until a raise was given, and then it was disrupted he was always Doctor Snow who brought about a compromise. He was a man of strong will, industry and perseverance. But he never let his convictions to make him disregardful of the views of others. He was a generous, warm hearted friend and without a known enemy. Petticoat Sale We received by today's express 10 dozen mercerized petticoats with a 15-inch satin pleated flounce. These are in Kelly green, Cerise and all staple shades and the price, $1.25. See Window Display Weaver's ONE DAY ONLY MATINEE-THURSDAY----NIGHT Nebraska--Minnesota FOOTBALL GAME See the Nebraska Players in action as the "movies" have caught them. See the working of the Minnesota shift as it is played by the Minnesota athletes. ABOVE FEATURE IN ADDITION TO REGULAR PROGRAM Aurora Theatre PRATT WINS SEVENTH GAME OF FOOTBALL And Now Claims State Champion ship and is Ready to Defend Title (By Jerome Chapman) (BY JEREMY BRADSHAW) Pratt, Nov. 7 Pratt county high school won its seventh football victory today defeating Peabody 75 to 0. The game was devoid of interest. Pratt will claim the state championship, and will schedule a game with any team that disputes the claim. AGGIE ACADEMICS AND SALINA PLAY TO A TIE (By Paul A. Kuhn) Salina, Nov. 7—In one of the hardest fought games of the season, the Salina high school football team tied with the K. C. A. cademics, Friday afternoon at Manhattan. The final score was 42-36, with the straight football while the Manhattan touchdown was made by a fluke. Because of the high wind neither side succeeded in kicking goal. The game was played as a curtain raiser for the Aggie-Texas game. The Salina team has won 55-19. The next game will be at St. Marys, November 14, with the Academy team. SOUTHWESTERN KANSAS HAS A BASKET-BALL LEAGUE (By Doyle Buckles) Sedan Nov. 7.—In a hard contested game of basket-ball, the seniors defeated the juniors by a score of 37 to 27. This game proves that Sedan has a lot of good material for the season. A high school basket-ball league is being formed between the towns of Hewins, Peru, Cedar Vale, Caney, Coffeyville and Sedan. YUM, YUM, HAYRACK RIDE AND THEN AN OYSTER STEW (By Marshall Harkness) Burlingame, Nov. 8-The girls' basket-ball team won its second successive game of the season Saturday from the Lecompte girls by a score of 20 to 6. The boys' team is practicing hard but as yet has had no match game. The senior class of 19 members, celebrated Wednesday night the first party of the term in the form of a good old-fashioned hay-rack ride and oyster stew. The class was chaperoned by her cheek, Gelman, and entertainment at home of the retiring class's president, Gertrude Kelley. Alma 38, Hinerville 0. (By Leo Horne) Alma, Nov. 8—By a score of 38 to 0 the Alma high school football team defeated the Hinerville team in a game played here this afternoon. The game was good, with Alma gaining almost at will. Brown, Umbehr, and Schutter played a star game for the Alma team. LeRoy, Nov. 6—The hopes of a state championship football team are high in LeRoy. Coach Cellars' team has no been defeated this year. It has the following scores: LeRoy 57, Yates Center 0; LeRau 34, Eureka 6; LeRau 20, Blue Mound 0; LeRau 7, Burlington 0. (By Dale Cox) HERE'S LERO, CLAIMING STATE CHAMPIONSHIP, TOO When you're on the hill drop in at the new Oread Tea Room, 1241 Oread.—Adv. Plain caramels, nut caramels, and dipped caramels at Wiedemann's.—Adv. Bowersock Theatre Friday--Nov.-14 This is Pennant Week at Griggs! The Nation Wide Musical Success Franc C. Payne Inc., presents With Rose THE ROSE MAID Cast and Beauty Chorus Beyond 60 people 60 Special Orchestra, 12 Musicians A Rose Bud Garden of Girls Each Girl a Fashion Plate PRICES: Parquet $2.00 $1.50 $1.00 Balcony $1.00 $1.00 Balcony Balcony $7.50 Seats on Sale at Woodward & Co. Thursday, Nov 18 at 8 o'clock coming in after curtain goes up will not be seated until after the first act. NOTE:—Curtain 8:15 p. m. Those come in after a rain goes up Dancing Dresses M. C. H. At $12, $15, and $18 Artistic dresses for Evening wear. as dainty as you could wish them. Chiffon, Shadow Lace, or Crepe, some have rose bud garnitures, some are fur trimmed. A glance at our evening window will give you a suggestion of their beauty. Long Kid Gloves, Aigrettes, Silk Hosiery, Fans, Girdles, vanity Cases. Corsage Bouquets and Satin Roses are also shown. James Bulline & Neckman LAWRENCE KANS White Coats of Chinchilla or Polo Cloth. Party Coats, Pink, Light Blue, Rose. Prof. McKeever on Campus Class Inspects Meat Plant Dr. George H. Cochill, accompanied by five students from the School of Biology, will take yesterday to take a trip through the Armour Packing plant and get some specimens for class work. Prof. McKeever was in Lawrence yesterday making arrangements to move here from Manhattan. Professor McKeever will take charge of the new department of child welfare. Prof. R. A. Schweger will speak at 7:45 in the Baptist church tonight on "The College Man's Religion." To Confer on Engineers' Trip A conference of all senior engineers who expect to make the trip to Keokuk and St. Louis. It will be Ia.Ia. At this meeting it will be definitely decided just who will make the trip. This is Pennant Week at Griggs! To Address French Club Prof. Wm. P., W. Pard will go an anaconda, regular meeting of the Cercle Francais today at 4:30 in room 300 Fraser. There is a lunch counter in the basement of Fraser hall.—Adv. 42-1 This is Pennant Week at Griggs! MUMS FOR THE GAME MUMS FOR THE GAME ALL COLORS To Insure Deliveries On Time Order Early THE FLOWER SHOP 825 1-2 MASS PHONES 621 PHONE 100 FOR TAXICABS EERLESS GARAGE, Phone 100. Velvet W A G 1915 Velvet TOBACCO A CHECKMATE to your smoke that bites and burns! Velvet—the selected tender middle leaf—aged in the leaf over two years—producing a mellowness that only the measured pace of time can encompass. A flavor and smoothness tremendously good! Pipe smoking with Velvet is a revelation—proving that *time* only can make tobacco what we would all have it--smooth. "Your Movel" At all dealers. Full 10$^c$ 2 oz. Tins Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. MCNONNEL, Physician and Assistant Professor, University of Houston, 1834 Tenn. Tenn. 1024, Houston, 1024. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist Office 862 Mass. Station, Bell phone 6050. HARRY REDING. M. D. Eye ear, nose Bleach Phone, 103-648-7233 Home 512 Bldg. Phones, 103-648-7233 Home 512 G. A. HAMMAN M. D. B. eye ear, and Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Building. J. W. O'BRYON. Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Belfort Phone 507. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. Once Squares' Studio. Both phones. DR. BUET R. WHITE Osteopath, Phones, Relief Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. M. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D. O. D. 833 Mass aachrets街. Both phones, office and room. DR. H., T. JONES, Room 12, F. A. L. Bldg. Residence 2435 W. 10th St., Suite AM10, Office afx G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D., Diseases of the stomach, surgery, and gynecology, Suite 1, F. A. A. Bldg. Residence, 1201 Ohio St. Both phones, 35. CLASSIFIED Barbers E. J. Blaar, Physician and Surgeon. Office 2301 N. 8th Ave., 9th Flr., 7th St. 700-654-5500, m.p. 1-800-410-4100, m.p. 7-700-654- 5500 S. T. Gillippe, M. D. Office, corner Vermont Municipal Waste Sts. Residence, 728 Indiana St. Plumbers Frank IWl's Barber Shop. 1025 Mass. Two good barbers. Satisfaction assured. J. C. Houk's Barber Shop. 1013 Mass. Some of the barbers' chairs; near have to wait. Razors honed. Phone Kennedy. Plumbing Co. for, gas Mazda amps.灯器 937. Mass. phones 858. Pricess reasonable, work the best. Let us use the "B" for both & Co., & 816 Mass. St.phones 4239 & 4350. Ladies Tailors Ellison, Dressmaking and Ladies Johnson, Phone 2411, over McDonalds and Carl. Lawrence Sewing School. School 'Ledger' tailoring Phones 550. Miss Powers: Miss C. McClan- nard. Phones 551. Miss Powers: Miss C. McClan- Ladies Tailoring and Dressmaking. Gowns for all occasions. All work guaranteed. B. Daily. 014 Mass. Santuary cleaning establishment in connection. Phone 421 Bell. Queens City College. System and sewing School. Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 Kyll, Mrs. M. G. Mark Brown, 834 Kyll, Heli- Hair Dressers Sporting Goods Miscellaneous D & M sporting goods and athletic supplies. Kennedy & Erast. 262 Mass. S. Phones. Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-gifts, "Martial Arts" apparel, meals and mentions call Bell 1572. Home : 31. The Select Hair Dress Shop, 927 Mass 88. Hiahawai Cafe for regular meals, lunch and dinner when down town. Open after the show. W. E. Parsons, Engrave Watchmaker and Edw. J. Parsons, Jewelry and Jewelry. Bell Phone Number. One oral means no risk, small investment. Find a doctor or a social worker. smoke W. T. Williamson homemade cigarette I have a nice line of plain china for painting at Estelle North studio, 732 Mass. St. up- ward from the old school building. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. OREAD TEA ROOM OPENS WITH RECORD CROWDS Mrs. Hayes Advertises Exclusively in the Daily Kansan and Gets Results Five hundred students were served Monday at the opening of the Oread Tea Room on Oread Avenue. Several sororities with their matrons came in a body to give Mrs. L. S. Hayes, the proprietor, a royal come. The opening was advertised widely in the University Daily Kansas. The house is equipped in all the latest conveniences to make it comfortable and homelike for students. The marble fountain is one of the most sanitary to be found. Picnic lunches will be, a specialty and lunches will be delivered at most any hour. The Oread Tea Room opens on Monday 11:30 a. m. at 1241 Adwr—Adv. K. U. pennants, arm bands, football buttons and banners for the game Saturday at Boyles, 725 Mass. —Adv. 42-2 Try the sandwiches at the lunch counter in Fraser hall—Adv. 42-1 New lot of Nebraska and K. U. pennants just in at Boyles. Take lunch at the Oread Tea Room Monday, 1241 Oread—Adv. This is Pennant Week at Griggs! UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Engineers' Drawing Instruments----ROWLANDS UNIVERSITY HELP FOR YOUNG WAGE-EARNERS Courses Arranged for Machinists, Carpenters, CoatMiners and Other Trades In order that the young wage earners of Kansas, who have been obliged to leave school to enter the ranks of the employed, may fit themselves for promotion, the engineering department of the University has arranged courses for students, carpenters, firemen, and electricians, room men, and coal and salt miners. Other trades will be added later. The plan is to teach the courses by correspondence and lectures. Each applicant will be enrolled in the Extension division and will receive lessons and assignments by mail. He will prepare reports and papers which will be corrected and graded by instructors at the University. If a sufficient number in any one dusty take advantage of the correspondence work, a teacher will be sent from Lawrence at curricular intervals to address in groups. These shoes will be organized in machine shops, garages, railroad repair shops, and manufacturing establishments over the state. "We are not teaching the trades," said Dean Walker today who is organizing the work. "Neither is this enterprise a part of the Child Welfare work with a wide and important but quite different phase of the social problem. We are trying to give the workers of older years in the industries of the state an opportunity to acquire a knowledge of some of the theoretical works which underlie the work and the capacity for engaging in some branches of their trades which would otherwise be closed to them." "The prime object is to increase the efficiency of labor in the interests of worker and employer and state alike." Take lunch at the Oread Tea Room Monday, 1241 Oread — Adv. Caramel time at Wiedemann's.— The best gas fixtures at Fienis.— Adv. 42-2 This is Pennant Week at Griggel Adv. This is Pennant Week at Griggs! TRUCKING LOOKED AT FROM ANY ANGLE A NETTLETON Shoe is the best paying shoe investment that a man can make. Fall styles have just arrived—plenty of good ones to be seen. This is the time to act as the best models go first. Tan or black $6-$7 Other shoes $3-$5 Boys' $1.50 to $3.50 Ober's HEAD-TO-Foot OUTFITTERS Followers of K. U. football will be given a chance to see the Nebraska players in action at the Aurora theater tomorrow at the matinee and night performance. In addition to the regular program a special reel will be run showing the Nebraska Minnesota football game as it was played between the two schools a few weeks ago.-Adv. Freshman Committee to Meet the freshman finance committee will meet at 4:30 Thursday in room 311, Fraser hall. The following is the list of those who have been appointed with recent additions: Archie Ettmann, Frank Ise, Helen Gallagher, Lucien Ducy, "Jack Bond", Bron Beebe, Bess Ulrich, Edwin Wolfe, Irwin Baker, Fred Benedict, Richard Colley, Chauncey Hunter, Linnie Sheets, Rumsfield, Eugene Rolfes, Frank Miller, Reba Protsch, Lindsey Dasy, George Yeolsum. This is Pennant Week at Griggs! The WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus $100,000 Corner Mass. and Quincy Sts. Issues its own Letters of Credit and Travelers Checks. The only way to carry your money in safety. Banking of all kinds solicited. We Invite Comparison We KNOW We Have The Finest Pennants Made We Want You to Know It Also. GRIGGS 827 Mass. SOPHOMORES LEAD IN INTERCLASS MEET Win From Junior Track Me By Two Points; O'Neil Is The Star The feature of yesterday's meet was the winning of the 220 by O'Neal in 24.1. O'Neal is a sophomore, suitable for intercollegiate track work. The sophomores now lead in the interclass track meet being held at McCook this week. The results yesterday afternoon were sophomores 20 points, junior 24, seniors 23, and freshmen 15. 100 yards - O'Neal '16, first; K. E. Hilton '15, second; H. Harlan '16, third; A. C. Ross '15, fourth. Time, 11.3. Mile—R. Edwards '15, first; Thompson '17, second; A. Metcalf '17, third; F. F. Spreier '14, fourth. Time, 4:59. High hurdles—Dan Hazen '14, first; L. L Hurst '15, second; J. R Elliot '16 third; Kovarik '17, fourth. Time, 17.1. Following are the results of yesterday's meet; This is Pennant Week at Griggs! Quarter- V. Cissna '14, first; Rodkey '17, second; A. C. Ross '15, third; I. R. Elswick '16, fourth; Time, 55:22 E. F. Hutchison '14, second; R. G. Lindsey '16, third; Kovarik '17, fourth. Time 29. Hersheys and chewing gum at the lunch counter in Fraser—Adv 42-1 Two mile—Duwall '16, first; Rodkey '17, second; E. L. Vernilion '15, third; C. Deitrich '16, fourth. Time, 11:54. Flash lights at Fiens.—Adv. 42-2 Half mile=R. Edwards '15, first; W. H. McClure '14, second; L. E Fisk '16, third; A. E. Creighton '16 fourth. Time 2:10. TATE WILL EDUCATE KANSAS ROAD BOSSES Mr. T. M. Jameison of Denver, Colo., visited at the Kappa Sigma house yesterday. Ladies are served at the lunch counter in Fraser hall .Adv. 42-1 A school for road bosses is to be established at the Kansas State Agricultural College. The state board of administration sent an instruction to W. S. Guarhart, highway highway to S. C. Guarhart, presides over a *correspondence course* in road building; to be open to every road overseer in Kansas. K. U. and Nebraska pennants for the game Saturday at Boyles, 725 Mass—Adv. 42-2 LAIRD AND WEIDLEIN ELECTED TO BOARD Sport Editor And Varsity Captain Fill Vacancies In Athletic Organization Landon Laird and William Weidlein were elected to fill the vacancies on the Athletic Board at a special meeting of the Men's Student Coun- night. Laird, a sophomore in the College, and sport editor of the Daily Kansan, will fill the vacancy made when Audrey Pucell failed to return to K. U this fall. Laird's position as a member of the Kansan paper team with the paper has kept him in contact with all athletic activities this year. "Bill" Weidlein is a "K" man and captain of the Varsity football eleven. Weidlein takes the place left by Harry Burnham who was drowned in the Kaw river this spring. Social Notes Dr. Brewer and Jack Wheater coaches of the Missouri University football team are coming to Lawrence for the Nebraska-Kansas game Saturday. While here the two coaches will attempt to pick up enough points on the Minnesota shift to unable them to break it up. The two Missouri coaches will come to Lawrence Saturday morning accompanied by Mrs. Wheaton and Jack Cannon, one-time tennis champion the Missouri Valley Golfers former student of the University of Missouri. The party will be entertained at the Alpha Tau house while in Lawrence. 25c each --are sure good looking—nothing like them ever shown in Lawrence. Of course they come in Scotch Plaids and there are only two of the same pattern. . . . Mu Phi Epsilon, the music sorority, will celebrate founder's day with a dinner Thursday night at the home of Marie Ketels. Gustafson The College Jeweler The Delta Phi Delta art sorority held a meeting yesterday afternoon at the home of Lucile Brown. Papers on Dutch and Flemish art were read. Brass Fobs just in Another Bunch of K and KU Those New TAM O' SHANTERS -----$1.50---- JOHNSON & CARL Take a look at our north window; it will interest you. . . . The Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will hold initiation Thursday night for the following girls: Virginia Lucas, Marguerite Hunt, boreth Lauren Wilsons, Julien Tolma Welsh, Blanche Welsh, Elizabeth Matthews, Margaret Heizer, Thomas Boyd, Nelle May Schall, Alice Guenther, and Blanche Simona. Kappa Kappa Gamma is expecting the following guests for the Nebraska game: Miss Lyle Hayes, Miss Frances Conkling, Kansas City; Miss Helen Faber, Holton; Miss Fay Chisham, Atchison; Mildred Tettit, May Kelley, Helen Hornaday, Manhattan; Marie Fogarty, Junction City; Marie Mersteret, Margaret McFarland, Kansas City; Lois Dil The Sigma Nu fraternity will entertain the Sigma Kappa freshmen tonight at dinner. The guests will be Dura Palmer, Josephine Lambourne, Gladys Cole, Mary Myers, Fern Wilson, Irene Lucas, Mona Clair Huffman. The Kappa Sigma fraternity entertained the Pi Phi freshmen at dinner last night. The guests were Dorothy Brown, Elizabeth Brown, Gladys Lucan, Stella Bedell, Hazel Gould, Rebecca Cooper, Edith Colbertson, and May Miller. Ilo, Falls City, Nebra; Josephine Walker, Holton. The Kappa Sigma fraternity will hold a dance at the chapter house on Friday for the visiting Nebraska men. Native, race for your cyclone-collars! Pepare for a slaughter! The Haskell Indians defeated the College of Emporia 60 to 0. The College of Emporia romped on Ottawa University 56 to 0, and now the Haskell Indians Baptists Friday. Need we state that Ottawa has not won a football victory in two years? Nay, brothers, nay. That would be adding insult to injury. Under Other Goal Posts The Washburn iechabos, but slightly discouraged over their defeat at the hands of the Jayhawkers Saturday, showed plenty of "pep" in yesterday's practice, and swear to beat the Aggies Thanksgiving day and thus even up the score. A defeat over Lowman's pupils will give Gray's proteges a clear hold on the State Conference Championship. All kinds of electric supplies at Fiens—Adv. 42-2 Tomorrow Night Eagles' Hall GOOD EATS :: GOOD SMOKES :: GOOD PROGRAM Admission 25c COME OUT AND GET ACQUAINTED Freshman Smoker STOP AT The Oread Tea Room Some of the Good Things for Thursday Fried Black Bass Fried Halibut Southern Style Lobster a la Newburg in cases Chicken a la King Prime Ribs of Beef Porter House Roast Chicken Salad Tuna Salad Order what you want and get what you want at any time. Get a short order during that chapel date. Soda Fountain一Candies一Cigars 1241 OREAD Watch Our Friday Ad STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN. VOLUME XI. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 13 1913. NUMBER 44. RALLY TONIGHT, 7:30, FRASER! VARSITY IN PRACTICE WALLOPS "NEBRASKA" Jayhawkers Score on "Cornhusker Eleven" Portrayed by Bond's Freshmen TWAS NO LA-DE-DA WORKOUT "Cousin Tom" Smith and Pat Crow well Assist Coaches in Putting Team Through Paces "Nebraska delendah est," declared a top-line in last nigt's Kansan, and she was "delenda est" on McCook field yesterday afternoon. The hardest workout seen on the team this year was needed to the Varsity by the coaches in a final preparation for the season's big game. 809 A prismarium will be held this afternoon, that's true, but it will be light and easy, according to the present plans of the coaches. Tomorrow no strenuous work of any kind will be indulged in. It is doubtful if even light signals will be run. The probable form of the afternoon's entertainment will be a chalk talk, addressed to the players. Their heads, instead of their bodies, will be exercised for a while. Not a Pink Tea Worker. But there was nothing right about the work-out held on McCook field yesterday afternoon. The Varsity assembled in the "club house" at 2 o'clock on Sunday. They knew they had something coming to them and wanted to be ready for it. The coaches soon arrived, accompanied by Pat Crowell, and "Cousin Tom" Smith. The men dressed in their suits, troted out on the field, and the day's hard practice had begun. The earlier part of the afternoon was spent in light work. Practice was held in kicking and returning punts. Russell and Weildlein took several shots at the goal posts via the drop and place kick route. Strothers practiced the kick off. Russell and Wilson punted. The Coaches Delivered Addresses The Coaches' they then lined up in the team's field, placed on the defensive. The two oaches stood in front of them watching each man's position critically, and at the same time firing rapid questions at them. "Towle's going to try a run-pass. What would you do that pass to Howard just slide of left, keeling, Heinger Coach Frank And if it hit big object, or any other if Varsity men were the least bit slow in giving an answer they suffered a severe "tongue lashing" at the hands of both coaches. "Here comes Rutherford through left tack, coming like thunder, too. What's your part in the Kansas defense against that formation, Strothers? And yours, Detwiler? And yours, Stuewe?" And woe befall the man who did not know, letter perfect, his part in that same play. The coach looked around. It was time for scrimmage. Lounging on the sidelines, and in the south beachers were freshmen, and undergraduates, students who had come to watch the inter-hockey game had been attracted by sights much more interesting to them at this time of the year. "What are you fellows doing here?" he shouted. "Can't you read that sign on the gate that says secret hotel? Oh, Shropp, put these men out." And Lefty, with his "big stick", came running. Neither Mosee or Frank were taking any chances of finding in the personnel of that group of loungers "Bully" Halligan or "Tow" Rutherford. Three colored men far up in the grand stand, kept their places, unheeding the coaches' orders to "vacate." Frank caught sight of them. "Letty, get the men out too. 'Maybe one of them's Ross.' Truly the Jayhawker athletic management was taking no chances of having Jay Bond then led his freshman huskies in, and a lively scrimmage The tyros were unable to make the progress against the Varsity eleven that they could earlier in the week. The sharp words and implicit instructions of the two coaches had had the expected effect, and time after time, Woods, the speedy tyro quad, would shove his men into the line, only to have it hold like a stone wall. Wading Through the Freshmen The Varsity on the other hand found the freshman defense comparatively easy to penetrate. Time and again they romped through tackle and around end for good gains, and several times they ripped through center for "first and ten" even though all entire freshman were massed there awaiting their attack. Two touchdowns were scored on the yearlings in ten minutes. After Bond's eleven had done its "bit" for the day, Mose put the Varsity back at the old routine work, signal practice, and more "per" than ever was evidenced by the men in playing the ball. All of the Jayhawkers' trick plays were opened up, and everyone executed perfectly before passed by ("Cousin Tom" Tom) and ("Father Tom") than did their share in helping the regular coaches train their eleven, and all in all the team, after last night's practice, looked the best it has for the last three weeks. ADMIT ROOTERS ONLY TO ROCK-CHALK SEATS Manager Will Issue Tickets At Game To Students With Voices "Tickets admitting to the rooters' section are being printed this week and enough will be issued to provide each holder of a Student Enterprise ticket with one," said Manager Hamilton this afternoon. These will be handed out to students presenting their tickets, at the gates Saturday. The purpose of issuing the tickets is to get only students in the ranks of the Thundering Thousand. The rooting will be an important factor in the success of Sunday and everything possible is being done to get the best results. "The reserved seats are going fast, but we have the whole office force at work and we can take care of all the orders that come in," Hamilton said, pausing just a second from his work. "We will open up a new plot of seats today and are prepared to satisfy more than 8000 word of seats have been sold and the number bids fair to surpass the number at the Missouri game last year. The new seats opened up are a few on the north and south side and the whole west end." UNIVERSITY CLUB TO MAKE BOW FRIDAY Will Open Room And Hold Election of Officers During The Evening From 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. the polls will be open for the election of officers. But one ticket is in the field, nominating Prof. F. H. Hodder for president. Prof. D. C. Croussard, and L. N. Lewis, treasurer, and a governing board consisting of Prof. A. T. Walker, Prof. H. A. Mills, Prof. H. A. Rice, Mr. Bullene, Prof. J. H. Van der Vries, and Mr. friend. In the evening will be the annual re-election of officers will make their reports and turn over the books. Following this, a buffet lunch will be given. The University club at 1420 Ohio Hillsborough the members, Friday evening, Early evening. The student directories will be ready for distribution Saturday and the first of next week at the registrar's office. "The directories will be the most complete we have ever gotten out, said Registrar Foster Thomas." "There will be eighty pages in the book which will contain the name of 2517 students, and faculty and useful information of various kinds." GET DIRECTORIES MONDAY FROM REGISTRAR'S WINDOW Spanish Students Meet *Spanish* "Studdus" *nee* El Al Jazrullah from 306, Fraser at 4:30 A short program was given in addition to the regular work. FIRST 1914 SMOKER RAMPANT WITH "PEP" Cigars, Eats, and Talks Feature Great Conclave of Senior Men. 'LETS GET THE CORNHUSKERS' "Beat Nebraska" is Theme of Gath ering Campus Celebrities and Others--Fiery Speeches If "pop" ever won a football game, then the Nebraska game is ours. For the pep really came last night. That senior smoker was the most wildly enthusiastic gathering of its kind ever seen in Lawrence. To say that it, with the rally which followed, was a howling success, would be putting it mildly. Everyone was there, and everything happened. "Uncle Jimmy" Green declared that he never felt more prophetic, and he predicted a great victory next Saturday. Coach Mosse said his men could win if they threw the ball from the drift came, and so three hundred men crowded in Eagles' hall were rampant and overflowing with it. The merchants and business men, under the gentle and persuasive eloquence of Ben Williams, vied with the Oread men and yelled until the walls trembled. Swede Wilson demonstrated beyond a shadow of doubt his world superiority as a performer on the banjo. The Merchants Helped The entertainment features were greatly enjoyed. J. L. Sullivan would have turned green, had he seen those two boxing exhibitions Dingman vs. LeMar, and Smith vs. Powler. The classy wrestling bout between Early and Ellen would have himself a few pointers. These contests were all declared draws b Allie Carroll, the capable and efficient referee. Parson Advocates Memorial But the speeches were the big part of the smoker. First came "Parson" Spotts who advocated in vibrant tones the leaving of a memorial the class of 1914. In "Russ" Clark explained the satisfaction of the present just why the 1914 Jayhawker was going to be better than any heretofore produced. Prof A Jerome Boynton declared with great enthusiasm that he liked apples, cigars, and pep as well as anybody, and that he felt young and frisky again. H. A. Rice and Merle Thorpe entertained the audience with a few of the newest and choosest stories, and the laughs began to follow each other in rapid succession, like a bunch of Chinese firecrackers. Coach Mosse declared that if the present spirit kept up, no power on earth could keep Kansas from winning that big game Saturday. Leonard Frank described the great waves of enthusiasm which swept over Mrs. Frank (Leon McCarty) and himself when they were awakened by the "bep" gang passing through the streets. theyey. Pat Crawford, captain of the famous 1008 ever-victorious team told of the great form which this year's team has developed, and in what way it did. *Nebraska* "But there can't be too much of it," he said. "For it's going to take pep and lots of it to win that game." Bert Kennedy, former K. U. coach, gave instances of what pep had done for other games, and predicted, with the growing spirit here, an almost certain victory by the Mosee-Frank machine. Then "Uncle Jimmy" delivered his famous prophecy—exactly the same prophecy he delivered the last time we beat Nebraska. "These teams all poached him," he said. "They know we fight, and we'll show them Saturday how we really can fight, when the whole University is backing us." After the smoker 700 men stormed through the student district. "Much thunder heard to the west-ard" will probably be the gist of Pat Aoomore's speech. Aoomore fondly made with boxes and barrels which were generously donated by the sleeping grocerystores owners closed the rally tonight. 700 Men Rally Hamilton Fish jr., Harvard's 1908 football captain, has given $5,000 to the fund for a new gymnasium. CONVENTION WOULD NELP KANSAS CHILD Session of Jurists, Criminologist and Charity Workers Open Tonight DEAN BLACKMAR TO PRESIDE President of Organizations Will Deliver Address' at First Session in Snow hall To discuss child problems of Kansas, the joint meeting of the Kansas Conference of Charities and Corrections, the Kansas State Society of Criminal Law and Law Enforcementology and Probation Judges will open at K.U. Tonight. Friday afternoon the addresses will be "The New Constructive Child Welfare," by Prof. Wm. A. McKeever, of the extension department; "Juvenile Court Procedure," by Judge Henry Mason; "Manual Supervisory Court," "Our Present Juvenile Court System," by Judge Hugh McFarland of Toneka. At noon Friday a lunch will be served the, members and invited guests by the domestic science women. At tonight's meeting the presidents of the three societies will speak. They are Rev. F. E. Sherman, of the Kansas Conference of Charities and Corrections; Judge William F. Schoch, of the Kansas State Society of Criminal Law and Criminology; Judge W. W Parker, of the Probate Judge' Association Rev. Sherman, the child superintendent of the Children's Home Society Concordia; Judge Schoch isocate judge of Shawnee county; and Judge Parker, probate judge of Irvons county. The three organizations will meet in Snow hall tonight at eight o'clock. Tomorrow the meeting will be held in Green hall and will commence at ten o'clock. The addresses will be "The Appeal of the Feeble Minded Child," by Mrs. Kate E. Pearson of Topeka, formerly of Board of Public Welfare, Kansas City, Mo.; "Arrested Development in Children", Prof. A. W. Trettin, School of Education of University of Kansas. WASHBURN SENDS BRACE OF CHALLENGES TO LAWS The debating club of the Washburn School of Law has challenged the Cooley Club to an inter-club contest. Another challenge have been received by the Cooley Club from a similar society of Washburn College. Both communications will be discussed at the next regular meeting of the Cooley club Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. The senior committee in charge of the annual play has decided to write a play in keeping with the tradition of preceding classes. The committee and assistants announced by Etta Smith, the manager are as follows: chairman, Clarence Sowers, Bob Davis, John Madden, Ward Hatcher, Fay Blair, Florence Hyre, and Amaryntia Smith; assistant manager, George Marks. Members of the class are urged to offer any suggestion which may be acceptable to the committee. At the meeting of the club yesterday new officers were elected. They are W. M. Doggett, president; B. C Hurd, vice-president; D. M. Styles, secretary; J. C. Great; A. program elected; A program consisting of A. B. Campbell, L. L. Meisner, and B. C. Hurd has been appointed. SENIORS KEEP TRADITION BY WRITING ANNUAL PLAY MECHANICAL ENGINEERS WILL MEET THIS EVENING The American Society of Mechanical Engineers will meet at Prof. P. F. Walker's residence 1301 Ohio St., this evening at 7 p.m. The program includes the following: The Horseless Age, Claude T. Coggin; The Southern Engineer, Irwin W. Clark; The Scientific American, Burnette Bower; A Technical Report, Floyd L. Devlin. Addresses French Students Addresses French Students Paris A. M. Ward talked to Pierre A. M. Ward in the meeting of the Cercle Frances in room 306, Fraser yesterday afternoon at 4:30. Contrary to a report that had spread over Lawrence stating that all of the best seats for the Nebraska-Kansas game Saturday had been already reserved and that no good seats were left at the ticket office in Robinson gymnastium Manager W. O. Hamill this morning announced that plenty of good seats, box, grand-stand, and bleacher, are still open and can be obtained by application at his office. WILL PLAN AN HONOR SYSTEM FOR KANSAS Committees From Christian Associations And Councils To Work On Scheme To lay plans for the adoption of the honor system by students of the University, both student councils and the university will appoint a special committee. The committee will have charge of a chapel later in the year to better acquaint the student body with the plan they may formulate. This committee will investigate the honor system as it is already used in different colleges and universities over the west and then decide on a plan which would be beneficial to the school here. This plan will then be submitted to the student body. The Y. M. C. A. has appointed John Colbeck, McKinley Warren, and Halt Coffman, and the Y. W. C. A. Marie Seeley and Florence Whitener as members of the committee. The Men's Student Council and the W. S. G. A. have not named their committees yet. GEOLOGY STUDENTS ORGANIZE SOCIETY Elect Carl O. Dunbar and John McCurry Officers of New Organization in Haworth Hall The Geology society of the University of Kansas was organized yesterday afternoon by advanced students specializing in geology and mining. Carl O. Dunbar fellow in geology, was elected president, and John A. McCurry, a senior engineer, secreted and carried out research developments in which the students are working will also hold membership. The purpose of the society is to study and discuss current geological questions. Regular meetings will be held the first four Wednesdays of each month. The charter members are: Professors E. Haworth, Twenhofer Tel: 612-478-5300 Geology students: A. W. Duston C. O. Dunbar, Lila Golden, Edward Dahlene, E. E. Lyder, D. T. Bush. Mining engineers: O. A. Dingman, L. B. Sullivan, L. B. Smith, Cole R. L. Seger, L. B. Smith. Engineers Postpone Meeting The meeting of the Civil Engineering Society, scheduled for this evening in Marvin hall, has been held of the football rally. The next regular meeting will be held Dec. 11. To Ride The Angora Four new members will be initiated into the Alpha Chi Sigma, honor chemical fraternity tonight. They are H. V. Caldwell, P. B. Way, L. A. Benn, and R. A. Powell. Miss Helen Baity, a sophomore in the College from Kansas City Mo., has pledged to the Alpha Delta Phi sorority. All who expect to usher at the Kansas-Nebraska game report at drill at 7:00 p. m. tonight, Nov. 13. Manager Hamilton will give you your assignments. If you cannot be at drill give your name and the names of the men with you to Sertg. Sterling. Bell phone 569 or leave someone else who is coming to drill report for you. Subscribe for the Daily Kansan. AND WE RALLY AGAIN AT FRASER TONIGHT "Tres Moutarde Impossible" Says Leader--Will Uncork Ginger At 7:30 BAND PLAYS. ORATORS ORATE Morris Prepares Great Stunt Program, With Moving Pictures of Kansas-Missouri Game As a preliminary to the final rally to be held tomorrow at chapel time for the Nebraska game, Cheerleader Lawrence Morris has prepared a stunt for this evening. A pop meet starts at start at Fraser promptly at 7:30 Many talks will then be made by "Cousin" J. T. Smith and Pat Crowell, who captained the 1908 ever-victorious team. The band will be out. After all the speeches and pep starters, the bunch will go on over warm and endures to make any man in Lawrence rise from his slumbers. Following the rally in Fraser the students will parade through the streets to the Oread theater, where the pictures of last year's Kansas-Missouri football show free a celebration of the boys from Mr. Gusev, manager of the Oread. Tomorrow morning the final big rally will be held. "Doc" Bert Kennedy, Coaches Mosse and Frank and W. C. Lansdon of Salina, former manager of athletics at the University, will be the attractions. Morris issued the following statement this morning: "The band will be out for both these rallies, and we must have every man in the team. You remember the rally we held before the Nebraska game last year. You all know how the boys played football that day. Our rally tomorrow will surpass that one. It mustsurpass that one. It come out and show what's really in Smoker and Banquet Out Early The Y. M. banquet will stand at the banquet, and the early, reshman will attend the moker will join the festivities later. TWO MORE DAYS TO GET ANNUALS CHEAP After Monday Price Advances Twenty-five Cents On Each Copy Students who wish to get in on the $2.50 rate for the Jayhawker must sign before Monday one of the promissory notes that the finance committees of the different classes are issuing. The price of the annual check is $15 off of the week. Seniors that have not secured one of these notes should call Guy VonSchriltz or Russell Clark. Guy VonSchriltz said this morsuque different from other books, that this year's annual would be The book will have a special cover and the printing will be on better paper. "The promissory notes are going fine," said VonSchrollz this morning. "We have $1300 worth promised alread and $200 in cash. Most of the girls prefer to pay in cash; so do the professors." WILL COLLECT MONEY FOR JUNIOR CLASS MEMORIAL "It will be necessary for the junior class to stand behind the memorial committee and pay the seventy-five cent assessment," said Harold Matton, chairman of the committee yesterday. Matton says that the committee will be enlarged that the work of collecting the money may be hastened. Work of collecting will begin tomorrow. The Weather And the shucking is going to be good for the weather man will furnish colder weather tonight and no doubt on Saturday too. a. m . . . . . 1 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The official student paper of the University EDITORIAL STAFF HERBERT FLAUNT - Editor-in-Chief GREGSON ALLIVINE - Associate Editor JOHN C. MADDEN Managuer LANDON C. CROSBY Edit Editor LUISBERGER - High School Editor RUSINESS STAFF **EDWARA KENNYS** - Advertising Manager **JOE BRUNO** - Circulating Manager **JOUE BRUNO** - Advertising REPORTIAL STAFF LEGY BAGGER RANDOMH KENNEDY RENDERER SAD GAMM RENNESON RENNESON Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the postoffice at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance; one term, $1.50 Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of journalism. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kaman wants to picture the undergraduate students rather than merely printing the news by standing behind her. No favors; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be fair; to be serious problems to wister head, to allude to, to the ability of the University. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1913 Assistant editors for today's paper, Throck Davidson and Leon Harb. News editor, J. R. Greenless; assistant Joe Howard, Frank O'Sullivan, Lucy Large Exchange editor, John M. Henry. Society reporter, Luce Hildinger. Solomon says: NEBRASKA OUR GUESTS says: "Better is a dinner of herbs where love is, than a stalled ox and hatred therewith." NEBRASKA OUR GUESTS When the Cornhuskers reach Lawrence Saturday let us remember that we are the hosts and they are our guests. We should treat them royally for this reason if for no other. Remember two years ago how they stopped in Kansas City after defeating our eleven and sent a big bouquet of flowers and messages of comfort to our own "Tommy" Johnson who was then lying near death in a city hospital? a city hospital: Not so very long before that "Tommy" had run some seventy yards for a touchdown, administering to Nebraska a bitter defeat on her home grounds. some grounds. Let's forget past differences as they did two years ago and while our football team is playing theirs consider them as worthy rivals and as our guests. Now why in the name of good clothes didn't some more of us try out for the band? WEAR THE COLORS Why not help inspire our football team with a great display of our colors in the bleachers? Let every loyal Kansan wear the Red and Blue in some form at the game Saturday. the breach. Emphasis has always been placed upon the rooting and the effect of the rooting cannot be overestimated. But when a player looks into the bleachers and sees the Red and the Blue worn by thousands of loyal supporters with their armbands, umbrellas, or pennants, he feels inspired at the thought of the trust that has been placed in his hand and fights the game to the finish. A Pennsylvania girl died recently while washing dishes and now it may be expected any minute that some reformer will land a solar plexus blow on the University domestic science department. ARE WE GOING BACK? From all reports last Sunday was a red letter day in the Lawrence churches. It was University Day and special preparations were made for students and members of the faculty. Every church was crowded both morning and evening. It was a good thing, but the question now naturally arises whether or not we will wait for the next annual University Day before we go back. Those who enjoyed themselves and considered the time well spent should try going next Sunday and then keep going. Those who felt ill at ease and out of place should try it again in order to become better acquainted with the atmosphere of the church. The student who feels awkward in church is lacking in something, not the church. THAT FRIDAY RALLY It is "up to" the students to have a football rally Friday that will make visiting alumni feel at home. A painful lack of enthusiasm has been exhibited in chapel this fall and the 1913 freshman is almost ignorant of the way we usually do things. It is an established fact that enthusiasm of the students did much toward defeating the Tiger last year and a gigantic rally tomorrow will go far towards the defeat of things Nebraskan. Let's get stirred up and then stir things up generally for the old grads. As you have doubtless surmised, Saturday's affair will make the Mexican broil look like a Faculty Ladies' Tea. WOULDNT IT BE GREAT Last week several large endowments were made to different educational institutions, John Hopkins receiving approximately $1,500,000; Barnard College $200,000; and Wellesley College $200,000, besides several smaller bequests. State universities, however, were conspicuous by their absence among those receiving gifts. pits. When Harvard needs a new dormitory a thousand alumni ask to share in the honor of raising the money. Wouldn't it be great to have to turn away a few old Kansas alumni because the University did not know what to do with their proffered philanthropies? Prof. E. M. Hopkins of the English department is to be congratulated upon his appointment as a special commissioner of the United States Bureau of Education to continue his investigations of the teaching of English in high schools. His findings, based on the study which he has made of the situation during the last five years, have brought him into national prominence and have been of value in pointing the way to more efficient methods of handling the English work. SPIRIT There is no place in the grandstand today or at any time for the man who does not see the necessity of cheering when so many others are doing it for him or for the individual who sits like a bump on a log in morbid fear of making himself spicuous by preserving a fair other than those bound young gentleman of twenty-one or two, if afraid to perform a single undignified or independent action, may be less objectionable than slang, noisy college heroes of the story-books, but he is just as far removed from the happy medium. Let every man have some time sing and cheer as he has never sung before. Yale men within and without the side-linees are called upon to do their part.-Yale News. It takes a man with a keen sense of humor to joke with his dentist.—N. Y. Times. OUR DAILY QUIZ Use honor system and grade yourself IV. CHEMISTRY The science which treats of the elemental properties of substances, and of their reactivity. Heat—Atmosphere—Sound What is meant by Chemistry? **Dear** What did the ancients consider to be the Elements? The greatest number are metals; five are gases, or fluids in the form of air; the others can only be described as liquids. We see around us, including the air we breathe, are compounds of some of these elements. *Chemical affinity* not known C Chemistry has made known about airy. the REFERENCE of fire, air, earth and water as the four elements. as the four elements. 3—How many elementary substances are The natural attraction of different kinds of matter for each other, by which they combine to form molecules, is the combination of a combination of hydrogen with oxygen. The process of converting certain material into glass by fusing them together by heat. 4—What is their nature? 6. What is chemical decomposition? The reaction into their original elements. 5 What is chemical affinity? A spontaneous arrangement of particles into irregular shapes. Original electron? 7 — What is crystallization? 9—Is the art of glass making ancient? It was developed in modern times that glass has been brought to a high degree of perfection, as is seen in the finer kinds of crystal. 10—Explain common use of the combining of some substances with oxygen, attended with red heat, and usually with flames, whence it follows that the oxygen is in a fire. In blowing a fire, it is the rush of oxygen which is the true cause of the fierce blaze. 10—Explain combustion. Ol 'Mistail Trouble, he come around' one day, an ' say ' i gwiinter git you, so you laugh to run away! I like to see you hustle. Dat's de w- I has my fun; I knows I kinetest up to you, no matter how hard it is. I says: ' Mistail Trouble, you have been a-chasing me, a chasing member, an ' i seired ever since kien remember, an ' i seired at kien do So I seigne wist stop right yere an ' turn around', a-facun you an ' lick you if I, kien, an ' fin ' jus' what Ol 'Mistail Trouble, he looked mighty ashamed. He used a buckin' hosat'd suddenly been tamed. An ' den he turned an ' traveled off, a-hollerin. I also came to fool around' wif folks dats get dat way. OL' MISTAH TROUBLE No matter how fast a young man is he seldom catches up with his good intentions—N. Y. Times. (The following may or may not be a nary story. Dean Green says he is ignorant or any such incident. Butuner tancy or fact it is,as "uncle Jimmie" says an account ofa most wonderful play." theaccountis from a recent issue orCollars.) BLISS'S WONDERFUL RUN TO TOUCHDOWN "the most extraordinary play I ever saw made," said a western man ouss of kansas now nearly as famous as soldin Ward Bissi, the novice, as was in the days when he was the kid star at Lawrence. Kanse was paying the Trasken Indian senator and og keawater was then a member of the team. Late in the second night Keawater got the ball on his own quarter back's tumble, and went charging down the field like a freight engine. Bliss was just fast thing between him and him, as nung down to his tackles, he must have seen in the big Indian carried the ball in a loose way, for instead 'tackling the Indian, he snatched the ball and, rising from his knees to face the mass of both pumps, puned the field. He saw an Indian player there, he said afterward, whom he thought would put the ball on side, and enough Kansas line not yet fully away from the scrimmage point to down him with some forty yards' loss to Haskell. The Indian player got the ball and shot off to the left without interference. Bliss, after the kick, has spun down the field, and it was he first faced the runner close to the side lines. Again just once he tackled, he shifted and enchanted the ball, and with a clear field reached the Indians' five-yard line before he brought out from behind he heaviest hit the ball out of his club. Another Indian got it and down the field. This time interference formed and there were five men grouped to break it, so that a pushing, pulling mass formed around the ball. Suddenly it shot up in the air, and Bliss caught it. Ten seconds later he crossed the goal line without being touched." The way of the transgressor is hard on the joy rider—N. Y. Times. PUSSY A GOOD MASCOT Two years ago the University of Toronto played Ottawa College the opening game of the season. The University lost. After the game, as the players were going into the dressing room a black car ran across the field. Impelled by a strong punch some of the Varsity men chased the feline and captured it. So strong was their hunch that they boxed it up and carried it back home. The cat was nursed through the entire season, and as a result (?) Toronto won all the remaining games and the championship—The University of Toronto Varsity. dat acts dat way. —Washington Star. A college paper is a publication to which 10 per cent of the students subscribe, and which 90 per cent criticism—Yale Record. I'm fond of "Annie Laurie;" "A Vassar girl," observes the Detroit Free Press, "threw a baseball 205 feet the other day. How's that for a woman's right?" Maybe she was a southpaw?—Boston Transcript. The rhymes are only fair But no one in that song asserts His loved one is a bear. —Cleveland Plain Dealer. To hear it is a boo. Nobody in that song declares That he's a Zulu Coon. Washington Herald. "Beware him from —New York Mail." Cleveland Flat Daughter I like "The Miller's Daughter;" I do. I always did. I do; I always did, Yet no one in that lyric says: "Believe him she's some kid" New York Mail. And I like Highland kelly. The rhymes are only fair in that song assert —Washington Herald. \nd I like "Highland Mary;" "Up no one in that aisle. That mother's got a bean. ___Judge. And I like "Suanee River, When uttered sweet and low, When uttered sweet and loy. For no one in that song confides. That one might get a bean. ANNOUNCEMENTS Freshman Finance, committee meets in 311, Fraser Tuesday afternoon at 4:45. "Jahawke" business. A. Walters, chairman. The meeting of the College faculty which was postponed from last week will be held Thursday at 4:30 p.m. in Green, 105. Wanted—20 extra ushers for Nebraska game. Those wishing to user sher report at Robinson gymnasium Thursday evening, 8 o'clock. Definite assignments will be made at that time and every man must be present. This includes National Guard men. W. O. Hamilton. The Sphinx will hold a meeting tonight at the Phi Gamma Delta house to make arrangements for the freshman smoker tomorrow night. The meeting will be very important and it is urged that all members be present. The meeting will start at 7:30. Rooms for our guests. Anyone having a room that can ce rented for this week-end by alumni who come back to the Nebraska game will be doing a service by reporting to Alumni Headquarters K. U. 9 at once. Give price and whether men or women are preferred. CALENDAR Thursday Week of Nov. 10-15, 1913 4:30 El Ateneo Club, (306 Fra.) 4:30 Chemical Club, (Chem. 203.) 7:00 Amer. Society Mech. Eng., 4:30 Chemical Club, (Chem. 203.) 7:30 Amer. Society Mech. Eng. (1301 Ohio) 7:30 Orchestra practice, (Fra.) 7:30 Amer. Inst. Elec. Eng. (101 Marvin) 7:30 Greek Symposium, "Why We Admire Homer," Professor Wilcox, 8:00 K.J. Debating Society, (313 Fraser) Friday 11:00 Chapel, Mr. W. C. Lansdon. 8-12 Junior class dance Saturday 8-12 Student Council dance. 3:00 Football K. U. vs. Nebraska. Future Events Future Events Nov. 15 Student Council Dance, Robinson gymnasium, 8-12 p.m. Nov. 18 Fluor recital. Henri Levy. (PRESENT) Nov. 22 opponent council, 8-12. Nov. 23 J.-M.-Y. W. joint meeting in chapel, 3:30. Football Schedule Nov. 15—Nebraska on McCook. Nov. 22—Missouri at Columbia. Football Schedule All announcements or items for the University calendar either for the coming week or for future events should be given to Mr. Cronemeyer, at the department of journalism office, by 4:30 p.m. Friday. It is desired to make the calendar a complete schedule of University events and the co-operation of those interested is requested. SOPHOMORE DANCE SUCCESS Another is Planned, And Will be Given in Near Future. So successful was the first sophomore class dance in Robinson gymnasmuseum Saturday evening that the committee is making arrangements for another to be held in the near future. There were several present, including an eight-hour education program was furnished by Claire Dietrich. The members of the committee, J. Dyche, L. Thompson, and C. Stillers, consider their efforts well repaid, in spite of the other social affairs of the refreshments and refreshments during on the first floor by two students of the College, who have gained permission to serve at all the gym dances. Columbia, Nov. 7—In a letter to Coach Brewer, Coach Clyde Williams of Ames confirmed the report that the Tiger football signals had been sent to him before the Ames game of October 25. M. U. TRAITOR SENT TIGER SIGNALS TO AMES COACH There is a lunch counter in the basement of Fraser hall.—Adv. 42-1 When the letter was read before a mass meeting of 2000 Missouri students there were yells and cries against the informant. The best gas fixtures at Fienis.— Adv. 42-2 K. U. pennants, arm bands, football buttons and banners for the game Saturday at Boyles, 725 Mass. —Adv. 42-2 Ladies are served at the lunch counter in Fraser hall—Adv. 42-1 This is Pennant Week at Griggs! BOWERSOCK THEATRE MATINEE and NIGHT. WED. NOV. 19 ON DUTY The Screamingly Funny Farce OFFICER 666 By AUGUSTIN MACHUGH Three Sixes are Hard to Shake One Long Langh with Thrills Galore SPECIAL BARGAIN MATINEE Parquet 75c Balcony 50c 2nd Balcony 25c KEPT NEW YORK AND CHICAGO LAUGHING FOR ONE SOLID YEAR Parquet—1st 8 rows . . . $1.50 Parquet—Next 9 rows . . . 1.00 Balcony—1st 3 rows . . . 1.00 Balcony—Next 5 rows . . . .75 All 2nd Balcony . . . . .50 NIGHT SAM S. SHUBERT Matinée Wednesday and Saturday LEW FIELDS IN "All Abroad" PROTSCH The College Tailor Lowney's Chocolates McColloch's Drug Store 812 Vermont Phones 139 Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage Chafing dishes, casseroles, coffee machines and percolators. The finest line of metal and wood serving trays in the city. ROYAL ROCHESTER KENNEDY & ERNST 820 MASS. ST. PHONES 341 SAVE THE PIECES SAVE THE PIECES We have added Lens Grinding Machinery to our Optical department. Any Lens Duplicated Glasses Fitted. HESTER Jeweler and Optician LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. W. H. Quakenbush, Pres.; E. S. Weatherby, Supt. Eldridge House Stable W. E. MOAK, Prop. Taxicabs, Hacks, Livery Baggage Haused Both Phones 148 BERT WADHAMS The College Inn Barber FeaturingMilk Chocolates "SWEDE" Phones 540 COATS AND ALLEN CAN'T DO WITHOUT DAILY KANSAN Life in the copper metropolis, Coats and Allen say is not worth while without the University Daily Kansan. Charles M. Coats and Glenn L. Allen, 13', 14' mining engineers of Bissbee, Ariz., who are forging to the front in their profession as the result of a berth, to behold their own language "in the world we live in" per se, they just subscribed for Kansas, so that they may read, know and live. Notice Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 501, Home 180 We Give Club Rates 841 Mass. St. Upstairs. Students O. P. Leonard's Pantatorium is on the job again this year. Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Lawrence Pantatorium 2 W. Warren Both Phonex 506 Particular Cleaning and A "Square Deal" A. G. SPALDING & BROS. 1120 Grand Ave. Kansas City, Mo. Send for our Catalogue. for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantee each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding Trade-Mark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. A G. SPALDING & BROS. A. M. SALLOWING CO. TRADE SPALDING MARK A D 1924 FOR TAXI PHONES 12 We have some good values in Pennants & Posters to close with. J. A. Keeler 939 MASS. See the New Parker Self-Filling Fountain Pen Office Supplies, Typewriters F. I. CARTER 25 Mass. Bell phone 105 Come on Down - to JIM'S Tonight 1101 Mass. St. W. A. Guenther Phones 226 721 Liesn Give Us a Trial Brunswick Bowling Alley Four Regulation Allies with loop-the-loop return. 714 Mass. When calling for a good brand of 5c CIGARS SMOKE Robert Hudson, Pierson's Hand Made At all first class dealers UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY HELPS TO START LIGHT PLANTS Electrical Department Gives Advice and Counsel to City Executives. The electrical engineering department of the University of Kansas is now at the disposal of the various municipalities of the state for advice concerning installing and running electric light lamps "However," said Prof. Geo. C Shaid, this morning, "we do not wish to be put on record as universally favoring municipal ownership for the cities of Kansas. In many cases the best possible proposition is a mutually satisfactory arrangement with private corporations for the supply of electrical severance and electric power to corporations are satisfied with a reasonable return for their investment, such arrangement can be made." University Will Advise UNIVERSITY In case however, the municipality would take over the electrical plant, or install a new one, the department at the University will meet the city council for a general discussion, and advice. "But, by discussion and advice, is not meant planning the plant to the minutest detail," continued the head of the electrical engineering department. "Services of the local engineer can be secured for this purpose. Our aim is to give the city council a broad general knowledge of the subject so that it may know what it is attempting." Cities Ask Various Questions Cities Ask Various Questions Many and various questions are sent in to the University by cities. Here are a few of them: Is municipal ownership or an arrangement with a private corporation the better proposition for the particular city? Is the arrangement as proposed or already in force with the private corporation one which is to the good interests of the city and at the same time a reasonable one for the corporation? Which of two, or more, contracts or proposals is the better for the When the present arrangements, such as rates service, etc. are not satisfactory, what steps if any, can the city take to improve matters? Are the questions which arise such as can be answered by one reasonable familiar with the field or should a detailed engineering study be made of it before any reliable conclusions can be reached? What should be the basis of the rates to be charged for electrical energy whether the plant is municipal or private and the supply is from private concerns? YOUNG WOMAN OF N. Y. IS EFFICIENT EXPERT She admits that she was not born with a gavit, and system but he has acquired it. He has acquired By the indirect road to amateur dressmaking Miss Margaret MacKinley of New York has become the only efficient expert of her sex. The young woman is expert for the NAACP, and young Women's Christian Association. Since she has taken over the efficiency end of the Y. M. C. A. she has instituted many new rules and reorganized the work in practically every department. By the simple arrangement of having a head pencil sharpener instead of letting each stenogram or cleaver own pencils, or having reduced his $8 a year, and that with a larger staff than last year, and has saved the time a high salaried young woman would take to put a point on the lead by having a lower salaried person do the work. TEXAS DEAN OF WOMEN SEWS UP SPLIT SKIRT Mrs. Kirby, dean of women at the University of Texas, stated that while there is no regulation preventing the wearing of the slit skirt at the University, all the girls know that she is not in favor of them being, as he says, the shall, and ally has, called several girls into office and sewed the slip up. She has a needle on hand at all times for that purpose. Dr. Henry van Dyk, professor of English in Princeton, who was recently appointed minister to Holland by President Wilson, put in his resignation as professor of English. The board of trustees decided to thank his resignation; but they granted him an indefinite leave of absence. Four hundred students have registered in the different branches of athletics at Harvard. Hersheys and chewing gum at the lunch counter in Fraser—Adv. 12-1 This is Pennant Week at Griggs! MR. STUDE WRITES MOTHER AND In the little box labeled "Post Office" in the registrar's office, $500 worth of stamps are sold each month and the students and the faculty of the University use all of them. If all of the stamps were one cent ones there would be enough to cover the little office all over and still be enough left to start a carpet for the floor. The number of people waited upon can be estimated but that averageof $19 a day comes in in smallots and anyone lacking it of George O. Foster wouldprobably place the estimate at one million. SUPPLIES STAR FISH TO HIGH SCHOOLS Prof. W. J. Baumgartner Sends Miniature Menageries by the Barrel Over State The zoology department of the University of Kansas gives more assistance to the high schools of the state than any similar institution in the neighboring states. It collects frogs, jelly-fish, star-fish, dog-fish grasshoppers, mosquitoes, salts which high schools want them at prices very little above cost and far below the prices charged by private supply houses. Five years ago Prof. W. J. Baumgartner of the department of zoology began a zoology supply department and has given four years of remuneration. In the five years about fifty barrels of material have been handled. Much of this has been used in the zoological work University, with thirty-five barrels of material. The state have been supplied with material. The first big zoological expeditions were made to the Gulf of Mexico and to Puget Sound five years ago. Last summer another large party went to Puget Sound to collect material. Professor Baumgartner teaches in a summer school at Friday Harbor when he is not dig worms for worms or dredging for star-fish. This place is the headquarters for the expeditions in which several students take part each year. Social Notes The Sigma Chi fraternity held its annual home dinner last night at the Temple of St. John the Divine. The fraternity and the house mother, Mrs. Petty were the only guests. The Keltz club will give a smoker Saturday night at the club house for the guests who are here for the game. The Kappa Alpha Theta sorority entertained the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity with a dinner last night at the chapter house. The Delta Phi Delta fine arts sorority will hold its annual sale at Woodward's drug store, December 11, 12, and 13. Miss Blanche Millis of Kansas City will be the guest of Ruth Buchanan this week-end. The Sigma Nu chapter house entertained the freshmen of the Sigma Kappa sorority last night at dinner. The guests were Mona Chace man, Josephine Lamboeurs, Floss Cameron, Fern Wilson, and Dura Palmer Mu Phi Epsilon, the honorary musical sorority of the University, will hold an initiation tonight at the home of Marie Kettles for Miss Elsa Zutervan of Great Bend. After the initiation the annual Founder's Day banquet will be held. Covers will be laid for twenty-three. Judge and Mrs. R. H. Hanna, of Santa Fe, New Mexico, are the guests of Prof. and Mrs. J. N. Van der Vries. They will stay over to witness the Kansas-Nebraska game. Judge Hanna is a member of the supreme court of New Mexico. Miss Helen Short of Leavenworth, will arrive in Lawrence tomorrow to spend the week-end with Miss Jess Read of the College. Miss Elizabeth Heaveny '12, of Leavenworth, is visiting in Lawrence this week. . . . FRESHMAN GIRL BREAKS LEG IN RUNAWAY SATURDAY Florence Dunigan a freshman in the College, broke her leg Saturday when she jumped from a buggy after the horse started to run away. The accident happened southwest of town. Caramel time at Wiedemann's.— HOW YE K. U. STUDENT OF 1873 DID CUT UP! When the good old gathers gather on Mount Oread each June, their memories always take a long hark back to the 1873 commencement when Chancellor Fraser reigned and the history of the K. U. oldtimers was born. At Commencement Some Gay Undergrad Shocked Crowd With Ghostly Skeleton Fraser hall was then in the process of erection. The south wing and main hall were yet unfinished. The whole bullwing was barklike with roughly plastered walls, windows closed with old boards and a large hole above the ceiling. It was an unattractive place but the best that was to be had for the commencement exercises at that time. A temporary platform was built at the south side of the hall and decorated with flags and flowers. The place was crowded; even all the standing room was taken. In the midst of the exercises, while the band was playing a solemn tune, there slowly descended from the dark hole in the ceiling a skeleton, shaking his hand in the scattering bones and executing a sort of ghost dance just above the heads of the people. On his big toe tug a paper on which was inscribed the single word "Pred." For a time there was a great hubub, and a general rush made to discover the perpetrators of the joke. No one was caught. The only clue that was ever found was a rope hanging in an air shaft and a blue neckie found at the foot of the shaft. The tie was kept at Chancellor Fraser's office for several months but the owner never came after it, neither did the person to some indenture was lost by the student while climbing the rope will probably always remain a mystery—unless a prominent man now living in Kansas City will consent to give further information. As soon as quiet had been partially restored the president's young wife, turning to her husband, asked, "What does 'brex' mean?" "The faculty," he quickly answered. LAW TRAINING NEEDS CHANGE SAYS N. Y MAN LAW TRAINING NEEDS Clarence D. Ashley, dean of the law school of New York University, has just filed a report with the chancellor of that institution saying, "We need fewer lawyers and those we have should be highly trained, liberally educated men. There is a very general belief among fair-minded men that our legal system is antiquated technical and ill-adopted to present day needs. We need knowledge complete fundamental education. The public perceives that something is wrong in the administration of justice and the view is reached that the law itself if defective." Edward C. Mercer the noted social worker among college men, told the Cornell fraternity men the other day that the moving picture shows have done much to eliminate drink and licentiousness among college men. FELLS CORNELL MEN THAT MOVIES AID TEMPERANCE Young Bob LaFollette, son of the well known senator from Wisconsin, heads one of the tickets as candidate for president in 2012. University of Wisconsin. Bob is said to be advocating as his platform the same sort of democracy which his father has always upheld. He runs on what is called a university ticket while his opponent has organized progressive ticket. College Encourages Marriage Of the 1,113 women who have been graduated from Barnard College since its founding, in 1893, a total of 258 have married. Leaving out the graduate of Barnard College, so also the statisticians believe, have not yet had time to select their life partners, the percentage of married women among Barnard alumnae is 29.4, with the class of '02 having 25 of 49 of its members married. Even in the class of '10 it is shown that 26 percent toward matrimony, for eleven out of the 88 have already married, with engagements on file from many of the others. Just Like Dad. LOST-Theta pin, between 746 Miss. St. and the Theta house. Pinder please return to Carolyn McNiel for the Theta house and receive reward. Flash lights at Fiens.—Adv. 42-2 This is Pennant Week at Griggs! The Sale of 30 dozen Perrins Mended Gloves For Women or Misses at 69c a Pair The same qualities for which you usually pay $1.25, $1.50, $1.75 and $2.00 The lot includes two-clasp street gloves in French Kid and Pique Cape with heavy stitching, white, black, brown, tan, gray, navy. SIZES 5 $ _{3/4} $ to 7 $ _{1/4} $ A salesgirl at each size station, North aisle first floor. No Returns In previous sales of Perrins Mended Gloves, we have not had a pair left at 12 o'clock noon. No Refunds K. U. ALUMNUS WILL GIVE ESSAY PRIZES Onws; Bullline Hackman Dr. H. F. Hyndman Offers Liberal Awards to Summer County Students. GEN HUNTER TO ADVANCE ON CHINCH BUG ENEMIES (By Edwin E. Price) Wellington, Nov. 11—One of the medical men of this city, Dr. H. F. Hyndman, graduate of the University of Kansas has offered to Summer county high school students a first and a second prize of ten dollars and five dollars respectively for the best and second best oration on some subject pertaining to hygiene and health. Several are taking advantage of this offer. Among the subjects selected for these orations are the following: Immigrant Inspection, School Hygiene, The Great White Plague, and The Fly, a Carrier of Disease. (Bv H. Dale Watson) Coffeyville, Chanute, Parsons, Independence and Neodesha in Southeast Kansas Organization Mr. and Mrs. Chinch bug had better gather their baby bugs and flee to the tall timber or Gen. S. J. Hunter and his mighty army will begin a march to the southern border line of Kansas next Monday which will devastate the populous lands of the chinch bugs. Lieu. P. W. Clausen will go along to see that no hardy bugs escape the army's file. FIVE BIG SCHOOLS FORM NEW BASKET-BALL LEAGUE Coffeyville, Nov. 11—A high school basket-ball league, which includes five of the largest schools in southeastern Kansas, has been formed. The high schools of Coffeyville, sons, independent of Coffeyville, and independent in the new organization. An eight-game schedule has been arranged. The Coffeyville team will play its first game at home against Independence December 12. The new league will underder the name Independent Western League, a high-school basketball League and will be governed according to the rules of the A. A. U. Both a girls' and a boys' team have been organized and are practicing regularly. Prof. L. W. Wilkie is coaching the boys' team and Miss McKeon, the girls'. A double-header game will be played at Independence next Friday. This will not be a league game. The campaign will last one month and will supplement the work which was done last year. All the hedge rows and grass plots in the infested districts will be burned. This will destroy the eggs of the vermin and will control the damage done by the bugs. Professor Hunter state entomologist said this morning that the state would assist any farmer in the state to exterminate the pest. This is Pennant Week at Griggs! FRIDAY NIGHT DANCE TO AID JUNIOR SMOKER FUND The first Junior dance will be given in Robinson gymnasium tomorrow Clarence Williams chairman of the junior social committee has planned to turn over part of the profits to the successes to the class rooker committee. This will enable the men in charge to give an entertainment even better than the price charged for a smoker would warrant. If at the end of the year the social committee has made money in its series of dances the amount will be merged with the memorial fund. ENGINEERING PROFESSORS WILL ADDRESS STUDENTS Lectures on practical subjects connected with the engineering profession will be given weekly by the arvious professors of the School of Engineering. The following are addresses listed until the holidays: Nov. 19—Dean Larvin, address on General Topics. On General Topics Dec. 3—Prof. B. J. Dalton, The Engineer's Relation to Railroads and Railroading. Dec. 10—Prof. C. M. Young, The Engineer's Relation to Mining. Dec. 17–Prof. H. A. Rice, Th Engineer's Relation to Bridge Bake REGENTLESS K. U. NEEDS ONE NEW OFFICIAL SEAL The seal of the University of Kansas is about to be cast aside. It is behind the times and is now practically useless. Registrar Geo. O. Foster uses the seal says a new one will have to be adopted. The old seal has "The Regents of the University of Kansas" across the bottom. Now there are no regents, nothing but a Board of Trustees, and the seal means nothing. It is still used, however, in cases of necessity. Try the sandwiches at the lunch counter in Fraser hall—Adv. 42-1 All kinds of electric supplies at Flens—Adv. 42-2 This is Pennant Week at Griggs! Bowersock Theatre Friday--Nov.-14 The Nation Wide Musical Success Franc C. Payne Inc., presents 爱人 TH6 THE ROSE MAID With 60 people 60 Cast and Beauty Chorus Beyond Criticism Special Orchestra, 12 Musicians A Rose Bud Garden of Girls Each Girl a Fashion Plate PRICES: Parquet Balcony Balcony Balcony $2.00 $1.50 $1.00 $1.00 $1.00 $7.50 Tuesday, NOV. 10 at 8:30 a.m. NOTE: Curtain $1.15 p. m. Those Seats on Sale at Woodward & Co. Thursday, Nov 13 at 8 o'clock coming in after curtain goes up will not be seated until after the first act. MUMS FOR THE GAME ALL COLORS To Insure Deliveries On Time Order Early PROFESSIONAL CARDS PHONES 621 W. C. McONNELL Phyciadian and surgeon, Office 819 Mass. St. Bell 309, Home 9342, Residence, 1346 Tenn. St. Bell 1023, Home 936. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist of St. Louis office. Office 802 Mass. St. Bell phone 905. HARRY REDING. M. D. Eve. ear, nose Bleach. Phone 513. Home 513. A12. Phone. Home 513. Home 513. G. A. IAMMAN M. D. M. Eye, ear, and the head. Building Guaranteed. Dick Building. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BRYON, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS Office over Squires Studio. Both phones. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D. D. O. 833 Mass Museum街. Both phones, office and phone. CLASSIFIED THE FLOWER res Studio. Both phones. DR. BURT R. WHITE Phones, Box 128, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. St. Barbers DB, H. T. JONES, Room 12 F. A. A. H., Residence 130 Tenn. Phone 211- 545-689-2728 G, W, JONES, A. M, M. D, Diseases of surgical surgery, and gynecology. Suite 1. F, A. A. Bldg. Residence, 1201 Ohio St. Both phones. 35. Frank Hill's Barber Shop, 1025 Mass. Two good baggars. Satisfaction assured. J. C. Houk's Barber Shop, 913 Mass. Never have to wait. Razors honed. chairs; never have to wait. Razors honed. S. T. Gillippe, M. D. Office, corner Vermont Residence, 728 Ida Barrentan. Phone 5003. E. J. Blair, Physician and Surgeon. Office 250 to 400 w. of I-70, m. i-350 y. m. 1 p. and m. 2 p. to 700 w. of I-70, m. i-350 y. m. 1 p. and m. 2 p. Plumbers Phone Kenzo. Plumbing Co., for gas Mazda. Mazda lamps. 947. Mass. Phones 685. Price reasonable, work the best. Let us figure on your furnace work. Everything in stoves. Osborn & Co., 816 Mass. St. Phones 423. Ladies Tailors Mir, Ellison. Drossmaking and Ladies Tailoring, Loving. Phones 2411, over Mass. Cali. Lawrence leaving School. Ledies 'talliging phones 500. Miss Powers: M. C. McClair- phones 500. Ladies Talking and Dressmaking. Gowns for all occaions. All work guaranteed. Mrs. T. B. Dally. 914 Mass. Sanitary cleaning establishment in connection. Phone (212) 653-7080. Queen City College. System and sewing schools. Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 849 Kohl. school, Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 849 Kohl. Sporting Goods Hair Dressers Miscellaneous D & M sporting goods and athletic supplies. Dunley & Kirst. 920 Mass. L. Phones. 341-678-5313 Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-grows, "Martiello" haircut. Hair salon call Bell 1372. Home 51. The Select Hair Dress Shop, 927 Mass 84. Hawaia Cafe for regular meals, lunch and orders when down town. Open after a week. d. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler, Jewelry, Bell Phone (J Mason) 825 1-2 MASS no trial mean no risk, small in investment. Fine homemade smoke clear. smoke W. T. P. homemade smoke clear. I have a nice line of plain claith for painting: Eurodam, studios in Zürich and Kiel, Karolins Studios, studios T32 Mass. St. upper Pont-Neuf, studios T33 Mass. St. upper Pont-Neuf. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. BETTER GET that suit or overcoat before the cold wave gets here. Just now you get your choice of any $18 garment for $15.00 $15.00 Also all fancy suits, value up to $20 for Our reason for this is that many sizes in the $15 line are sold out and we do this instead of reordering. M. J. Skofstad GOOD CLOTHES 829 MASS When you're on the hill drop in at the new Oread Tea Room, 1241 Oread.—Adv. This is Pennant Week at Griggs! New lot of Nebraska and K. U. pennants just in at Boyles... 42-2 Plain caramels, nut caramels, and dipped caramels at Wiedemann's— Adv. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN JUNIORS TAKE LEAD IN INTERCLASS MEET Hurst Wins Pole Vault, Putting Third Year Men in Front. But one event in the interclass tmeet meet, the pole vault, was held yesterday. By winning first and tying for second place in this event, the juniors crowded the sophomores cut of first division. Haret, junior won with a vault of 10 ft. 6 in. Jones a junior and Russ, and Gutzmacher, freshmen tied for second at a height of 10 ft., each getting one point. Taylor, freshman was third (By Paul Brindel) The score now stands: Juniors, 30; sophomores, 26; seniors, 23 and freshmen, 18. WILL RUN SPECIAL TO THE TIGER CAMP (By Paul Brindle) Kansas City, Kans., Nov. 12—Announcement of a speed train to Columbia for the Kansas-Missouri football game driving Kansas City Friday night at 11:40, and arriving on the Tigers the next morning at 9 was made yesterday by the Wabusa city ticket agent in Kansas City, Mo. The fare will be $3.75 for the round trip from Kansas City. Wabash Agent Announces Night Train From K. C. to Columbia—Accommodations For All Pullman accommodations will be available in addition to the usual chair car and coach equipment. Two dollars will be charged for a lower berth and one sixty-six Reserve car made after Montover of next week. A dining car, serving breakfast before arrival in Columbia, will be carried. Although efforts were made to have a special leaving Kansas City SINCLAIR If you're tripping, trotting or tangoing, here's the evening suit that will add grace to your kick and style to your dip. These suits are the exact models made by the exclusive New York tailors, correct in every line and point. Full dress suits, silk lined, $35, Tuxedo coats $25. Full dress waistcoats from $3 to $6. And all the necessary details from collars to Tango Pumps. Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTSitters the morning of the game, the project was found impossible, according to railroad men, because of the distance and the poor track between Centralia and Columbia on the branch line. However by this arrangement's students can leave Lawrence as late as 8:35 Friday evening and have ample time to make connections in Kansas City. This is Pennant Week at Griggs! Many To See Game of that crowd the best dressed young men will wear clothes tailored by Shultz. Style, quality, fit are all ear marks of our clothes. We invite inspection. 913 Mass. The WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus $100,000 Corner Mass. and Quincy Sts. Issues its own Letters of Credit and Travellers Checks The only way to carry your money in safety. Banking of all kinds solicited. P We Invite Comparison We KNOW We Have The Finest Pennants Made We Want You to Know It Also. GRIGGS 827 Mass. TWENTY-FIVE TIGERS TO ROOT FOR JAYHAWK Missourians Are Coming to Help Kansas Win Cornhusker Game Saturday No more does the old Missouri Kansas hatred predominate over all other feelings of the two schools! No more dancers crying "Beat Kansas" flare out into the eyes of visitors in Columbia! No more do Jayhawk rooters shout "Get Missouri." The old time feeling of enmity and dread has passed—and everyone recognizes the fact. As a proof of this—“Twenty-five Missourians will be in Lawrence Saturday rooting for Kansas,” says a letter received this morning from Harrison Brown, the editor of the University Missouri. “Tiger rooters are as anxious for the Jayhawkers to win fom Nebraska as are the Kansans themselves.” (Petty good spirit—eh what?) S "We're coming to Lawrence Saturday to become Jayhawkers for a day, and cheer Kansas on to a great victory," he concludes. The University Missourian will issue a football extra Saturday on the Kansas-Nebraska game. The Washburn Ichabods suffered a severe blow to their state championship hopes yesterday afternoon when it was definitely ascertained that Dwight Keen, of Tampa Bay, had more football for the Blue and White eleven this year. Parental objection is the cause of his withdrawal from the game. Under Other Goal Posts Topeka enthusiasts are having a good sized pipe dream these days and are supporting the claim of Dan Rogers the captain of the Ichabod eleven, for an All-Valley tackle position. They base their support on the showing he achieved in the Kansas game last Saturday. All very well! The Washburn "dope fiends" however seem to have forgotten the presence of Messrs. Weildie, Halligan, Loomis, and Cameron on other Valley teams, all as good as the Topeka star. The one big surprise of the football world came yesterday when it was learned that Texas University beat the Oklahoma Sooners 14 to 6. Benny Owen had counted this game as a sure Oklahoma victory. "Now," figures the "dopist." "Oklaahoma beat Kansas. If Kansas bears the Jayhawks in Minnesota, the Gophers fell in conflict before the Lincolns. Minnesota beat Wisconsin, Wisconsin—Why Texas has a good claim to the All-American football championship" Officer, oh officer call a cop! Says Jumbo Stiehm, in an interview with the Topeka papers, "It is doubtful if either Rutherford or Purdy, my two halfbacks, will be able to play against the Jayhawkers Saturday. Rutherford has tonsiltis, and Purdy is laid up with a sprained knee" "Alas, too bad, Jumbo," say we. "Considering that it is all one grand bear story." Our sincerest apologies to Messrs. Strickland and Cline, the Lawrence representatives of the Kansas City Star and Journal respectively. In our Monday's edition we attempted mildly to rim these two gentlemen on their Sunday stories when they gave the first Kansas City Greenlees and one to Sommers, Leonaan Frank our authority on the matter, now reopens his former decision and states Greenlees really did lug the ball over the goal line, not the other half as he originally stated. We are glad to offer the representatives of the Kansas City papers this apology. Navy defeated Bucknell Saturday by the overwhelming score of 70 to 7. The smaller school, made famous by being the Alma Mater of "Big Six" Mathewson, romped on the Middies last year, and the Sailors amply got the revenge for which they had longed. Charles Brickley, the Harvard booster, is more than ever the hero of the Cambridge school since his field goal which defeated the Princeton Tigers last Saturday. Brickley was already acknowledged the best halfback in the team and will undoubtedly be with Baker of Princeton the two positions on the All-American eleven, to be chosen after the season closes. A press dispatch from Lincoln states that the Cornhuskers' halfback, Rutherford, is out of the game with a mild attack of fever, and will not be able to work against the Jayhawkers, two weeks hence. He has been able to past Stiehl has turned out much more plausible bear stories than that. South American Opportunities John Barrett director general of the Pan-American union of Washington, D. C.; with emphasis on the Canal and South American Mean to Columbia University Students." The Drake Collegians now have but one big game to look forward to, their contest with the Ames Aggies Thanksgiving. This is an annual affair between the two schools, and a single victory in this big game makes up for a season of defeats which the winners may have suffered earlier in the fall. Come on Drake, we're with you! Missouri stock is booming after her defeat of the Drake Bulldogs Saturday in Columbia. The Tiger defense had been considered weak before this game, but the decisive way that they did was the branding of the Des Moines linesmen brands the rumor a rank "bear story." The Haskell Redskins have piled up so far this season a total of 284 points to their opponents' 14. And of these 14, but 7 were earned. This unrivalled record should furnish one grand monument to the work of Bert Kennedy, as good a coach as there is in the entire Missouri Valley. Says the Kansas City Star, "Missouri's victory over Drake put the Tiger's in the Conference race," Take it from us, dear readers, the Tigers have always been in the Conference race. And they always will be. Were it not for their lone defeat at the hands of the Michigan Aggies the Ann Arbor Wolverines would easily head the middle west teams in their race for the Big 9 title. After looking both teams over, had it not been for the decisive score by which the Fargo derrovers gave this game to Fordham, a casual observer would be led to believe that Yost had the stronger eleven. His men easily romped on the Cornell Collegians at Ithaca Saturday. Notes from many of the eastern —Spalding Sweaters— Are exclusive. They look right and they are all wool. See our special garment for ladies. CARROL'S SMITH'S NEWS DEPOT 709 Mass. Phones 608 Instruments Gem Union Dietzen - $17.00 Richter - - - - - 14.00 Altemeder - - - - 27.00 UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE 803 MASS. ST. and middle west colleges indicate that part of their "favorite sons," football stars in former years, are now congregating on the college gridiron to help coach the 1913 elevens. The Jayhawkers would not object to a similar pilgrimage toward Mt. Oread. "Foolish football" characterized the play of the Tigers last night" says the University Missouri last week. Missouri, them's the kindest woids we've heard from you this year. This is Pennant Week at Griggs! A boxing class will be organized at the University of Texas for the benefit of the upperclassmen. Freshmen are not eligible to join the class. JUNIOR DANCE HALEY AND FINDLAY WILL PLAY Tomorrow Night Last Dance in Gymnasium Admission 50c Freshman Smoker Tonight Eagles' Hall GOOD EATS :: GOOD SMOKES :: GOOD PROGRAM Admission 25c COME OUT AND GET ACOUAINTED COME OUT AND GET ACQUAINTED The Oread Tea Room A Few of the Things for FRIDAY Clam Chowder Roast Young Chicken with Combination Dressing Cream Shrimp in Cases Individual Vienne Meat Rolls Prime Ribs of Beef Loin of Pork with Jelly Porter House Roast with Mushroom Sauce English Veal Cutlets STEAKS! We serve all the different kinds the way you like them. Try Our Sandwiches During That Chapel Date Soda Fountain—Candies—Cigars 1241 OREAD STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY VOLUME XI UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TOPEKA KAN. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 14, 1913. NUMBER 45. "PROFANITY DIVIDES US",SAYS CHANCELLOR "So Let's Leave It Out And Thus Present A United Front" LANSDON URGES CLEAN PLAY Rally Speakers Remind Students That Kansans Should First of All be Gentlemen Chancellor Strong asked the students to leave the "cuss" words out of their yells in his speech at the rally this morning. raised that "It makes a division," he said, "because a whole lot of us don't approve of it. Then it is contrary to the genius of this institution, and puts a stamp on us that doesn't belong there." The Chancellor also requested students to refrain from damaging property. "It makes us look like roughnecks," he said, "and we are W. C. Lanson, of Salina, former manager of athletics, and a Kansan born and raised, talked of Kansas and her spirit, and gave a little dope on some of the old boys who kept the plumage of the Jayhawk intact in times past. He thinks Nebraska will be defeated tomorrow. A strong point of his address was an appeal for clean playing. "Nebraska may play some one whom we do not like," said he, "but that is Nebraska's business, and every member of the team who played there in Kansas are neighbors and should be allies. There should be no friction." "Cousin" Tom Smith, who has the Kansas spirit in the nth power, gave a little peep to the football player himself, says that according to all the dope Nebraska hasn't a thing on Kansas, and that Kansas will win. Y. M. COMMITTEES REPORT AT BANQUET Chairmen Say Association Stock in Above Par With 445 Student Members Hal Grafton, Hal Coffman, Registrar郭 O. Foster, Ralph Yeeman, Prof. R. A. Schwegler, and Con Hoffman gave after dinner talks on the importance of the life of students and the life of students. Registrar Foster made an exceptionally strong talk on "Why are we here?" "We are here to talk about the most important thing in student life, the work of the Y. M. C. A.," said Chancellor FrankCommittee's master of arts Committee's inauguration of the Y. M. C. A., held in Wyers hall last night. 700 at Chapel Rally In the meantime nearly 700 other students attended the rally in chapel. The band played and Chancellor Strong and "Cousin" Smith made speeches. The crowd cheered and yelled and hollered. Would we win? We would, in no untaintain language. Were we DISCOURAGED? Most people knew that Nebraska's corn mucked and in the crib and both the eyes of the old Miss Tiger are blacked clear shut if pep has anything to do with it. WILL BE FIRST WEDDING HELD IN SORORITY HOUSE The first wedding ever held in a sorority house at the University will take place when the marriage of Miss Hassel Templeton of Hiawatha, a senior in the School of Fine Arts and Mr. W. A. Iwiliw, Duver, Colo., will be celebrated Saturday 7 'clock in the Alpha Delta Pi house. The Rev. Mr. Elderkin of the Congregational church of this city will officiate. HOLD COLLEGE SMOKER IN EAGLES' HALL NOV. 18 The first all-college smoker will be held November 18 in the Eagles hall. Prof. George Putnam will be the master of ceremonies. Phi Gamma Delta will hold a dancing party at Fraternal Aid hall Fri night night for the visiting Fijis from Nebraska. GOOD SPORTSMANSHIP (We asked Uncle Jimmy Green, the patron saint of K. U. football to write our editorial on the Kansas-Nebraska game tomorrow. Here it is:) "Tomorrow we meet the mighty Cornhuskers and I have a feeling in my bones that we are going to beat them." "But whether we win or not, and whatever the line-up of the Nebraska team, let us not forget ourselves. Let us remember that the rooters as well as the team can display sportsmanship when Nebraska twice tomorrow, on the field on the bleachers. held and on the bleachers. "If the athletic management has passed on the personnel of the Nebraska team, it is not for the bleachers to judge or to humiliate any visiting player. Sportsmanship on the bleachers is as necessary as clean playing on the field. Let us treat every member of the Nebraska team like a gentleman." SOPHOMORES STORM FIRST-YEAR SMOKER "UNCLE JIMMY GREEN." Freshmen Puff Calmly While Upperclassmen Pound Barred Doors While three hundred freshmen sat at the cool*ends of long black cigars, last night listening to a sermon by the colored parson on "Old Mother Hubbard," one thousand (it seemed) shouted, "Do not look at the doors of Eagles' hall trying to break up the service. Ames Rogers, president of the freshman Sphinx society ordered the sermon to continue and the crowd outside soon wandered off to a tavern where the moving picture show it all happened this way. Held Off Upperclassmen The first freshman smoker was announced for last night and every first-year man on the hill came out. The sophomores and other upper-classmen at the rally in Fraser hall decided that it would be a great stunt to go down and rough-house the freshmen. So down they went—horns, tim pans, bells, sophomores and they rushed the Eagles' hall and managed to get the doors of the building open. A hundred sophomores to upstairs. Parson Verta Alley, preaching from the text, "Old Mother Hubbard told me the climax of this sermon. The freshman rushed toward the door." "Be quiet, fellows." Ames Rogers dorms are locked and peo one can get in. The freshmen gradually returned to their seats and the parson drew his moral from the tale of "Old Mother Hubbard," while they crowd outside soon gave up their attempt and wandered off. Then everybody got acquainted with everybody else. After the cigars had burned out there were sugared doughnuts and cider. ALL EYES FOCUSSED ON KANSAS CHILD Convention Speakers Dis cussed Condition and Remedies for Betterment The child was the subject of the discussion at the joint session of the Kansas Conference of Charities and Corrections, of the Kansas State Society of Criminal Law and Criminology and of the Association of Probate Judges, held in Snow hall last night. The addresses dealt with the child's home life, some recent attempts for legislation for the betterment of the child's condition, and the relation of the public to the child. Following a welcome by Dean F. W. Blackmar, Rev. F. E. Sherman, first vice-president of the Kansas Conference of Charities and Corrections, gave the annual address that society, in which he pleaded for better parents, better lives, better surroundings, and better training. After the Rev. Sherman, Judge Wm. F. Schoch, president of the Kansas State Society of Criminal Law and Criminology, told of the vain attempts of that body to obtain the passage of child welfare laws in the legislature. He deplored the disposition of many amateur reformers to take inspiration from an isolated case. Following Judge Schoch, Judge W. W. Parker, Probate Judge of Lyon county and president of the Association of Probate Judges adds that the juvenile court and the public's responsibility for juvenile conditions. Miss Lena Miller and Miss Kate Daum had charge of the luncheon. Fifty criminologists were entertained at 12:30 o'clock today with a luncheon given by Mr. Edno Echo Day, of the Mafia of Forshall in the basement of Frasher hall. Miss Day Entertains HUNGRY JAYHAWK AND LEAN CORNHUSKER READY FOR BATTLE McCook Stage Set and Actors Eager to Answer First Call-Old Kansans Here to Witness the Husking of the Corn Scipio Africanus, the old Roman senator, alwa concluded each speech in the senate with the words, "Carthage Must Be Destroyed." A very savery Jayhawk and a lean and hungry Cornhusker will meet for a death struggle on McCook field tomorrow afternoon at 2:45 o'clock. An undercurrent of excitement is seen and fitted in every part of the town. At one corner a knot of business men are assembled. At another a group of noisy students are locked in a quietous, one with air with their surprise of loyal esprit, all thinking of the Saturday struggle. For the real peep of the past few days is after all the real Kansas spirit. And the hundreds of determined young men and young women, for the majority of the assembling crowd is young, realize this, and are rejoicing that the great struggle is so near at hand. It would seem as if a great legal holiday were about to be celebrated, or a president was expected. For the town is in gala attire today. Constantly augmenting crowds are streaming into the building where they have already begun to arrive. Great excitement is prevalent, and the Kansas spirit is in the air. The light rain which the coaches have been praying for came. The weather promises to be colder. Everything is set for the big game, and everything is perfect. The payers have been shifted and definitely rain is feeling that he is in the one position which he naturally created to build. AND MOREOVER, NEBRAKA MUST BE DESTROYED DR.C.E. JIMMY MALLOY The enemy is coming prepared to meet a great team. A great team is waiting for them with fighting expectancy. Greek will meet Greek; but the Kansas spirit and the Minnesota Shift won the Missouri game last year, and we're ___ MINE HOST K. U. WILL ENTERTAIN THOUSANDS All Kansas to Welcome Guests Who Arrive For Big Game All K. U. will be a host to thousands of visitors over the week-end Every train will bring innumerable guest house in the University district. The following is a part of the visiting audience: Sigma Alpha Epsilon; "Cupid" Haddock "Henie" Waters, Raymond Kirkpatrick, Mates, Chandler, Chester A. Dunham, Fredrick Att, Miss Dorothy Bandy, Mr., and Mrs. Raymond Stockton, Miss Esther Degen, John Parker, and Linton rv betaPi M; Marion Ellis, Ava Hardcaste, Jae Reikel, Nell Culbull, Edith Lamie, Milred Marr, Louise Barrick, Genevieve Prey Phi Aphla Delta; Clifford Sullivan, Willis Maessomore, Richard Cox, McCaskill, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nesbitt, Mr. Pfounts, Mr. Walters. (Continued on page 4) **Phi Delta Theta:** Thornton Cook, Ted Cook, Sydney Cudd, Hyden Eaton, Reed Beyers, Woodward James, Crawford James, Aldeeo Dean, Ed Heidrich, "Brown," Ike" Adams, Ralph Lewis, Kenneth Lyttle, "Mike" Ault, Mr. J. W. Detwiler, Miss Eshert, Detwiler, Glenn Aitken, Newman, Frank Lossutter, Lee Todd, Aller Todd, M. H. Black, D. M. Porthup, Fred Rowland, Eugene Lawther, Albert Bowland, Jack Erickson, Howard Rauser, Stanley Copeland, Harold Helmi Mitchell, and Judge Mason. Alpha Tau Omega: Dave Shaw, Donald Tyles and wife, Coach Brewer, Jack Wheaton and wife, Jack Cannon, Clinton, Moyer, Miller, Miller, Cey Mobaugh, Carl Gerehl Wilson Brown, Mr. Zoellner, Harold Calhoun, Lynn Sigma Chi; "Tod" Woodbury, "Bus" Woodbury Charles Gossard, Arthur Fulton, Clement Parker, Holmes Meade, Ivan Dibble, Willis Bramwell, "Bully" Magill, Walter Eisenmayer, William Kern, "Hal" Harlan, Cassy Daniels, Mrs. and Mrs. Wilbur Lapham, Mr. and Mrs. Doran, Mr. and Mrs. Sunderland, Mrs. R. B. Teacheren, and Dr. Frank R. Teachener. Phi Kappa Psi: "Chuck" Dole, Clarence Falls, Charles Benton, Charles Younggreen, E. C Meserve, John Musselman, Sam伯器, Caleb Bowron, J. C. Jambock, Krank曼尔, Jim Nutter, Don Elk, Dan Wheelock, George Bowles, Clarence Connor, Lewis Sawyer, Manwood Crowley, Charles Blackmar, Morris Blacker, C. W Gleed, Dr. Hull, George M. Marsh, Dutton, Charles Milton, George Stuckey, Albert R. Reel, George Wards, Leo Winfrey, L. D. Smith, Jack Welsh, Munger, Williams, Southwick, Gardener, Bowen, Noble, and Silas Bryan. Tudor Goes to End Shifting Tudor to end, placing Hammond and Mulloy at guards, and starting Sommers at left half, the Kansas coaches last night fully determined on the line-up which will start the big Nebraska game Sat- The shift of Tudor to end, a change which had long been contemplated by Mosse and Frank, was in response to a demand to strengthen the footwork of his Strothers, handicapped by an injured ankle, is not up to his old form. James Out Of It John Hammond, the big sophomore lineman, will take Tudor's place at guard, and face the proposition of playing against Ross the 212 young negro of the Nebraska eleven. "Heavy" Mulley will fill the other guard position, James, the regular incumbent not yet having fully recovered from his recent attack. He is on the sidelines, will be on the sidelines in a suit, ready to jump into the harness if needed. The quarterback position is still up in the air. Late last night the coaches were unable to decide finally who would start the big game at this position for the Jayhawkers, but pressure was on. Resell beginning the contest, with Wilson ready to be the call on if needed. Detwiler's injured leg is not in good enough shape to permit him starting the battle at left half. Sommers, another shifty back, upon whom the rooters can always rely will take his place. Stnewe Will Be At Full Stuewle Will Be At Full Greenlee will probably start at right half, and Stuewle, the best line bucker in the Valley, at full. Last night's rain should have comparatively little effect on the play of either team. If anything the Cornhusner line outweighs Kansas, while the Nebraska backfill has too much sota Shift. Nebraska the "Dartmouth." Both trick plays will be equally affected. During yesterday's practice on McCook the general prayer of the coaches and the players was for rain, the ground being as hard as a rock. No scrimage was undertaken for fear of injuring a player. USHERS! All mililit ushers for the Nebraska game must report at the armory in the gymnasium by 12:15 Saturday Nov. 15. Assignments to places will be given out then. Sergt. Bennett WATCH FOR KANSAN AT FIELD TOMORROW Look for it! A souvenir football edition of the Daily Kansan, containing the latest dope on the game and pictures of members of the Jayhawker team, will be distributed at the gates tomorrow at the game. Facts of The Game Time—2:45 p. m. Saturday, November 15, 1913. Place—McCook field. Coaches—Nebraska: Ewald Ortwin Stichm; Kansas: Arthur St. Leger Moss; Leonard Frank Officials--Referee, J. C. Grover, K. C. A. C.; impire, Capt. K. U. S. A.; head linesman, Dr. Joseph Reilly, K. C. A. C. Captains - Nebraska; Richard Por- tlander - Kansas; William Weidmann - Kansas Rooters—Local rooters should be on grounds not later than 2 p. m. Seats—Nebraska will occupy the south bleachers, Kansas the north. Admission--The gates will be opened at 1:30 prompt. Tickets—Plenty of tickets for good seats may still be obtained by application at Manager Hamilton'ts Office in Robinson gymnasium. To obtain tickets, you must attend at Smith's News Department, immediately south of the Eldred house. Student tickets=Ticket No. 5 only admits to the game. **Rooters' section** - Fickets will be given to the rooters desiring to sit with the "Thundering Thousand at the gate", in exchange for student tickets. Teams—Nebraska will arrive some time Saturday morning and will go immediately to her headquarters at the Eldridge house. Kansas will prepare for the game in her dressing room at the field. How To Get In Gate 1. South side near east end of field. All west bleacher seats. Gate 2. East gate farthest south. All south bleachers seats. Gate 3. North of No. 2. South box seats. Gate 4. Auto gate. Autos and north boy seats. Gate 5. Usual gate All north blacbusters and general admission seats Statements of the Coaches (Entrance number is printed on each ticket.) Coach Moses—I can make no definite prediction as to the outcome of the game Saturday. We enter the contest crippled in some measure, but every inch of ground she gains. Leonard Frank—We may lose. I'll not say as to that. But no matter how the game comes out, these CHICAGO - JUNE 13, 1908. IN MEMORIAM OF THE YEAR A CHICAGO FOOTBALL TEAM MEMBER WHO WAS KNOWN FOR HIS BLADE AND HIS SOLID FORMATION. HE WAS A VERY PROFESSIONAL PLAYER AND WAS PART OF THE CHICAGO FOOTBALL TEAM THAT WON THE WINNING OF THE 1908 N.F.L. CUP. CAPT. BILL WEIDLEIN Cornhuskers will know they're'veen in a fight. Stiems has a good team, but Weidelin's are fighters, and that's the spirit that wins in the end. Kansas Line-up Nebraska Reber L. E. Beck Weidlein, c. L. T. Halligan Mulloy L. G. Ross Keeling C. Thompson Hammond R. G. Abbott Burton R. T. Cameron Tudor R. E. Mastin Russell Q. Towle Sommers L. H. Purdy, c. Greenlees R. H. Rutherford Stuewe F. Howard Substitutes Kansas - Calkins, James, Parker, Militia, Capps, Bishop, Jamee. Detroit. Nebraska—Hugg, Balis, Irwin, Shields, Delameter, Carewell, Elwil The Weather Unsettled tonight and Saturday* Colder tomorrow. Temperatures: 9 p. m. . . . . UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The official student paper of the University of Kansas. EDITORIAL STAFF HERBERT FLAINT - Editor-in-Chief GLEMONT ALLIVINE - Associate Editor JOHN LARIE - Sport Editor JOHN LAIRD - School Editor JOHN GLESSNER - High School Editor BUSINESS STAFF Ebruy Amra Aman Advertising Manager Circulation Manager Joe Benion Advertising REPORTIAL STAFF LUCY BARGER RANDOLPH KENNEDY BRODIE SADKOOM HANDELSON Entered in as second-class mail matter lawyer, the Supreme Court of Lawrence, Kanning under the act of March 1970. Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance; one term, $1.50. Published in the afternoon five times a week by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of journalism. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate and graduate students further than merely printing the news by standing with them. The journal no juniors; to be clients, to be cheerful to leave; to be gentle to leave more serious problems to wiser heads; to be able to students of the University. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1913. Editorial assistants for today's paper, John M. Henry and H. C. Morgan News editor, Lucy Barger, assistants, Leon Howe, Jack Greenlees, Joe Howard. News editor, Lucy Burger; assistants. Howe, Jack Greenwell, Joe Howard. Exchange editor, John M. Henry. Society reporter, Laurie Hildinger. Solomon says: "A fool despiseth his father's instruction; but he that regardeth the truth is prudent." FROM COACH OMAP But Right or Left as straight as the Player goes; he used to down upon them. The Ball no question makes of Eyes and Nose And He that tossed you down upon the Field "YOU ARE VERY WELCOME" He goes it for the Goal, he goes, HE GOES. YOU ARE VERY WELL. Once more the University extends a welcoming hand to all alumni and friends who are our guests this week at the University's second Homecoming. Last year we entertained you by twisting the Tiger's tail. This year we are offering a good old fashioned "Huskin' Bee." Some of you may be here for the first time. We are glad to see you and want you to feel at home. Every K. U. man and woman is at your service. This is an age of propriety. First the good old song, "Hail, hall, the gang's all here" has been toned down to "mustn't say the naughty words now." Now the latest is "Cousin" Smith. NINE RAHS FOR THESE MEN While you're cheering the team on tomorrow, add a cheer for the fellows on the sidelines who, although unable to take much part in the game, contribute in no small degree to the success of the team by their presence ready to go in should a regular be laid out. Nine rahs for the subs! And consider the case of the injured regular on the sidelines, biting his lips from disappointment at being unable to get into the big game of the season because of injuries sustained in one of the preliminary games. Nine rahs for the crippled Let those Nebraskans who are sure of beating K. U. remember Josh Billings's saying, "I don't take no chances. When I mourn for a dead mule I go 'round in front of him to shed my tears." Bankruptcy is too good for the boarding club that announced a "miscellaneous course" to its hungry bardens the other evening and then served hash. FOOTBALL If you are getting on in years—say, to the time when the young follows begin to caution you that it is imprudent to run upstairs—it is a good thing to go out to play. A game with the crowd. A perilous sally thing, a football game, you think as you see the struggling, swaying mass in the middle of the field. And the cheer leader. Did you ever see anything more ous than the fiercest shots of his team, so the sollemly calls for "mine" 'rhs" for So-and-So? But as the game progresses and you see some thrilling runs around the end, and some reckless tackling, and some nerve line bucking, all for the honor of the team and the college—well, you begin to warm up. Before the last quarter is over you have picked your team, if you haven't one to start with and you frantically for it to get the ball afront that stanchly defended goal line. After all, youth is a great thing. The well fought college football game, with its fine abandon and its compelling enthusiasm and its fervid admonitions to the players makes the blood flow faster through the veins of the most sedate person of middle age—Kansas City Times. FOOTBALL IN SHAKESPEARE "Down! Down!"—Henry VI. "Wel] placed."—Henry V. “An excellent pass.”—The Tempest "A touch a touch I do confess,"— Hamlet. "I do comment you to their backs." Macheth. "More rushes! More rushes!"— Henry IV. "Pell mell down with them!"—Love's Laws Lost. "This shouldering of each other." —Henry VI. "Being down I have the placing." —Cymbeline "Let him not pass, but kill him" —Othello. "I'll catch it ite ite ite to round." - Mabceth. "Tis sport to maul a runner" Anthony and Cleopatra. "We must have bloody noses and cracked crowns."-HIV, IV "Worthy air thou 'bleedest; thy exercise hath been too violent"¹ “It’s the first time that ever I heard breaking of ribs was sport.”—Ag You Like It—Boston Transcript. THE ETERNAL SURPRISE Clear the way for the young men. They are entering "the strong flourishing, and beautiful age of man's life." They decree the changes. The map of the world may be rolled up—every acre tramped upon and inhabited. But still they come claiming all the time to be turned their pioneer. Domains must be guarded for them if the old earth has gone stale. If the life of danger and discovery is ended, then they will turn their hand against our secure world and refashion the pleasant places. They will uproot tradition and shatter the institution. We should like it if they were not so scheme, if they were ruddy and cheery and ended there. But they come earnest and critical. They jeer at our failures, reject our compromises. It isn't our idea of youth, our peaceful picture of what youth should be. Poets sing it as if it were a pretty thing, possession of glee, care of beastiness is lusty with power and disastrous to comfort. Men sigh for it as if it had vanished with Old Japan at the hour when it is ramping in their courtyard and challenging their dear beliefs. They are wistful for it in their transfigured memory and the curse it is when their father taught it. Is it what the elders would have it? It does unacceptable things, while age stands blinking and sorrowful. It is unruly, turbulent power on its endless track —Collier's. OUR DAILY QUIZ Use honor system and grade yourself V. LIGHT 1- Is the rainbow produced by moonlight? Yes; but faintly; - it is called a lunar fair. 2. What use has sunlight besides that of giving us light? The light of the sun powerfully affects vegetation. So water can be added to other vegetables; without it plants become white and sickly, as is seen in vegetables growing in a dark soil. Objects presented to the eye have their images depicted on the back part of the eye, called the retina, from which intelligence of the image to the brain. 3-What is the principle of vision? 6-**Do this light come instantaneously** from the sun to the earth? It is that, which is natural to minute animals in the sea, some kinds of fish, certain decaying animal matter, and also the glow worm and fire-flies. 4—What is phosphorescent light? Electricity—Magnetism 5—Mention the source of daylight. No: it is found that light travels at the rate of a hundred and ninety-two thousand miles in a second; according to the theory, it takes eight minutes each the earth. to reach the earth. 7—Name the prismatic colors. 7 - Name the premise colors: Red, orange, yellow, green, blue, blue No; three only are primary, the others being derive, and blue received the name, now red, green, and violet are regarded as the primary colors. Are all these colors primary or elementar? 9—Where are the prismatic colors shown beautifully in nature? By the sun's rays being reflected and decomposed in their passage through the falling snow, they must stand between the sun and the falling shower. 10 - How are the colors of the rainbow produced? Ask The Extension Division A course of lectures on any subject, or single lectures by members of the faculty. Arranged to suit your convenience. The cost is small. For Lectures-for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantees each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding TradeMark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. For Correspondence-Study-for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantees each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding TradeMark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. University credit, or special training in Engineering or any of the usual college studies. For Municipal Questions-for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantees each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding TradeMark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. Anything dealing with the government of municipalities or with public utilities. For Club Programs-for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantees each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding TradeMark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. Women's clubs or societies will be given programs for systematic study. For Package Libraries On public questions. For Lantern Slides-- Interesting educational series for high schools or clubs. For Problems in Child Training-for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantees each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding TradeMark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. The Child Welfare Bureau will help in organizing playgrounds or with individual questions relating to children. By means of references and bulletins. For Help in Debates-for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantees each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding TradeMark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. For any of the special facilities of the University in cases of public interest. Address University Extension Division University of Kansas LAWRENCE BOWERSOCK THEATRE MATINEE and NIGHT, WED. NOV. 19 ON DUTY The Screamingly Funny Farce OFFICER 666 By AUGUSTIN MACHUGH Three Sixes are Hard to Shake One Long Langh with Thrills Galore KEPT NEW YORK AND CHICAGO LAUGHING FOR ONE SOLID YEAR SPECIAL BARGAIN MATINEE Parquet 75c Baleony 50c 2nd Balcony 25c Parquet—1st 8 rows . . . $1.50 Parquet—Next 9 rows . . . 1.00 Balcony—1st 3 rows . . . 1.00 Balcony—Next 5 rows . . . .75 All 2nd Balcony . . . . .50 NIGHT SAM S. SHUBERT Matines Wednesday and Saturday LEW FIELDS IN "All Abroad" PROTSCH The College Tailor Lowney's Chocolates McColloch's Drug Store Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 Vermont Phones 139 KENNEDY & ERNST 820 MASS. ST. PHONES 341 Chafing dishes, casseroles, coffee machines and percolators. The finest line of metal and wood serving trays in the ROYAL ROCHESTER SAVE THE PIECES We have added Lens Grinding Machinery to our Optical department. Any Lens Duplicated Glasses Fitted. HESTER Jeweler and Optician LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. W. H. Quakenbush, Pres; E. S. Weatherby, Supt. Eldridge House Stable W. E. MOAK, Prop. Taxicabs, Hacks, Livery Baggage Haused Both Phones 148 BERT WADHAMS The College Inn Barber FeaturingMilk Chocolates "SWEDE" PENNANTS JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. Are One of our specialties Our prices are right, too. Indian Store A GOOD PLACE TO EAT A' ANDERSON'S OLD STAND Notice Students We Give Club Rates Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 501, Home 180 O. P. Leoard's Pantatortium is on the job again this year. 841 Mass. St. Upstairs. Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Particular Cleaning and Pressing Lawrence Pantatorium 2 W. Warren Both Plains 506 A "Square Deal" A. P. BUILDING DISTRICT TRADGE SPALDING MARK A. D. 1922 A. G. SPALDING & BROS. 1120 HAMILTON Me. Send, for gur, Catalogue. Send for our Catalogue. FOR TAXI PHONES 12 We have some good values in Pennants 'Pictures & Posters' to cate J. A. Keeler 939 MASS. See the New Parker Self-Filling Fountain Pen Office Supplies, Typewriters F. I. CARTER 255 Mass. Bell phone 106 Come on Down to JIM'S Tonight 101 Mass. St. W. A. Guenther Phone: 226 721 Liesn Give Us a Trial Brunswick Bowling Alley Brunswick Bowling Alley Four Regulation Allies with loop-the-loop return. 714 Mass. When calling for a good brand of 5c CIGARS SMOKE Robert Hudson, Pierson's Hand Made At all first class dealers UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Bring Your Guests To THE OREAD TEA ROOM Special Saturday Dinner with over a dozen different meats to select from. A variety of side dishes to accompany each meat order. Our dessert will please any taste. Prices 4c and up. Pay for what you want. FOR SUNDAY PART OF OUR MENU Roast Young Turkey with Cranberry Sauce Roast Spring Lamb with Mint Sauce Baked Halibut Southern Style Stuffed Leg of Pork Prime Ribs of Beef Lobster Nuberg In Cases Ten Other Meats To Choose From Puddings, Pies, Salads. The largest variety ever carried in Lawrence We sell meal tickets. 1241 OREAD MUSIC WHILE YOU EAT COPYRIGHT BY BARN BROOK LTD. You Can Distinguish An Exclusive College Man By His Overcoat What Your Tailor? COPYRIGHT BY ED. V. PRICE & CO. WORKING BY GILLEDANCE LTD. To make judgment fair to yourself you need only to select your style and fabric, leave your measure and tell us to have Ed. V. Price & Co. tailor your overcoat to order. You will thus enjoy not only comfort, warmth and graceful fit, but economical price as well. Let us serve you. S. G. CLARKE S. G. CLARKE Eldridge Hotel Bldg. 707 Mass. St. Exclusive Local Dealers for Ed. V. Price & Co. Mrs. J. L. Newhouse's Dancing School Saturday Dancing morning at 9 o'clock, Ecke's Hall. Private lessons by appointment. ANOKA 2 for 25 ANOKA 2 for 25 ANOKA A New ARROW Notch COLLAR Cluett, Peabody & Co., Iso, Makers Hersheys and chewing gum at the lunch counter in Fraser~Adv. 42-1 Bell 938 Rooms for our guests. Anyone having a room that can be rented for this week-end by alumni who come back to the Nebraska game will be doing a service by reporting to Alumni Headquarters K. U. 9 at once. Give price and whether men or women are preferred. ANOKA A New ARROW Notch COLLAR Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc. Makers PHONE 100 FOR TAXICABS PEERLESS GARAGE, Phone 100. Extra Car Service All cars to McCook by way of Mississippi St. before game. All cars back to town by way of Mississippi St. after game. EXTRA CARS ON ALL LINES SATURDAY Bolf Size Edge View Quarter View K.U. Spoons Fobs Tie Clasps Shields Scarf Pins Hat Pins TieRacks Cuff Links Paper Knives Napkin Markers Lemon Forks Rings Bar Parks Ash Trays Match Boxes Call or send for our catalogue of Fraternity and K Univerities illustrated. HIGH SCHOOLS Send for our catalogue of class pins. Can save you money on those class pins. Gustafson The College Jeweler PRICES Gruen Verithin Watches $25 to $250. Grun "Wristlet" Watches $15 to $150. Visitors very welcome GRUEN 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 Other appropriate gifts in almost endless variety, at prices within the reach of all. WATCH MUMS FOR THE GAME ALL COLORS To Insure Deliveries On Time Order Early THE FLOWER SHOP 825 1-2 MASS PHONES 621 PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. MCCONNELLE, Physician and Home Health. Hom. Health,idence 1346. Tenn. St. Council. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist J. F. BROCK, Office 862 Mass. J. f. BROCK, phone 800-7343. HARRY REDING. M. D Eye, ear, nose Bell, phone 513, Home A-12. Bell, Phone 513, Home A-12. G. A. IAMMAN, M. D. E. Eye, ear, and satisfaction guaranteed. Dick Building. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BRYON, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. J. R. BECCHIEL, M. D., D. O. S3 MA- sculpture Street. Both phones, office and phonebook. DR, H. T. JONES, Room 12, F. A. A. DR, H. T. CHAMMIES, Office over DR. H. L. C CHAMBERS. Office over Squires Studio. Both phones. C. W, JONES, A. M., M. D., Dienes of the stomach, surgery, and gynecology, Suite 1, F. A. B. Aldg. Residence, 1201 Ohio St. Both phones, 35. DR. BURT R. WHITE Osteopathy, Phones, Bell 938, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. St. CLASSIFIED E. J. Blair, Physician and Surgeon, Office and residence: 915 Mass. St. Office hours: 7:00 to 9:00 a.m., 12:00 to 4 p.m. and 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. . Phone Bell 854. Home 131. S. T. Gillipie, M. D. Ouse, corner Vermont Phone 5061. Residence, 728 Indiana St. Phone 5065 Barbers Frank Hlff's Barber Shop, 1025 Mass. Two good baggers. Satisfaction assured. J. C. Houk's Barber Shop, 913 Mass. No clothes. No chairs; never have to wait. Razors honored. Phones Kennedy Plumbing CO. for, gas Phone 658 Mazda lamps. 693. Mass. Phone 1050 Chrysler. Plumbers Prices reasonable, work the best. Let us involve you. **435** & **Co.** & **216** Mt. Mass. **435** Ladies Tailors Mrs. Ellison, Dressemaking and Ladies Masses. Messages 2411, over Johnson & Carl. Lawrence Swine School. School. Ladies'训养 Phones 556. Miss Powers: Miss C. McCurri- phone 555. Ladies Tailoring and Dressmaking. Gowns for all occasions. All work guaranteed. B. Duluth. 914 Mase. Sanitary cleaning establishment in connection. Phone 421 Bell. Queen City College. System and sewing school, Mrs. E. Marlow, Brownsburg, mrs. G. Mark Brown, B934. Ky. Bell Hair Dressers D & M sporting goods and equipment. Kennedy & Ernst, $26 Mass. St. Phones McClure & Ernst, $17 Mass. St. Phones Sporting Goods Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-groats, "Martello" appointment. Appointments call Bell 1372. Home: Select Hair Dress Shop. 927 Mass. 875. Hiwatha Cafe for regular meals, lunch and dinner when down town. Open after the show. Miscellaneous Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Silverware and Jewelry, Belfone 717 - 717 Mass. One trial means no risk, small investment, few costs. The person who wakes up with smoke, W. T., Williamson is homemade oogar. I have a nice line of plain china for painting; also some already decorated. Orders taken. Estelle Northrup, studio 733 Mass. St., upstairs. Bell Phone 152. LOST—Theta pin, between 746 Miss. St. and the Theta house. Finder please return to Carolyn McNutt at the Theta house and receive reward. LOST-Pocket size, paper covered note book containing notes on Philosophy between Ohio street and Fraserral at hour 8 o'clock this morning. Return to N. P. Knight, 1320 Ohio street, Bell 1538. Bowersock Theatre Friday--Nov.-14 The Nation Wide Musical Success Franc C. Payne Inc, pets THE ROSE MAID With 60 people 60 Cast and Beauty Chorus Beyond Criticism Special Orchestra, 12 Musicians A Rose Bud Garden of Girls Each Girl a Fashion Table PRICES: Parquet . . . $2.00, $1.50, $1.00 Balcony . . . $1.00 Second Balcony . . . $7.50, $5.00 Seats on Sale at Woodward & Co. Thursday, Nov. 13 at 8 o'clock NOTE:—Curtain 8:15 p. m. Those coming in after curtain goes up will not be seated until after the first act. When you're on the hill drop in at the new Oread Tea Room, 1241 Oread.—Adv. There is a lunch counter in the basement of Fraser hall—Adv. 42-1 This is Pennant Week at Griggs! Ladies are served at the lunch counter in Fraser hall—Adv. 42-1 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Engineers' Drawing Instruments----ROWLANDS FISCHER'S SHOES ARE GOOD SHOES RAH! RAH! RAH! "Fischer's Special $500 Shoes for Men They've scored again this season—sold bigger than ever before. Because they have METTLE and the BRAWN and the FORM that appeal to discriminating dressers and prudent purchasers. Before you go the game tomorrow—the safest bet for a winter of comfort—is to plank down your $5.00 for a "Fischer Special" Shoe. Shown in a variety of Smart styles — the "ENGLISH" being most notable—all good leathers Fischer's Wanted 20 Men to handle chairs. We pay 20 cents an hour. Report at Gymnasium at 7 o'clock Saturday Morning. W. O. Hamilton Many To See Game of that crowd the best dressed young men will wear clothes tailored by Shultz. Style, quality, fit are all ear marks of our clothes. We invite inspection. 913 Mass. P We Invite Comparison E We KNOW We Have The Finest Pennants Made N NN A N We Want You to Know It Also. GRIGGS 827 Mass T MODEL 74 Season Meyer Step by step, season by season. year by year, we improve the make. the quality, the effectiveness of our suits and overcoats. This fall, with perfect confidence in the results obtained, we invite the hard-to-suit man, the cold proposition, to come in and thaw out. Plaid Skirtings Suits from $15 to $35. Overcoats $10 to $30. Raincoats $5 to $20. Mackinaw Coats $5 to $15. Sweaters $1 to $7.50. At last we have received some very handsome plaid skirtings 56 inches wide, so one length makes a skirt. Priced. a yd. $2.00 and $2.50. S Senior laws—I have a number of Willistons Cases on Bankruptcy to be used next quarter. J. D. R. Miller, 1041 Vt., Phone 2511 B. Adv. 45-5 Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUT FITTERS MINE HOST K. U. WILL ENTERTAIN THOUSANDS (moved from page 1). Try the sandwiches at the lunch counter in Fraser hall—Adv. 42-1 Reger Conant, Clarke Wallace, Mike Booth, Earl Hamma, MacRickinnon, Mr. and Mrs. William Montfort, Will Moore. (Continued from page 1) Konantz, Ben Forbes, Wes Reid, Reid, Joseph Vose, Joseph Joseph Vose, James Maehal, Mr Rathfon and wife, Paul Hall, Allaice Hoch, Roy Williams, Roscoe Min- gus, Franklin Harield, Harold Crawford, A. H. Thompson, Jacob Long, Paul and John Slagg, A. H. Kim, K. S Keltz: Calt. Morrow, K. K Simmons, D. Mickey, Herbert Cowan, C. Rain Coats WEAVER'S This is the kind of a day when you wish for a Raincoat. We have them in several styles and in prices from $3.50 to $15.00. Notice Johnson & Carl Closed during the NEBRASKA-KANSAS FootBall Game WILL WE WIN! Rock Chalk Jay Hawk Sizz Boom wk U! !!!! Kansas Benjamin Clothes K. U! Two Winners--- The Kansas Foot Ball Team and Benjamin Clothes- A true Kansas Student stands by both. Johnson & Carl Progressive Clothiers We close during the game- This is Pennant Week at Griggs! This is Pennant Week at Griggs! A Victrola affords a wealth of valued pleasure and entertainment. We GUARANTEE you will never regret the small amount you spend for one. We can give you the best service obtainable. A fine stock, all the latest models and the largest stock of records in the state. Our twenty-four hour approval plan will interest you in making a purchase of a Victrola. All the very latest records. All the late Hawaiian music from [Oliver Morosco's "Bird of Paradise" musical comedy on sale now. Hear them at BELL BROS. MUSIC CO. R. D. Krum, Mgr. We repair all kinds of musical instruments and phonographs SQUIRES FOR PHOTOGRAPHS KODAK FINISHING AND SUPPLIES. ALSO FRAMING State that Surely UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. ENGINEERS WILL GO ON INSPECTION TOUR UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, MONDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEM BER 17, 1913. NUMBER 47. Party Will Make Columbia Its Destination and Visit Three Universities WILL INSPECT KEOKUK DAM The inspection tour for the upper-classman of the School of Engineering will begin this evening at 5:28 when the forty-two students and four professors in charge board a Union Pacific train for the east Arriving at Kansas City a special train awaits them by day 700 h. Tuesday the men arrive at Keokuk, which will inspect the dam crossing the Mississippi river at this point. The dam is the largest of its kind in the world and furnishes 300,000 horse power, which is distributed over that part of the country. Leaving Keokuk at midnight the party will arrive in St. Louis 7:15 a.m. my car will be there they are the remainder of week before going to Columbia to attend the Kansas-Missouri football game. And Then They'll Witness The Annual Tail-Twisting Exhibition on The Tiger Campus The mechanicals will pay special attention to steel and iron works, and the large refrigeration plants in St. Louis. Dean P. F. Walker will accompany the mechanicals. Prof. H. A. Rice will be in charge of the civils visiting various bridges and water treating plans about St. Louis. The机械师们 will inspect generating stations, the transmitter stations, and the method of handling power from the Keokuk dam, to St. Louis. Dean Walker has received invitations for the men to a smoker given by the University of Columbia; also to attend the chapel exercises at Washington University, and later, to lunch Wednesday morning. ENGINEERS TO INSPECT TOPEKA SEWER SYSTEM Those making the trip are: Electricals, L. E. Brown, V. J. Sisa, A. J. Fecht, C. V. Fowler, H. C Hansen F, J. Lichn, C. H. Cauple, S. A Washburn, R. H. Cauple, L. H. Dodd, W. F. Fox, K. J. Bunn, L. H. Dodd, W. F. Fox, G. C. Glenn, L. H. Barsharger, M. V. Holmes, L. W. Kninear, R. F. Moore, G. R. Murphy, D Reid, A. B. Underwood, C. R. Viers, Harystal Staly, N. W. Brown, W. E. Brown, T. E. Newcomer, R. E Templin, Mechanicals, L. E. Nofinger, L. Severn, R. J. Butler, W. J. Malley, J. R. Butler, W. M. Allison, D. F. Hazen, L. C. Angevine, C. L. Coggins, H. N. Baucher, F. B. Devlin, H. F. Heierabend, Sam Fairchild, F. N. Veach, Prof E. J. Dalton, and Prof A. H. Sluss. Working under the aupies of the Russel Sage Foundation Prof. G.R. Jones professor of sanitary engineering and consulting engineer of the State Board of Health and three senior sanitary engineers will start today on a complete social survey of the city of Topeka. The survey will cover all matters of public interest in the city of Topeka, including housing conditions, of streets, parks, etc. of the city water and the various well waters of the city will be made . The seniors who accompanied Professor Jones are E. C. Richardson and W. A. Davenport of Lawrence, and H. D. King of Cawker City They will use the material gathered for theses. WILL TELL WOMEN HOW TO CHOOSE A VOCATION Miss Helen N. Bennett of Chicago an expert on vocational work for women, will lecture at the University on December 4 at 4:30 o'clock Miss Bennett comes under auspices of the local association of the Association of College Alumni of which Ms. F. H. Hodder is president. Miss Bennett's address will be on "Vocational Work for Women." Miss Bennett is manager of the Chicago Collegiate Bureau of Occupations. The reception by the ladies of the facult for both men and women was set for the same date but will be changed. Olney Announces College Smoker The first smoker to be given by the College was announced by Avery Olney president of the College today. It will be given Nov. 18 at the Eagles' hall. Read your own KANSAN. FINAL RALLY SLATED FOR THURSDAY NIGHT Thundering Thousand Will Thunder In Gym For the Missouri Game UNITED WE ?—DIVIDED WE ? Morris Plans Monster Meeting- Stunts, Speeches, Music, and Eats Will Help Generate Ginger. Following up the exhibition of real "K. U. Spirit" shown at the game Saturday, the Thundering Thousand have arranged to hold a monster rally in Robinson gmsmissum Thursday night at 7 p.m., Wool Hollow Wobble president of the senior class have been working on the plan for several weeks. Tuesday morning tags will be issued which will sell for fifteen cents. The money that raised will be used to furnish rooters with amuse- and eats. The program as planned includes several boxing bouts, wrestling some stunts by the glee club and other musical organizations, and finally to top it off—some good eats. There will be a number of speakers on the program, but they will not be announced until tomorrow. In speaking of the rally this morning Mr. Morris said, "This will be an "On to Missouri" rally. We want to get together, tear loose with a barrel or two of "pep", and loan each other money enough to give the pastor a bill and a bill and change, along with a happy smile and some nerve will see everybody through. And-Oh yes! we want everybody to get a girl and bring her to the rally. The girls can yell just as well as the men." SUMMERTIME DEAN RESIGNS POSITION Other Duties Force Prof. A T. Walker To Give Up His Work Prof. A. T. Walker of the Latin department has resigned as director of the Summer Session, a position he has held for the last eight years. Constant work during the entire year in arranging for instructors, preaching courses, and doing other work connected with the Summer Session leaves little time for other regular duties. The professor who desires time for scholarly and publication work, decided to resign his office as director. Under Professor Walker's administration the summer session has increased in enrollment yearly, and Chancellor Strong and hundreds of teachers throughout the school testify to his satisfactory and efficient director. The director who will succeed Professor Walker has not yet been named. 'HANCELLOR STRONG LIKES KANSAS ROOTERS' SPIRI "I was much pleased at the clean rooting displayed by the Kansas roots in the game Saturday," said Chancellor Frank Strong this morning. "The rooting Saturday was the best and cleanest of any game this year and the boys are to be commended on their excellent behaviour "And I was also pleased to see the way the rooters continued their cheering even after it was evident that we could not win. That makes the team feel confident that whatever the outcome of the game, the rooters will remain behind the team and not criticise its playing. No team can play good consistent football until they understand the rooters will stay beyond it." Senator Howe Liked It Too J. W. Howe, state senator from Dickinson county and secretary of the State Board of Control commented favorably on the spirit evinced in Texas roots at the game Saturday." "What I noticed most," he said, "was the clearness of the roofting, and the good spirit shown. I think students should be complimented." Wants Copies of the Independent The extension department would like to obtain some recent copies of the book. Please send a ready copy for any that are available. Send the Daily Kansan home "WHEN EVERYTHING GOES DEAD WRONG" LISTEN AT TMAT LITTLE BEAT RUBBING IT IN. HE THINKS I'M DEAD I KILLED COCK JAYHAWM, I BID IT. NEB. Y. M. C. A. GRAPPLES WITH HONOR SYSTEM Students and Faculty Members Discuss Cheating and Unfair Grading An animated discussion of cheating, the honor system, and grades, featured the close of yesterday after the hanging of the Y. M. C. A. in Myers Hall. A reference in the communication column of the Daily Kansan to cheating started the discussion. After the regular session at which he addressed Epicopia, was the speaker, an impromptu meeting that lasted until nearly six o'clock was held, students, professors and Registrar Foster taking active parts in the debate which centered around the honor system, because his love for Elie Beta Kappa came in for its share of the discussion. Working for grades, the presence of girls, the unwillingness of students to tell on others who cheated, and the unfairness of the grades 1, 2, and 3 were threshed out. No decision was reached. The Y. M. C. A. meeting for December 7, at which the Rev. N. S. Elderlin will speak, is to take up the matter of cheating. Members of the faculty, the two student councils, and all students interested in the matter, will be present. If possible some move one way or the other on the matter of cheating will be made, for or against an honor or honor sentiment system. A joint committee composed of members from the Men's Student Council, the W. S. G. A. the Y. M. and Y. W. has written more than a dozen colleges to get data on the university institutions. The committee will make a report of their investigation at the meeting Dec. 7. GUILD WILL SPEAK The Rev. Chas. M. Sheldon' Successor Will Address Students Tomorrow in Chapel The Rev. Roy B. Guild, pastor of the Central Congregational church of Topeka, will speak in chapel Tuesday morning. IT WAS SOME SUBJECT THAT THE CHEMICS HAD At the meeting of the Chemical club Friday afternoon Professor Faragher reviewed a magazine article entitled "The Relation of Concentration and Conductance of Certain Ionized Substance in Various Solvents." The article was by Kreus and Bray. Mr. Guild left a salary of $4,000 a year as executive secretary of the Men and Religion Forward Movement to succeed to the pastorate of the Rev. Charles M. Sheldon at a salary of $25,000. Thus the minister should be more than a teacher and takes a prominent part in civic activities in Topeka. Miss Mary M. Morin, a senior in the Fine Arts school, will play. George Peterson, a 1912 graduate, told some of his experiences in the mines of Colorado. ANSWER ATTACK ON K. U. FRATERNITIES Prof. E. W. Murray and Ed win C. Meservy Reply to Florence Kelly Two articles in reply to a criticism on fraternities and sororites at the University of Kansas, made in the last issue of the Graduate Magazine by Mrs. Flora Finch Kelly, will appear in the Graduate Magazine, which will be issued the latter part of the year. The articles are written by Prof. E. W. Murray, chairman of the students' interests committee of the University Council, and E. C. Me. McCarthy, chairman of City Both are graduates of the University and members of fraternities. Professor Murray criticizes Mrs. Kelly's article in several instances. The chief objection is referred to the students' interests committee. Mr. Meservey has compiled some interesting statistics in regard to fraternities and sororities, which he will use in his reply. UNIVERSITY CLUB OPEN Organization of Faculty And Merchants Elects Officers at First Meeting The University Club made its bow o the public Friday evening in the way of a formal opening in its house it 1420 Ohio. Prof. F. H. Hodder was elected president of the club for the ensuing year, W. S. Metcalf, vice-president, Prof. D. C. Croissant secretary and L. N. Lewis, treasurer. The governing board is composed of the above named officers along with Professors A. T. Walker, H. C. A Rice, J. H. Van Drieys, and C. E. Friend and Mr. Bullene. After the election, which was held from 9 a. m. till 5 p. m., the following committees were appointed by the new officers: House committee; Education committee; Carter and Means. Auditing committee: Mr. Marsh, Professor Boynton and Mr. Hosford. Entertainment committee: Professors Van der Rooij and Litterature; The Rev. Mr. Elderkin, and Messrs Marvin and Flint. The dues were raised to $15 for active membership and $7.50 for active membership. A buffet lunch was given at the close. Both Sides Played Dirty Bal. PARKER'S HISTORY OF TROUBLES KANSAS DOWN TO DEFEAT BUT NOT WITHOUT HONOR Jayhawkers Lose to Nebraska, 9 to 0, in a Sea of Mud, Gloriously Contending for Each Inch of Ground. A CORNHUSKER TRIO DID IT Towle, Halligan and Rutherford Were Too Much for a Team Trained to Swiftness, Handicapped by a Heavy Field Statistics of the Game First downs--Nebraska 11, Kansas 7. Number of yards ball was adva- ced from snappback -Nebraska 164 164 Yards averaged on punts—Nebraska 34, Kansas 32. Return or扑盘 in yards needed—Nebraska 125, Kansas 49. Penalties—Nebraska 70, Kansas 30. Attempted forward passes—Nebraka 5, Kansas 2. Successful forward passes—Nebraska 1. Number of players used—Ne braska 12. Kansas 16. Statements of the Coaches Ewald Ortwein Steim—The better team won. Had the field been dryer our score would have been laver. Arthur St. Leger Mosee—Nebraska's superiority in kicking won them the game. Had the field been there, the score wound have been closer. Leonard Frank-The muddy field lost us the game. Howard's kicks were a powerful factor in the Cornhuskers' victory. "Red" Lupton—It was too awful bad. To the wonderful play of Max Towle, "Tow" Rutherford, and "Bully" Halligan the Kansas Jayhawkers owe their defeat of 9 to 0 at the hands of the Nebraska Cornhuskers Saturday. These four athletes were Stiehm's whole team. They were the "whole show" of the Lincoln school. They played the whole game for Nebraska. Loud and long praises have drifted for weeks out of the Cornhuskers' lair of the deeds of this trio. They were reputed to be fiends on the offense, wonders at carrying the ball, Napoleonos in running the team. It was Howard, Beck, Mastin, some of the "dark horses" that the Kansans feared, not the bright and shining luminaries that had lit up the Lincoln sky for so many weeks. "Watch Purdy, Beck, Mastin," was the war-cry that had been driven into the heart of supporters, "Halligan, Towle, and Rutherford have overestimated." Coaches Knew The coaches alone recognized the strength of this trio of players. They recognized the power that they, with the help of Dick Purdy, lent the Stiehm eleven. They alone knew the real worth of Halligan, the giant tackle, Tooke, the most talented wizard, the most speedy half. But what awailed their warnings in competition with the enthusiasm of the Thundering Thousand? The coaches had drilled the team all week against the "tackle swings" of the massive Halligan. They had taught their eleven from first to last just what work it must expect at the hands of that grand little field general, Max Towle. They had drilled Reber and Tudor since the Washburn game in the methods of breaking up the end runs of Rutherford. And had this trio of Nebraska stars played only up to form Kansas would have broken up their runs, their swings, and their return of punts. But Towle, Halligan, and Rutherford played far beyond themselves. They played better than ever before they sheared his hands, but when the Stiliin himself did not know they possessed, as he said to the Kansan after the game, and as a consequence they defeated the University of Kansas. Long has Lincoln shouted the praises of Owen Frank, "Nebraska's greatest athlete." Long have the Cornhuskers fondly turned back to the days. Shonka, Nebrake, ever possessed. Long has Rathbone, the mighty Rathbone, been idolized at the Lincoln shrine. But the "good old days" have possessed. Shonka, Rathbone, and Frank must sit alone and muse over their visions of power to the days of "nineteen-ten" for they are Ne- oraska's heroes no more. Halligan, Rutherford have supervised them. Jayhawkers in Good Form The Jayhawkers, you ask? They played good ball. They in turn expected to play well, but expected of the team. The week's hard practice had wrought changes in the Kansas machinery for which the student rooters had not dared to hope, but they went down into despair. In three Nebraska stars. And to our surprise that tells the whole story. The mud was a severe handicap to the Kansas hopes. There is no doubt of that. The trick plays, the forward passes, the open field work, the forward passes, the hardcover preserved for this big game, worked for naught. They could not be used on a wet field. Forward passes, trick plays, quick shifts call for a fast field, a field on which each athlete is sure of his footing, and the forward passes. Kansas eleven Saturday. But two forward passes were attempted; both went wild. Nebraska tried five. But one worked, and that only for a four yard gain. Kansas was forced back day, and the Jayhawkers had no extensive practice in the art of swimming with the ball. Bucked 70 Yards In two quarters, the second and the third, Kansas looked its best. Five minutes before the end of the first half Nebraska had the ball on the Kansas ten-yard line. The half ended with Towle catching a punt in his own thirty yard area. In those seconds of kicks, a rapid exchange of kicks, by great line plunging, and shifty end runs, the Jayhawkers had fired the Linehomes back 70 yards. 2 into their own territory. Early in the third quarter Kansas got possession of the ball and started a strong and irresistible march toward the Nebraska goat. Three teams converged on the vananced the ball to the Cornhusker 35-yard line. Lincoln rooters in the grand stand were frantic, "Hold them, Nebraska, hold them," they pleaded. Jumbo Stehm anxiously paced up and down the sidelines. The team overcame the north stand were deliriously waving red and blue banners. The Tide of Battle And then the, tide changed. Greenlee savely attacked the center of the Nebraska line. Thompson and his followers held, and the doughty half back failed to gain an inch. Russell hit right yard-gain and O'Reilly yard-gain was all the shifty sophomore could register. With third down and "eight to go" Wilson dropped back for a forward pass. Opening his fingers, he grabbed the ball, and drew back his arm to hurl it to a Kansas end. He looked up for a ball, and drew back his arm to him were six Cornhusher linesmen. It was useless to pass; Cameron or Halligan would be bound to recover it. He tucked the pikein carefully under his arm, and went to the ground buried beneath Halligan, Cameron, Abbott, Ross & Co. Weldon kick from the 40-yard line, but it fell short by a few feet, and the Jayhawkers' only chance to score had passed into the discard. How Three Points Were Made How Three Points Were Made Nebraska's first score came early in the second half, and missed one goal from placement, and Kansas had recovered the ball on her own 20-yard line. After two futile attempts to gain through the line, Russell kicked 35 yards to Towle, who returned five. With the ball on her own 45 yard line Nebraska started. Howard, on a delayed pass, was taken by Cameron, receiving the ball on a "tangle around" play, shook off two Jayhawk tacklers and lumbered 18 yards down the field before downed by a Kansas safety. Rutherford made 4 around right (Continued on page 4) UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The official student paper of the University of Eugene EDITORIAL STAFF HERBERT FUNN - Editor-in-Chief GLENDON ALLIYNE - Associate Editor JOHN C. MADDEN - Management Editor JOHN C. GLASBERN - High School Editor JOHN GLEISBERN - High School Editor BUSINESS STAFF REPORTIAL STAFF RAY EIDRUDGE • Circulation Manager JOE BEROP • Advertising RANDOLPH KENNEDY SAM DEGEN Entered as secor 1-class mail matter September 17, 1916, at the postoffice at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price $2.50 per year, if advance; one term, $1.50. Published in the afternoon five times a week, students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of journalism. ___ Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate undergraduates further than merely printing the news by standing up to the press and playing no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to leave more serious problems to wiser head. He will teach at the students of the University. MONDAY NOVEMBER 17, 1913 Editorial assistants for today's paper, Gilbert Clayton. new.edu editor John Glaser assists; Leon Howe, Lucy Harger, Charles Gibson. Exchange editor, John M. Henry. Society reporter, Lucile Hildinger. Solomon says: "A merry heart maketh a cheerful countenance; but by sorrowing the heart, the spirit is broken." LOOK OUT, TIGER! Kansas has no sore spots over the Nebraska defeat and is looking forward to her annual feast on Tiger meat next Saturday with appetite unaffected by the mud battle disaster. Our team put up a good fight and is not to be ashamed of. So let's put the game in the profit aid loss column and turn to the one thing that can console a defeated Jayhawker—a drubbing for Missouri! things, but considering the scarcity of luck on either side, the better team won Saturday, and we give it to 'em. They had to go some to do it but they did, boys, they did! HONOR SENTIMENT Crop note: Conditions and circumstances that it is not necessary to mention have interfered with the corn husking in this vicinity of late. There can be little room for doubt that honor sentiment must be aroused at the University. From the many different systems in use among other colleges, Kansas should be able to choose the most satisfactory. The movement for the adoption of an honor system in the University has remained dormant entirely too long. Within the last week Christian organizations and the student government councils have recognized this fact, and special committees have been appointed to investigate the honor system as used elsewhere. tory. We need honor sentiment: it is only a question of selecting the best means of cultivating it. Reports from the committees will be awaited with interest. "Harvard Gains by Shift of Players," declares a New York head line. And so now there is a "Harvard Shift!" THREE ON THE WALK THREE ON THE WAY There were three of them—three girls on the sidewalk—arm in arm. A lone pedestrian coming from the opposite direction hesitated for the three to give him a share of the walk. He waited a moment, then turned out on the parking. He didn't do this because he wanted to; but because it was the easiest way. And he is complaining, this lone walker who turned out on the parking to let three girls continue their arm in arm stroll. No doubt he is a hard-hearted selfish sort of a man or he wouldn't expect three girls to give him a part of the walk. They were having such a good time, these three college girls, and it would have spoiled the conversation and the fun if they had walked single file past this selfish man who wanted a part of the sidewalk. And besides a sidewalk is made just three breadths wide so that three merry girls may walk arm in arm; and the parking, so that the lone pedestrian may get out of the way of this laughing, talking, thoughtless trio. Chicago University has discouraged its cheaters by social ostracism of the dishonest person. There is no better way to make the honor system effective. PRAYER WEEK OBSERVANCE The two religious societies of the University, the Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A., observed last week, the week of international prayer, by appropriate devotional exercises each day This manifestation of religious spirit, is only another indication that the atmosphere of the University is pre-eminently Christian. While, of course, the University is strictly non-sectarian and could not include religious instruction in its curriculum, it brings strong Christian influence to bear upon the students in a more genuine and intense form than the majority of students would feel in the communities in which they live. "At the University of Montana 78 per cent of the men engaged in college activities are supporting themselves." What about the remaining 22 per cent. Are they married? OUR DAILY QUIZ Use honor system and grade yourself THE CAMPUS 1. What and where is the campus of the University of Kansas? It is a tract of 163 acres situated on the top of a steep bluff overlooking the Kawer河 and the city of Lawrence. 2-Give a brief history of the campus. Dung war times the present site of the university was occupied by Fort Thatcher. In 1863 the city offered it to the state as a location for the University, and in 1865 the first building, now known as North Building, erected. Since then, four buildings have been built by the state and five rifles. 3- What are the chief uses to which the campus is put? In the fall, as a place for football rallies, in winter as a substitute for Pike's Peak, in the spring as a gymnasium and in summer it is an ideal picnic ground. Incidentally it supports the twenty buildings and one class memorial building, featuring a moving feature of - What is the most striking feature of he campus? The least striking? (a) The hourly beauty show on the steps of Green Hall. (b) The Physics 5—What is in the little white box on the oreen west of Snow Hall? The home of the celebrated Meter wins, Thermo and Baro. twins, Thermo and Nudder (or the administration Building (i.e. be completed) Nobody Knows 7. Name several distinctive campus activities The burning of the tiger, the May Fete, chapel dates, the engineers' parade, paddling freshmen, the chairman of the eligibility committee. 8- What does the campus lack most? identify, between the libra 4. What does *M* mean walks between the library and the Administration building, a girls' dormitory, some class memoirs, a student Union building and a new v - what is the most impressive structure, on the campus? 10—What is the perving atmosphere of the campus? That which comes from the chemistry building. The Swallow dives in gonner air, the Robin swings with sweetest ease, the apple shines among the leaves, the Bee jumps over the fence, the Butterfly on a warm stone, the Bee is suckled by a flower, the Wasp's insect climbs up theulum, and his hand this hour. The Squirrel counts and hides his nuts, the Stool is on a scent that burns, the Rabbit sits beside his ferns, the Snake has found a sunny spot, the Frog and Snail a Skiny spot, All through the temper of a maid— THE TEMPER OF A MAID (News item; Professor Patten, of the University of Pennsylvania, says that the study of language affects the will. A dainty maven set and weep, he can count on that. I asked her what the matter was, and then she was sadly told: "My classes all are simply fierce. In quizzes I am not pleased. And my themes are given back. They're labeled 'Minus P' Oh, maiden fair, I. I gently said, The fault is all your own. The time now is fine, along and things, But that alas, I cannot do." Quoth the maiden, weiling still. "I'm taking language in my course, And that effects me." LAWRENCE SMITH THE LANGUAGE COURSE WILLIAM H. DAIRES, in the Literary Digest If we could see ourselves as others see us, most of us would make a beehive for the oculist's.—N. Y. Times. CAMPUS OPINION Communications to the Daily Kansan must be signed as an evidence of good faith, though not necessarily for publication. The column is open to all Daily Kansan readers). A little incident occurred Thursday night at the chapel rally which I believe the whole student body should know about. CUT OUT SWEAR WORDS Editor the Daily Kansan: The Chancellor had been to the Y. M. C. A. banquet where more than a hundred men had enjoyed a great spiritual feast and came in just in time for the tail end of the rally—just in time, indeed, to hear the K. U. hymn followed by "Hallelujah give 'em h-mo — boys!" We have known one University which used such songs repeatedly—just one. And we can't afford to put ourselves in the same class with Kenyatta State. With bowed head the Chancellor left the room as soon as the song was announced. After it was over they called out, "We want the Chancellor. He consented after a time to come back and address the crowd. The first words he said were, "Boys, you can afford to cut out your swear songs," or words to that effect. Why can't we have songs everybody knows, that everybody will be willing to sing, even the girls, and those whose sensibilities are outraged by the vulgarity of "swar songs"? We need them for the team, as to the Chancellor said. Then let us know what everyone can sing and vells. Tune, "Marching Through Georgia" Come let us sing the praises of the say in our songs I enclose a song which may lack much in merit in parts, but its chorus especially is rousing. Its sentiment is right; everybody would sing it with spirit and understand- why? Why don't we use more of these good rousing songs instead of the vulgar things which appeal to the lower strata of student life only? You never saw a finer squad go nothing to the fray. marring to the And never fear for Kansas, men, today (Chap. 10-8) Hurrah, Hurrah, K. U. is on the hill. we are marching to victory (Chorus.) Hurrah, Hurrah, We'll never, never yield. We're going to say, their fate is surely sealed, and marching to victory. As To the Editor of the University Wilhelm Tversen. AS TO THE PUPPET PLAY Old Fashioned. Dear Mr. program committee of the Deutscher Verein, whose last program was reviewed in a supposedly numerous manner in your paper last Tuesday, wants to protest against the unfair representation you given. The puppet is by no means the vulgar spectacle with your article suggests, nor was it a burlesque on the famous classic drama of "Faust," as your reporter seems to think, but a careful reproduction of a play of the early times, from which I am born, reprints of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. If the writer had taken the trouble to see the play before describing it, he might have learned that it was a serious treatment of a theme has been of the German literary importance, and of influence in England as well. If we are careful to see that the good name of the University of Kansas is held high where our athletic honors are concerned, is it not equally worth while to represent fairly, to the outside readers of the Kansan, the activities of the University in the way of scholarship? What right has any University publication to treat lapidantly the most effort the Verein to make its members, who will be among the future teachers of the state acquainted with the cultural elements of their study, with the traditions and history of Germany as well as its present cuis- With reference to your article of last Thursday on the beginning of football at K. U. I wish to say a few reminiscent words not so much by way of correction as of amplification. The first substantial consideration given to football in K. U. was in 1882 when a fellow student said to me, "We're going to buy a football and we want you to chip in twenty-five cents. I chipped in a quarter and never saw it again. That football was never bought. The program committee of the Deutscher Verein. Editor the Daily Kansan; In 1889 some students had a football and did a lot of kicking. In 1890 K. U. had a full-fledged football team proper organization. He made up the K. U. player of the time complains that the "coaching was poor." This队, however, played games and had a match with Baker University. It was next year, 1881 that he graduated from this his master knowledge of the game became the first coach. M. W. Sterling. Freshman Finance committee meets in 311, Frasier Tuesday afternoon at 4:45. "Jahawkw" business. A. Walters, chairman. A letter addressed "for the writer of the communication signed 'Kicker' by the Kansan recently awards the author of this report at the Daily Kansan office. ANNOUNCEMENTS One fiber suit case sent by mail from K. U. Postoffice without address. Call at K. U. The Lynn County club meets tonight at 1244 Louisiana at 7:30. Plans for the Christmas banquet will be discussed and all students coming from Lynn county are urged to be present. CLASS MEMORIALS MAY REALLY APPEAR SHORTLY CLASS MEMORIALS MAY The memorial plans of the various classes will soon be definitely outlined. The juniors have already decided upon the goat for which they are going to line up the line the plan which they expect to follow at their next meeting. The sophomores will adopt a plan of assessment at the first class bum which will be held in the afternoon the evening of the Missouri game. "DIRECTORY TO BE A DANDY" DECLARES GEO O. FOSTER "The student directory this year is far superior to that of last year," said Registrar Geo. O. Foster this afternoon. "If you don't believe it just compare it with one of last year and see. In fact it is better than that of any other institution of our standing, as far as I know." The directory this year has a more complete list of officers of the student organizations and contains all their constitutions including the constitution of the Athletic Association. Anyone desiring rules concerning eligibility to or for the Valley Conference or to the University need but to turn to the directory. Rules governing University danges are in given full. The new student directories will be delivered to the registrar tomorrow and can be had at his office in Fraser hall Monday. There will be twenty-five hundred books one for each student. 1207 STUDENTS ENROLLED IN THE EXTENSION COURSE 1207 STUDENTS ENROLLED At present 1207 students are enrolled on the indexed list of the extension department. There are several more who are enrolled irregularly and are not counted in the list of regular students. This number covers all branches of the work, the most popular study being Prof. D. C. Croisant's course in English History. NEARLY ELEVEN HUNDRED ENTERPRISE TICKETS SOLD Only four Student Enterprise tickets have been sold since the first of November. Registrar Foster had expected to sell a big bunch of tickets before the Nebraska game but Manager Hamilton seems to have cornered the market. However, Mr. Foster got in his licks at the first of the year and sold 1096 tickets which enriched the treasury by $5,480. "There isn't any argument about it at all," says the genial floor-walker. "They cannot dance and play basketball on the same floor. When the floor is slick, it buckles that it is actually dangerous for the players. To cut this wax we have to use resin. This is ground into the floor, which must be scrubbed off with hot water and soap before it can be wetted again. Even then it is impossibly tough." All off, and it is running the floors." "Dancing in the gymnasium must be stopped or the floors will be ruined." Thus speaks Mr David Miller, head batanitor. GENIAL JANITORIO SHOWS WHY DANCING HURTS FLOOR FRESHMEN ENGINEERS CAN PRESS THEIR OWN RAIMENT No more will the freshman engineer have to pay a dollar seventy-five to three dollars a semester for semesters beyond work hours. How do he his own pressing. All because of the fact that in shop I the freshmen are making flat irons this year. The ironws weigh about five pounds, we wooden handles, and the other buns of U., the dishies is only one of the changes in shop work. Some of the freshmen are making butcher knives to take home Thanksgiving time. Simpson College made possible a girls' debate this year. They completely liquidated the stance for the debt by having a box supper. BOWERSOCK THEATRE MATINEE and NIGHT.WED.NOV.19 ON DUTY The Screamingly Funny Farce OFFICER 666 Three Sixes are Hard to Shake One Long Langh with Thrills Galore KEPT NEW YORK AND CHICAGO LAUGHING FOR ONE SOLID YEAR SPECIAL BARGAIN MATINEE Parquet 75c Balcony 50c 2nd Balcony 25c By AUGUSTIN MACHUGH NIGHT Parquet—1st 8 rows . . . . $1.50 Parquet—Next 9 rows . . . . 1.00 Balcony—1st 3 rows . . . . 1.00 Balcony—Next 5 rows . . . . .75 All 2nd Balcony . . . . . .50 SAM S. SHUBERT Matinees Wednesday and Saturday The College Tailor PROTSCH LITTLE WOMEN Lowney's Chocolates McColloch's Drug Store 812 Vermont Phones 139 Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage ROYAL ROCHESTER CITY KENEDY & ERNST 826 MASS. ST. PHONE 3413 Chafing dishes, caseroles, coffee machines and percolators. The finest line of metal and wood serving trays in the world. SAVE THE PIECES We have added Lens Grinding Machinery to our Optical department. Any Lens Duplicated Glasses Fitted. HESTER Jeweler and Optician LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. W. H. Quakenbush, Pres.; E. S. Weatherby, Supt. Eldridge House Stable W. E. MOAK, Prop. Taxicabs, Hacks, Livery Baggage Hauled Both Phones 148 BERT WADHAMS The College Inn Barber FeaturingMilk Chocolates "SWEDE" PENNANTS Are One of our specialties. Our prices are right, too. Indian Store A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. Notice Students We Give Club Rates O. P. Leonard's *Pantatorium* is on the job again this year. Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 501, Home 180 We Give Club Rates 841 Mass. St. Upstairs. FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Particular Cleaning and Lawrence Pantatorium 2 W. Warren Both Pisney 506 A "Square Deal" A. SPALDING LONGY TRADE SPALDING MARK A D 1924 for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantee each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding Trade-Mark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. A. G. STARKING 1120 Grand Ave. Kansas City, Mo. Send for Catalogue. We have some good values in Pennants *turtles* & *Posters* to close. J. A. Keeler 939 MASS. See the New Parker Self-Filling Fountain Pen Office Supplies, Typewriters F. I. CARTER 1025 Mass. Bell phone 1051 Come on Down to JIM'S Tonight 1101 Mass. St. W. A. Guenther Phones 226 721 Liesn Give Us a Trial Brunswick Bowling Alley Four Regulation Allies with loop-the-loop return. 714 Mass. When calling for a good brand of 5c CIGARS SMOKE Robert Hudson, Pierson's Hand Made At all first class dealers UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OLD GRADS COME BACK FOR HOMECOMING DAY University Societies Entertained Hundreds of Alumni and Friends Saturday The various organizations at the University entertained thousands of visitors this week-end, here for the annual K. U. home-coming day. Among those who returned to Mount Oread are: Chi Omega: Elizabeth Dunaway, Gladys Clarke, Helen and Esther Dogen, Lina Coxedge, Helen Strothets. rS. Alpha Delta Pi: Irene Stratton. Alpha Delta Delta; Delta; Mr. and Mrs. Surber, Mrs. E. I. Blair, Mr. and Mrs. Busick, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Lindley, Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Hetherington, Ms. Las. L. Verna Ruth Blair, Mary Davies, Look Challis, Robert Milton, Millon Cain, William Cain, William Carliele, J. M. Challis, Jeutenman, Ms. Samuel T Seaton, Robert Waters, Fred Pausch, Rudolf Drapol, Frank Stein, and Messra Wilson, Ameron, Racely and Dick Purple, Jeutenman, L. C. Berneth Yorkville Miss Mary Davies, Mr. and Mrs. Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. Ramsay, Carl McMara, Harry Mansfield, Marion Sharp, Gus. Berneth Yorkville Miss Mary Davies, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Lindsley, Miss Gertrude Small, Mr. and Mrs H. A Hackney, Mrs. E. K. Blar Miss Helen Hacker, Ms. L. C. Steamer, Charlotte, Mr. and Mrs Steamer, Howard Chroma, Byron Linzby, C. C. Burer, Mr. and Mrs Fra Craig, Alfred Lundberg, Thack Guernassey, Jim McClane, and Rolt Kimball, Edgar Schoers, and Molt Kappa Sigma: Glen Caleno, John Hoffman, Martin, and Martin, and Benedict. Kappa Alpha Theta: Louise Coe, Maurine McAdams, Bedie LouseBedil, Emagine Clarke, Mr. and Mrs. J. C Musselman, Emile Playen and Fletch Kappa Kappa Gamma; Lyley Hayes, Francis Scarritt, Francis Conkling, Margaret Sweet, Emma Rymeison, Helen Tavaire, Marina Seigessia, May Chisham, Pettit, May Fayster, Hornday, Emilie Fowler, Margaret McFad- Lois Billie, Edith Haynes, Grace Davis, La Verna Egan. Nu Sigma Nu: Dr. D. O. Smith, Clarence Earnest, Bert Camblet Victor Chesky, Claude Hunt, from Rosdale School of Medicine. Phi Delta Phi: Harry Fisher, Bill Simmons, Glem Wisdom, M.Locke, Harry Wisdom, M.Grfie, Harry Snyden, Hjal Harlan, Geo Holliday, and Van Martin. Sigma Nu: Dale Coney, William Pepperelle, King Contey, F. D. Eberhart, Dr. A. Shah, F. Mantle, Manley, Martin, Marin, M. Shields, Carlitz Gilderby, Byron Dudley, Spott Wilson, F. Tornburrow, J. B. Marshall, Harry Shlaymaker, John Amos, Antonio Andrew Benson and wife and Mrs. Carl Carl Messenger Ablemania House: Miss Hazel Wiscakeoil, Miss Margaret Holmes, Miss Virginia Dodd, J. D Joseph, Mr. Alden Branine, Mr. F. A. Rat-ert, Mr. Fred J. Prout, and Mr. J. J. Bliss. Uirich Club: G. Duuswekleyl, S. E Ogden, R. R. L. Fonckel, G. Griffith and R. L. Fonckel Club-- Glendale Griffith. Nottingham- ham James Share. Aechth: Jessie Downing, Margaret Keifer Loraine Holtz, May Pickens, Fanny George, Pearl Jordan, Estelle Vincent, Winifred Matticks, Alice Riley, and Genevieve Gilbert. Charles Braden, E. H. Braden, Bert Jaggars, Warren H. Kerby, Thurman Lambert, Hardid R. Roy Simpson, K. l. Lawrence, Philip King N. Gilman. Acacia "Pat" Crowell, Jack Mavigny, Roberts, Roberts, Guy Howe, E. R. Smith, Walter Ise, O. M. Rhine, C.Rey Fail, R. A. Porterfield, Harry Weaver, Bob Sellers, J. F. Barnhill, Pat Lay, Harrington, Bowers, Clarence Rice, Long, O. M. Edsonon, Wetmore From the Acacia area Nebraska Ellwell and Ponda will be visits Sigma Alpha Epsilon; "Cupid" Haddock "Heinie" Waters, Raymond Strohner, Duncan Littleton, Chester A. Dunham, Fredrick Att, Miss Dorothy Bandy, Mr., Mrs. Raymond Stockton, Misha John, John Parker, and Linton Treyo. Pt Beta Phi; Marion Ellis, Ava Hardcastle, Jes Reikel, Nell Coulbon, John Laming, Mildred Marr, Elisha Laming, Mildred Marr, Louise Burick, Genevieve Prey. Phi Aphla Delta: Clifford Sullivan, Willis Masemore, Richard Cox, William Dainter, Mr. Rowe, Neal Boulard, Mr. Frank Biddsitt, Mr. Pfouts, Mr. Walters Phi Delta Theta: Thornton Cook, Ted Cod, Sydney Cook, Hyden Eaton, Reed Byers, Woodward James, Crawford James, Gryda Dodge, Ed Heidenrich, Red Brown, "Ike" Adams, Ralph Lewis, Kenneth Lytle, "Mike" Ault, Mr. J. W. Detwiler, Miss Eder, Detwiler, Falkin, Calvin Newman, Frank Lossatter, Lee Todd, Aller Toddr, M. H. Black, Mr. D. P. Northrup, Fred Bowers, Eugene Lawther, Albert Rowland, Jack Howard Rauser, Stanley Copeland, Michel Mitchell, and Judge Mason. Phi Kappa Psi: "Chuck" Dolle, Clarence Falls, Charles Benton, Charles Younggreen, E. C. Meservoy, John Musselman, Sam Bierer, Caleb Bowron, R. J. Campbell, Frank Merrill, Jim Nutter, Elsholm, Holen, Wheelock, George Brunet, Clarence Connor, Lewis Sawyer, Manwood Crowley, Charles Blackmar, Morris Blacker, C. W Gleed, Dr. Hull, George M. Marsh, Dutton, Charles Milton, Rick Stuckey, Albert, Rick Wards, Leo Capri, L.D. Smith, Jack Wardens, Leo Capri, Scarriff, Connor, Welb, Munger, Williams, Southwick, Gardener, Bowen, Noble, and Silas Bryan. Sigma Chi; "Tod" Woodbury, "Buz" Woodbury Charles Gossard, Arthur Fulton, Clement Parker, Holmes Meade, Ivan Dibble, Willis Bramwell, "Bully" Magill, Walter Eisenmayer, William Daniels, Harlan, Mr. Daniels, David Daniels, Mr. Mr. Wilbur Lapham, Mr. Mr. Doran, Mr. and Mrs. Sunderland, Mrs. R. B Teachenor, and Dr. Frank R Teachenor. Alpha Tau Omega: Dave Shaw, Donald Tyler and wife, Coach Jack Er,Jack Wheaton and Coach Jim Clinton and Chuck Wielmil, Jeffrey Miller, Cy Mobaugh, Car Greever Wilson Brown, Mr Zoelner, Ben Forbes, Mr Bozelen, Ben Forbes, Frank Reid, William Vose, Frederick Vose, Joseph Lewis, James Maehaal, RathPython and Williams, Roscoe King. Sigma Delta Phi: Jacob Mireau. Ketts: Cal Morrow, K. K. Simmons, D. M. Dickey, Herbert Cowan, Roger Conard, Clarke Wallace, Mike Booth, Earl Hanna, Arch MacKinnon, Mr. and Mrs. William Montfort, Will Moore. CO-ED STEALS PIG--- SENTENCED TO JAIL Not A Real Pig Nor A Real Jail But A Real Bucklin Girl (By Albion R. King) (By Albion R. K. Buchlin Nov 15. Liberati literary sojourn. A mock trial this february. Miss Ada Troehmel, senior, was accused of stealing a pig from Carl Coons, sophomore. The trial was heard before Judge Olivia Snyder, Senior, with the proceedings of a trial by jury. The court court was prosecuting attorney and Albion King, junior, was lawyer for the defense. The jury returned a verdict of not guilty and the defendant was sentenced to pay a fire of $100 to be confined to the county jail for five days. thirty days. (What would she have got if the jury had found her guilty?—H. S. Editor.) Franklin Rayfield, Harold Crawford, Jacob Long, Jacole McDonald, Paul and John Shaggy. TRIBUNE STUDENTS SHOW WORK OF THEIR HANDS Tribune, Nov. 15—Bessie Kutter won the sweepstake prize of ten dollars for the next display of breast cancer research at the fair at the fifth school Saturday. high school Prizes were offered for farm products and cookery by towns-people and the county commissioners. MANUAL STUDENTS EQUIP (COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT (Ry Hazel Benneson) Clay Center, Nov. 15—The commercial term has a business like appearance since the banking and office places have been constructed and placed in position by the students of the manual training department. Actual business work will be in full swing next week with a bank, a wholesale office, and a commercial exchange. The penmanship classes are enthusiastic over the prospect of exchanging specimens of their work with the Topeka high school. Geo F. Docking of the First National Band, addressed the students of the commercial department on "The Board of Trade." FOR FIRST TIME IN YEARS CLAY WITHOUT FOOTBALI (By Hazel Benneson) [By Hale] Clay Center, Nov. 13—On account of the lack of material and funds for the first time in years the Clay high school has no football team. Enthusiasm is concentrated on basket-ball and an attempt will be made to win the championship once more. Velvet THE SMOOTHEST TOBACCO SEE the singer full of glee piping up! See the pipe full of Velvet helping out! Velvet, the finest of leaf—aged over two years— toned down—mellowed—fit for “Prexie” himself. Time alone can eliminate all harsh- ness—bring about real smoothness and develop the taste that’s good. When exams, loom up and uncertainty is ripe—a tin of Velvet will help concentration and study—it's smooth! At all dealers. Liggetta Myers Tobacco Co. 10¢ Full 2 oz. Fins One ounce bags, 5c, convenient for cigarette smokers A tournament to determine the membership of the basket-ball team has just ended. The school was divided into three teams, each playing ten games. The seniors won the trophy cup offered to the winners. BILL BUSICK'S BASKET-BALL TEAM WINS A FAST GAME Lucas 20 his game was fast and the score as close at the end of the first half, but the Sylvan Grove boys had things their own way in the last. Sylvan Grove will play Ellsworth Nov. 21st. (By John B. Yost) Sylvan Grove, Nov. 15-William Buzick, K. U. 12 of the Varsity team last year, as a member of high school basket-ball, turned out a team that defeated Luces 26 to 0 Friday. (By John B. Yost) Music For Marysville (By Van Broderick) Marysville, Nov. 12.—An orchestra of nine pieces has been formed among high school students, with Prof. R. L. Parker at a weekly a week. The orchestra will furnish music for school programs and entertainments. HALF OF CONCORDIA'S FACULTY IS FROM K. U. (Rv Della Marcy) (By Delta Concordia, Nov. 2-1 Half the high school faculty are graduates of the University of Kansas. They are: O. Porter, Supt., A B, 1904; Prof. O. B, Seyster, Prin, A M, 1004; Lois Harger, English, A B, 1913; Frances Smith, Latin, A M, 1911. Middle laws—See my list of Quasi- Contract Books to be used the next quarter. J. D. R. Miller. 1041 Vt. Phone 2511 B—Adv 45-5 Ask The Extension Division A course of lectures on any subject, or single lectures by members of the faculty. Arranged to suit your convenience. The cost is small. For Lectures-- For Correspondence-Study-- University credit, or special training in Engineering or any of the usual college studies. For Municipal Questions-- For Municipal Questions Anything dealing with the government of municipalities or with public utilities. For Club Programs-- For Club Programs- Women's clubs or societies will be given programs for systematic study. For Package Libraries-- On public questions. For Lantern Slides-- Interesting educational series for high schools or clubs. For Problems in Child Training-- The Child Welfare Bureau will help in organizing playgrounds or with individual [questions relating to children. For Help in Debates-- By means of references and bulletins. For any of the special facilities of the University in cases of public interest. Address University Extension Division University of Kansas LAWRENCE PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M'COONELLY, Phydran and H. Hammond, Indiana, 1346. Temp. House, Indianapolis, 1346. Temp. House, Indianapolis, 1346. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist Office 802 Miss Moss. Bell phone 900-635-4741. HARRY REDING. M. D. Eve, ear, nose, nose. Phone 513. Home 512. Phone, Phone 513, Home 512. $\textcircled{2}$ A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eyes ear, and G. BARTHOLOMEW, M. D. Eye building. Guaranteed. Dick Building. DR. H, W. HAYNE, Ocullist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BRYON, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Belfort Phone 507. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D. D. O. 833 Mass Mason Street. Both phones, office and address. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. D. Diseases of the Heart. Boston, 1920. Residence, 1201 Both phones, in person. DR. H. L. C. CHAMMERS. Office over Squires' Studio. Both phones. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12 F. A. K. Bldg. Residence 1300 Tenn. Phone 211- 5850. DR. BURT R. WHITE Osteopathy, Phones, Bell 938, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. St. S. T. Gillippe, M. D. Office, corner Vermont and Warsteens St. 728 Indian St. 128 Indian St. Barbers E. J. Blatz, Physician and Surgeon. Office residence; 915 Mass. St. Office hours: 7:00 to 9:00 a.m. 12:00 to 4 p.m. and 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. Phones Belt 45, Home 500. CLASSIFIED Plumbers Frank Ilder's Barber Shop. 1025 Mass. Two good barbers. Satisfaction assured. J. C. Monk's Barber Shop. 913 Mass. Three barbers in chairs; never have to wait. Razor honed. Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co., for mass Mazda lamps. 1937. Mass. Phone 658. Price reasonable, work the best. Let us use a 12-08" Infinity Battery or a 18- inch Battery & Co. **81st Mass.** 439 439 Battery. Ladies Tailors Lewis Leaving Sween School. Ledera tellt her Phones 550. Miss Power: Miss C. McClair- Mrs. Ellison Dresmaking and Ladies Masses. Masses 2411, over Johari & Oarl. Ladies Tailoring and Dressmaking. Gowns for all occasions. All work guaranteed. Mrs. T. B., Daily. 914 Mase. Sanitary establishment in connection. Phone 421 Red. Queen City College. System and sewing Queen City College. System and sewing Mrs. M. G. Mark Brown, 834 Kell, Mrs. M. G. Mark Brown, 834 Kell, D & M sporting goods and athletic supplies. D & M: Ernest, 232 Mass. S, Phone: 617-894-5040. Hair Dressers Sporting Goods Miscellaneous Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-gifts. Manage hair in salon appointments call B3L 1572, Home : 51. The Select Hair Dressning Shop, 927 Mass St. Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler, and Jewelry, Bell Phone 711-7150, Mass. 711-7150 Hiwatha Cafe for regular meals, lunch and dinner, where you down town. Open after the show. One tital mean no risk, small in investment, fine goods. A clean white smoke; clear W. T. W., smoke; clean smoke. I have a nice line of plain china for painting; it's made from fine white ceramic. Estelle Northside, 723 Mass. St., up- ward from the corner. Student's Coop Club $2.50 to $3.00 per LOST-ta LOST-ta bilin. 746 LOST — Theta house Finder please return to the Theta house. Finder please return to Carolyn McNutt at the Theta house and receive reward. LOST-Pocket size, paper covered note book containing notes on Philosophy between Ohio street and Fraser hall at 8 o'clock this morning. Return to N. P. Knight, 1320 Ohio street, Bell 1538. LOST—Small jeewed Fraternity pin, in shape of triangle on Mass. St or at Eagles' Hall. Name on back. Bell phone 1789. ANOKA 2 for 25 ANOKA 2 for 25 ANOKA A New ARROW Notch COLLAR Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc. Makers THE Topeka Capital Delivered Daily from 6 to 7:30 a.m. 10 CENTS PER WEEK JAS. G. ALLEN, Agent Phone 2433B 931 MAINT Juniors laws—A number of second hand Mechams Outline and cases from last quarter to next quarter. J. D. R, Miller. 1041 Vt, Phone. 2511 Bell—Adv. Try the sandwiches at the lunch counter in Fraser hall—Adv. 42-1 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SQUIRES FOR PHOTOGRAPHS KODAK FINISHING AND SUPPLIES. ALSO FRAMING KANSAS DEFEATED BUT NOT WITHOUT HONOR (Continued from page 1). end, Purdy one through center. Halligan failed. With four down and "five to go" Towle dropped back for a drop kick from the 20-yard line. Soaked with rain and covered with mud, the ball was alimmy that seemed to be slurped by it between the crossbars from that 60-degree angle. But the little quarter lived up to his reputation. Carefully scraping the mud from his shoes, he stamped twice, signalled for the ball, received it, and with a resounding thud shot it for the goal posts. Sailing 3 yards inside the south crossbar, Towle's drop kick scored the first three points for the Cornhuskers. And for a long time it appeared as if that single score would win the game for Purdy's men. The remainder of the second quarter went winnable, and the session was Kansas, and not until late in the fourth quarter did the Cornhuskers again approach the Jayhawk goal. But this time they had better luck. An exchange of punts in which Nebraska had the larger end had left Kansas in possession of the ball on her own 10-yard line. Greenlees shot at right guard, the home of the powerful Abbott, and gained only one yard. Bishop was given the ball, and tumbling slightly on the pass, was delayed long on the field. Nebraska to sift down him in his tracks. With 9 yards to gain, and but 2 to make them in, Wilson sent a pretty punt to Towle, 30 yards down the field. Dodging the ends and shifting in and out between the linemen, the great quarter advanced it 20 yards back toward the west goal before finally downed. Everybody's Going to That First College Smoker Eagles' Hall Tuesday Night-8:00 Smakes Eats Speeches GIVE ME BACK MY WHOSE YOU ROBBER! A FUNNY SITUATION IN THE BOR OF OFFICER 666 WHEN THE JOHN I MISS HER WARD IN THE AWAY GARDEN, SOME THANNT WHOSE WRISTS ARE ORnamented WITH A PAIR OF HANDCOLOURS. BOWERSOCK THEATRE Wednesday-Matinee and Night And this shifting run put the Cornhuskers in scoring position. With the ball 15 yards from their opponents' goal, Purdy hit the line fiercely, but failed to gain. The signals were shouted, signals for a "tackle around," and Halligan was called upon, and nobly he replied. Trotting behind the line he received the leather from Towle, and started toward the Kansas goal, dodging wide of the Jayhawker线. The 10-yard line passed under his feet; he crossed the 5-foot mark and fell into the arms of Bishop. Jayhawker half, just over the goal line. Purdy's kickoff hit the ground, and the last score of the game had been chalked up. Kansas Line-up Nebraska Reber L. E. Mastin Mulloy L. G. Ross Weidlein, c. L. T. Halligan Keeling C. Thompson Hammond R. G. Abbott Burton R. T. Cameron Tudor R. E. Beck Russell Q. Towle Sommers L. H. Rutherford Greeniees R. H. Purdy, c. Stuewe F. Howard The Summary: Substitutions, Kansas; Kane for Reber; Wilson for Russell; Russell for Sommers; James for Mulloy; Mulloy for Hammond; Martin and Bishop for Greenes; abrasives; well or pearl. Oceans Hallingway Goal from场; Towle; Referee, J. C. Grover, K. C. A. C. Umpire, Capt. King, U. S. A. Head linesman, C. E. McBride, Kansas City Star. Notes of the Game Saturday's unfavorable weather reduced the size of the crowd considerably. The anticipated 12,000 attendance dwindled to a scant 9,000. Wilson played a good game at quarter. "Bunny," because of his pop and enthusiasm, is the rooster's eye. He spends every minute that he is on the field. The Nebraska band won everlasting favor in the hearts of the Jaya-hawkier rooters when it marched over to the North Stand before the game, and played "Boola." The Kansas band appeared in new suits and made a hit with both crowds. Prof. Frank Martin, acting dean of the School of Journalism at Missouri University, watched the game from the press box. He, with Harrison Brown, the editor of the University Missourian, sent home a play by play account of the battle to the Tiger rooters at Columbia. "Missouri is for Kansas every day in the year except the Saturday before Thanksgiving," was the way the Missouri dean expressed it. Stiehm, as usual, ran the game to a certain extent from the sidelines. When things were not going well for the Cornhuskers he was cut up. The Eelwolves Elwell post haste to take Purdy's place. Purdy would wave the substitute half-back aside, but not before he has received Jumbo's little message of warning. Missouri's rooters, 45 strong, also attended the game as they had promised. The press of men with a barbarism at first could not be fathomed by the students. Kansas played good ball, clean ball, consistent ball. From Keeling to Stuewe each Jayhawker performed as he was expected to, after the game would have been better. from the Kansas' point of view. "Purdy was the brains of the Nebraska team," said Coach Mose after the game. "When he was on the bench, we also Cornhuckers were up in the air." If Towle is a "hot-head and has a belligerent temper," as the Nebraska papers warned us, what about Purdy the Cornhuskers' captain? Among the outsiders in the press box were Chapin and Nutter, of the Kansas City Star, Ed. Cochran, of the Kansas City Journal, and Stewart Jackson, of the Kansas City Post. All of the Kansas City specialists had to be present to witness the big battle. Stuewe several times talked over the Cornhusker linemen, massed in a bunch, for a Kansas first down, which was the most pleasing feature of the game from our point of view. Senior laws—I have a number of Willistons Cases on Bankruptcy to be used next quarter. J. D. R. Mallard 1041 Vt., Phone 2511 Bs-5. Adval 1041 Vt., Phone 2511 Bs-5. "CORN LADY" AUTHOR TO SPEAK ON OREAD Young Woman Representing National Y. W. C. A. Board Coming Miss Jessie Field, representing the National Board of Young Women's Christian Association in its work for country girls will speak at the regular meeting of the Y. W. in Myers hall Tuesday afternoon at 4:30. Miss Field is the author of a book called the "Corn Lady" which took its peculiar name from an experience in a rural community in Iowa several years ago. In an endeavor to make the country schools in her district more efficient, Miss Field organized a corn growing contest for Corn County and the children were so delighted that they made Miss Field their "Corn Lady" in recognition of her small friends. LOST—Suit of clothes by K. U. Pantatorium. Kindly call Bocker 2764 Bell. 47-3* In January, the National Board of the Y. W. C. A. procured her as a director of country work among women and girls. She travels about the country to visit countryside Y.W. committees on methods of reaching the country women who ordinarily miss the advantages of their city friends. ENGINEERS TO PLAY MEDICS FOOTBALL That Is, If After Practicing They think They Can Do It Getting ready to accept the general football challenge issued by the medics, the engineers are out practicing and whipping a team into shape. Thus far no definite team has been picked. According to M. R. Cort who is helping coach the engineers, there is an abundance of good material and it is his opinion that they can handle medics a few things about the game of football sometime next week. Their line is a solid one, and the backfield shows much class both in respect to speed and headwork. The medic team will consist of the following: Culter, Conner, Lamer, Boon, Coleman, Gillette, Maroney, Sterling, Peterson, Vermillion, Neal, Dale, Dively. Bill Hargis is coaching this team and the medics feel confident that they will be able to take care of their end of the challenge when the formal acceptance comes. The K. U. Dames will meet with Mrs. N. P. Sherwood at 1733 Mississippi Wednesday at 3 o'clock. The Sachems will meet tonight at 9 o'clock on the Sigma Nu house. Subscribe for the Daily Kansan. THE OREAD Cafeteria and Tea Room Some of the Eats for Tuesday Boston Clam Chowder German Vegetable Soup Scalloped Oysters, English Style Roast Vermont Chicken, Oyster Dressing Prime Ribs of Beef, Yorkshire Cream Shrimp in Cases Loin of Pork Hungarian Golatch Hungarian Golatch Twenty Different Salads We have just engaged two special first-class waiters from the Baltimore Hotel in Kansas City. Service Unexcelled. Try one of Mrs. Hays' special Tenderloins 1241 OREAD NOW FOR MISSOURI! A special train carrying the band, rooters and Freshmen will leave Lawrence Friday night (definite time and the road will be announced tomorrow.) Plenty of chair cars, Tourist Sleepers and Standard Pullmans will be furnished if reservations are made before Thursday morning. Missouri-Kansas Game at Columbia, next Saturday, Nov.22 Special rate $5.35 for the round trip from Lawrence. This train will arrive in Columbia early Saturday morning. This arrangement will be much more satisfactory than the early morning train. Tickets for the game are: Bleachers, $2.00; Box Seats, $2.50. A block of 500 of the best seats now on sale at Carroll's news stand and at Manager's office in the Gymnasium. Tickets should be purchased at once as the Missouri management has requested that unsold seats be returned Thursday evening. Columbia sent 2000 rooters to Lawrence last year. Shall we allow them to outdo us in the support of the team? Get your tickets now. W. O. HAMILTON, Mgr. P. S. Mosse says we will WIN in this Game STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 18. 1913. SHIFT IS BLAMELESS DECLARE K.U. COACHES NUMBER 48. Trio Of Nebraska Stars Alone Is Responsible For The Defeat PLAY TO FEATURE K.-M. GAME Rumors That Famous Minnesota Shift is Failure, Ridiculous—Nebraska Outshone Herself Various rumors have been circulating on old Mt. Oread these last two days, coming immediately upon the defeat of the Jayhawker football eleven at the hands of the Nebraska Cornhuskers Saturday. The students, according to the coaches, did not accept as the real cause of the Kansas defeat the Jayhawker football advanced after the game. They refused to accept the commonplace versions of the catastrope Saturday. And as a result both Coach Arthur Mosse and Leonard Frank feel called upon to quiet the Kansas enthusiasts and restore peace usable积placid Lawrence. The wonderful playing of Towle, Rutherford, and Halligan were responsible for the Jayhawks' defeat at the hands of the Cornmunkers Saturday. Nothing more important than their expected brilliancy, and as a result they trounced the Kansas eleven. That was all there was to it. Shift. For K., S. reports. And for R., K. reported that the Jahawks' former stars who witnessed the game Saturday declared the Minnesota shift a failure, and the cause of the Kansas defeat, there is positively nothing to it. No such declarations were made by any of the Jahawkers' old athletes since such sentiment has reached the ears of each coach. That should be relatively down that rumor which has been floating all over the hill ever since the big game. And now all eyes are turned to the one grand contest—the greatest game of the season—the battle with Tigers at Columbia next Saturday. It Worked Last Year Kansas' policy for that game has not yet been fully decided upon by the coaches. But one thing is certain. The players will go in the game, and from the first moment use the Minnesota Shift. If it fails to work,hampered by any other inclement weather conditions, Kansas may be changed in succession, half, but both Moss and Frank remember with pleasure what sterling service it performed against Brewer's athletes last year, and on former merit, are going to give it another chance. Team in Apple-Pie Order Understand, that is not final. The Jayhawkers may entirely revise their play to guard against some unforeseen emergency later in the week, but that policy was laid down by both Coach Mosse and Assistant Coach Frank yesterday afternoon, and from present indications will be the one on which the Varsity will base its play next Saturday. Team in Apple-Pie Order The men emerged from the stiff Cornhusker game in splendid condition physically. The long-capped bug-a-boo that one of the prize athletes would lay out such as the prize athletes possessed into the discard, and harring any minor injuries which may be suffered in practice with the freshmen the remainder of the week, the eleven, from center to backback, will go into the Tiger games in excellent shape. The two regular athletes, Detwiler and James, who were kept from starting the Nebraska game from injury and sickness have improved considerably. It is still doubled, however, especially in Detwiler's case, when he works with the Tigers. James looks fairly good, although he still feels the effects of his recent severe attack of bronchitis. Line-up is Unchanged The line-up which will start the game Saturday against the Tigers will be in all probability the same which opened the game again last week. James may be inserted for Hammond, but outside of that the composition of the line will be the same. Tudor and Reber will work at ends, Weisheim and Finkenstein will work at Hammond and Mullor at guard Keeling at center. In the backfield will be Harl Russell or Bunny Wilson at quarter, Sommers and Martin at halves, and Stuewe at full. Of course, the above list is not exhaustive, and knows what strange whims or fantasies may enter the brains of the coaches at the last minute. They might decide to work Red Lupton at full instead of Stueve, and the close followers of Jayhawker football would not be surprised, but as it stands now the eleven named above will start the game against Missouri Saturday. Sacred Concert in Chapel Sunday A sacred concert will be given in the chapel of Fraser hall next Sunday afternoon in charge of the Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. The University Glee club and orchestra will give several numbers and vocal solos by students will also be on the program. All student and faculty members are invited. CHANGELLOR TO TALK AT COUNTY BANQUET Students From Linn Plan Record-Raiser Feed Dec. 30 A banquet during the Christmas holidays with Chancellor Frank Strong in attendance and high school seniors as guests is part of the good time which the Linn county club will have at home during the mid-year vacation. At the meeting of the club last night committees in charge of the banquet were appointed by President Melvin Evans. The club will stage the "get-to- gather" affair at Blue Mound on the evening of Dec. 30. Linn county students in preparing for the feast. The funds to pay for the banques will be obtained through a seventy-five cent assessment from each member of the club and each alumnus. The proceeds of a basket-ball game between members of the club and some of the county teams will also go into the "eats" treasury. The banquet this year will be the second which the club has given in Linn county. Last year more than ninety were present and those who had the affair in charge say that enough K. U. enthusiasm was aroused among the alumni and high school seniors to make the effort to give any more of the good time which the crowd is still talking about. With Chancellor Strong as the principal speaker this year the Linn county students place no limit on estimates of the success of the event. The committee chairmen are basket-ball, Robert Brooks; banquet hall, Clay Morrow; reception, Marie Madsen; music, John Miller; the committee chairmen will select John Madsen. The chairman will select the other members of the committees. The invitation committee is: Gola Coffelt, Blue Mound; Burnette Bower, Mound City; Wilbur Fisher; Frances Campla, Le Cyrne. FRATERNITIES FAVORED BY UNIVERSITY DEBATERS That fraternities and sororites are valuable to the life and activities of a university or college, was the decision reached at the close of a debate at the University Debating Association. A.W. Erison opposed the Greeks and J. M. Johnson and H. V. McCullough defended them. There will be no meeting of the society next week owing to the conflicting date of the sophomore bum. "Promissory notes for over $1,000 have been collected from the seniors and more are coming in right along," said Guy von Schrittz, manager of the Annual. "The committees are working and the number of the Annuals will probably run as high as 1750. PLANS FOR ANNUAL CALL FOR A HIGH GRADE BOOK "This is the most expensive Annual yet published," said Prof. Merle Thorns, the journalism department after it was over the specifications for the Annual. "Specifications for the book have been handed to several printing firms and the exact price will soon be determined." pi Upson held initiation last night for Glendon Alliance, junior law, Omar Hodges, sophomore College, and Charles Habenbuck, sophomore engineer. All three are from Kansas City. CONVALESCENT Pi Upsilon Initiates Brown Heir Arrives A Brown Heir Arrived W. B. Brown, superintendent of the department of journalism press, was returned from Kansas City where he welcomed the arrival of a baby boy. Read your own KANSAN. AND BY SATURDAY YOU'LL FEEL BULLY HE WONT STAY CROAKED A-TALL MALLOY BIG RALLY TO WIND MEN OF COLLEGE WILL UP FOOTBALL SEASON RAMPAGE AT SMOKER Boxing, Wrestling, And Music Largest K.U. School Awaken Will Feature Morris' And Prepares To Mix Extravaganza Tonight To the battle cry of “Pep, Pep, Pep, Pep,” two monster football rallies will be staged Thursday evening at 8 o'clock in Fraser hall and Friday morning in front of Fraser hall. Even with the defeat of Saturday and that of two weeks ago, the Kansas team is up strong and the ranks of the rooters are being strengthened rather than diminished. The rally Thursday night will be the biggest football meeting of the year. The ticket sale will start Wednesday morning. They will announce for the small and insignificant sum of fifteen cents ($15). An overflow meeting may be outside if the walls of Fraser hall refuse to hold the multiset of foals everybody and everybody is expected to be there. The program includes speeches, boxing bouts, wrestling matches, the Glee club quartet and "Swede" Wilson and his banjo. Friday morning the annual annihilation of the Tiger will take place on the campus in front of Fraser hall. RUSSELL SELL BEQUEST TO AID KANSAS CHILDREN Financial assistance from the Russell-Sage foundation will now enable the department of sociology in solving public welfare problems. "A playground director should have a salary as large as that of the superintendent of schools," Professor Burgess said today. "The work of directing child recreation has been done in many Kansas cities." The department at the University has received requests from Kansas City, Wichita, and other cities of Kansas for recommendations in welfare problems, but these appeals have always been neglected because they are not included in the funds to do the work. Now we expect to go into the problems of each city with a full force at work." HOLD YOUR BREATH NOW; YOU MIGHT NEED IT LATEP The crowd will continue to struggle up the hill about 1:20 every afternoon; at least until the next meeting of the University Council. Then it may puff and hold its side while it toils up at one o'clock. At the meeting of the University Council last week a committee consisting of one man from each school reported in favor of changing the hour of beginning from 10 a.m. to 1:00, but the council laid the recommendation on the table until the next regular meeting. Prof. E. W. Burgess, of the department of sociology will spend part of his time each week for two months, in Topeka, where he will make a complete investigation of social conditions, especially the way in which school children spend their play time. The Chancellor will attend along with Coach Mose, Professors Putnam, Thorpe, Hill and Van der Vries. Coach Mose will oure "Old Mizzou" and Professor Putnam will orate about English athletics. The get-together spirit, which of late has pervided the atmosphere of Oread, has at last permeated the reserve of the College and tonight at Eagles' hall at 8 o'clock with big eats and lots of smoke, the College men are going to get-together with a will. A new lot of yells, yells just for the College, will be submitted and tried out. HENIOT LEVY TO PLAY Celebrated Polish Pianist to Appear Before Students in Fraser Tonight Mr. Heinley Stent pianist will give a reitalt in Fraser hall tonight at 8 Mr. Levy was born in Warsaw, Poland, a part of the world which has furnished a number of distinguished artists and the city contributed to his early training. He is acknowledged in Germany as a pianist of great ability and a composer of note, having gained the esteem of his fellow composer's prizes offered abroad. The water survey department will probably be in its new quarters in the three rooms of the southeast wing of the basement of Snow hall by Thanksgiving. The office of C. C. Young, director of the department for microbial analysis, be needed for bacteriological analysis under charge of Miss Greenfield and room four for chemical analysis under charge of Mr. Bruckmiller. WATER DEPARTMENT TO HAVE CAUSE FOR THANKS New desks and laboratory apparatus are being installed. No classes will be held there as the department may for the work of state water analysis. PROF, C. H.TALBOT ATTENDS CONVENTION AT TORONTO Prof. Charles H. Talbot of the extension department, has gone to Toronto, Ontario, to attend a meeting of the National Municipal League which meets there tomorrow. He will also attend a conference of municipal Council Reference Library to be held there the latter part of the week. On his return he will stop in Chicago and Madison, Wis., where he will study methods of municipal reference work. The Sigma Nu fraternity has pledged Woodrow Sorgett of Wichita. Many Famous Solitaires Sparkle In Hayworth Hall Young ladies of the University who are especially fond of diamonds should go over to see an exhibit in Haworth hall. The collection includes all of the famous sparklers. There are the "Pasha of Egypt" and the "Great Mogul" restful peaceful side by side; while the brilliant "Kohinoon" and the "Polar Star" try to outshine each other. The "Blue Diamond of Hope," a large blue stone might interest to lose joy girls who are expecting to own diamonds soon. The diamonds are made of an excellent grade of glass. YOU'RE ON THIRD-NOW SCORE, GUILD URGES Topeka Minister Talks Baseball To Students And Registers A Hit Baseball burst forth in chap this beautiful spring morning and Roy B. Guild of Topea scored a hit. There were few in the bleachers and less in the box seats, but the player looked out over the yawning space before him and made a home run. His batting average had not been sufficiently advertised to the students or they would have stayed for the game. Roy B. Guild is successor to Dr. Charles M. Sheldon at the Central Congregational church in Topeka, a leader in the Men and Religion movement, and chief worker in the new social survey in the capitol city. He played against K. U. on the Washburn football team several years ago. This morning he read a newspaper baseball story entitled "Get Home From It." Morris had been up to him to reach home. The score was tied. The thousands in the bleachers watched him anxiously. "To get home from third is the chief business of every one of us," said Mr. Guild. "The college graduate has reached third. He or she may have reached there because someone was behind them. He may have reached there by his own efforts. But if he doesn't get home from third he falls in the eyes of the whole training to is develop the habit to get home. Get the habit to score, for the failure of the college graduate is conspicuous. We need the men who car make third and score." make chirp and sushi After the talk Miss Mary Moran of the School of Fine Arts played the piano. KANSAS CRIMINOLOGISTS HONOR PROFESSOR HUMBLE The Kansas State Society of Criminal Law elected officers for the ensuing year at a business meeting of the association Saturday morning. Officers elected were; Judge Roy T. Osborne, of Independence; Judge Garvey, vice-president; Prof. H. W. Lockman, of Law, secretary and treasurer. The society voted to hold the next meeting at Lawrence, the date to be set is November 25. USUAL NUMBER FLUNK OUT SAYS DEAN OLIN TEMPLIN "There are about as many this year as in the years past or as there will be twenty years from now," said Dean Olin Olm emmeyer, overseer of a query regarding the number of "flunks" in the freshman ranks. "The grades given out at the end of the first six weeks are merely a checking up, a warning to both students and faculty. Of course, some students find the work a little too hard at first and we have been compelled to withdraw a few from some of their classes. Some are failing but all have the chance to redeem themselves." NOVEMBER 24TH LAST DAY TO GET A $2.50 ANNUA Margaret Butts of Mankato, has pledged PI Phi. Manager Von Schritz announced today that since the finance committees of the various classes have not had opportunity to see all the students who wish to pay $2.50 cash for their graduation, they will purchase which $2.50 in cash will buy an order for an Annual has been extended to Monday, November 24th. if any student or instructor desiring to pay cash is not called upon by a member of the finance committee he may telephone Manager Guy Von Schrillz, 1791 Bell, 947 Home, or Russell Clark, both phones 248, and a member of the committee will be sent to interview him. JAYHAWK ARMY TO ADVANCE ON TIGER Led By Engineers, Students Will Cheer Team To Victory Saturday HUNDREDS PREPARE FOR TRIP They're All Digging Down in Old Wallets And Bringing Out the Necessary Five-Thirty-Five Students are dragging out all the old sugar bowls, ancient trousers, and other things that could possibly contain the necessary "five-thirty-five" for the trip to Missouri and are paying over their cash to Manager Hamilton for tickets for Saturday's game. Led by the engineers who are on an inspection trip which will end at Columbia, the following men will attend the game and help root the Jay Hawk to victory in the final battle of the year: Eugene Davis, C. L. Moore, H. P. Simpson, L. L. Smith, John Hamilton, R. S. Springer, Jim Simpson, F. C. Campbell, J. C. Hoffman, A. H. Campbell, J. C. Hoffman, A. Wardas, Lawrence Morris, Lymen Arnold, Walter Borders, E. F. Schooloy, Dick Small, Wilsen Benson, Tom Ashby, Edgar Blanton, Charles Alexander, Joseph Gaitshield, M. Morrow, Cecil DeRoin, Norman Pierce, Louis Park, Frank Royse, Boyd Prugh, Sam Johnson, Melvin Johnson They're Going in Droves F. M. McClellan, O. C. Conkey, C. O. Buckles, Burney Dunham, D. C. Mofft, H. C. Hansen, H. C. Pauly, Fred Leasure, O. J. Fisk, A. W. Hirth, E. Baysinger, Leonow Hacew, H. H. Hewley, Hercully Waugh, Ralph Seeger, Frank Miller, Wendell Lyman, Philip Sprop, Joe Huhl, Alfred Harris, Humphrey Jones, Leonard Hurst, Calvin Lambert, Fred Noftger, Leon Brown, John B. Carey, John Jenkins, Russell Clark, Calliday Curran, John Blair, Jack Castles, John Cunnick. Dickens Markell, Ben Berger, Junius Dyche, Lucien Dycie, Neeley Toss, Lock Wardock, J Detwiler, John Smith, William Morton, Roland Dodge, Watson Dodge, George O'Neil, Vermillion, McClara, Mathan Resenberg, William Lezite, Harry Evans, William E. Jane, Eugene B. Hyndman, Bruce Shomber, William Howden, John L. Laird, Robert Skinner, Howard Heineman, Elen Schärer, Dauab Einberg, Hughes, Nathan Isenberg, Steve Siger, Fred S. Degen, Norman Strachan, John Madden And Uncle Jimmy Green L. E. Brown, V. J. Sisna, A. J. Fecht, H. C. Peale, H. Lichen, H. C. Pauley, G. A. Washburn, T. D. Wise, Joseph Segel, J. A. Rouke, J. K. Bunn, H. L. Dodd, W. F. Fox, G. C. Glenn, E. L. Harshbarger, M. V. Holmes, L. W. Kinear, R. F. Moore, G. R. Murphy, D. Reid, B. Underwood, C. R. Viers, Harry St. Alley, N. W. Brown. W. E. Brown, E. T. Newcomer, R. E. Templin, L. E. Nofsinger, W. H. Severs, D. B. Kleighe, W. J. MALcolson, J. R. Butler, M. M. Allison, D. F. Hazen, L. C. Angevine, C. L. Coggins, N. H. Bauger, H. Sam Fairchild, Sam Fairchild, F. N. Veatch, Prof. B. J. Dalton, Prof. A. H. Sluss, Dean James Green, Herbert Flint, Philip Ferguson. C. O, Ammons, E. C. Burke, A. H. Lindsey, Ro Robbins, R. T. Cowhill, Hillery Bohanann, G. P. Hinshaw, J. A. McKone, Halleck Craig, Philip B. Miller, Blair Hackney, "Duke" Kennedy, Paul Surber, Harry Schores, Maynard Egan, DeLaskie Miller, Joe Bishop. COUNCIL SELECTS DATES FOR FACULTY MEETINGS The University Council has decided on the following schedule for the meeting of the faculty of the different schools and colleges; University Council, the first Tuesday of each month; the Graduate School on the second Tuesday; the third Tuesday; and the Engineering, the Educational, the Law, the Pharmacy, and the Fine Arts schools on the fourth Tuesday. U. U. GRADUATE DIRECTS THIS $20,000,000 PROJECT D. H. Redinger, a graduate of the School of Engineering in 1911, is supervising a mammoth engineering project at the University of Los Angeles with electricity. When completed the job will cost approximately $20,000,000. Send the Daily Kansan home. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSIY DAILY KANSAN The official student paper of the University EDITORIAL STAFF HEBRERT FUNKT ... Editor-in-Chief GLENDON ALVINYE ... Associate Editor MILLMAN HAWKINS ... Sport Editor LANSON JOHN ... High School Editor JOAIN GLUSSBERGER BUSINESS STAFF BAY EIDERHUEP - - - - Circulation Manager JOE BINOP - - - - Advertising REPORTIAL STAFF RANDOLPH KENNEDY Entered as secos-1-class mail matter Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of journalism. Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance; one term, $1.50. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate students further than merely printing the news by standing for their opinions, no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to have more serious problems to widen heads; to more serious problems to widen heads; to ability the students of the University. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1913. Editorial assistants for today's paper, Ray Eldridge. neweditor, Fred Hondersten; assistants Frank O Sullivan; Jack Greenies; Joe Howe Exchange editor, John M. Henry Society reporter, Lucile Hildinger As we advance in life we learn the limit of our abilities — FROUDE. ON TO MISSOURI' This is to convince all rooters that they CAN go to Columbia next Saturday with the team if they just THINK so. Care fare's $.35; game $2.00; and then, one must eat, of course, and ride the street car; but $10 should cover everything. Let's all go. We can save that extra quarter thrown away now and then for something we don't need, and by Christmas we'll never miss the price of going. Besides, you can earn all that back during Christmas vacation through the extra "pep" you'll get from seeing Missouri beaten and from knowing your support and rooting helped win. Let's all go. THEY CAME HOME Simplified spelling is said to have been adopted by the University of Missouri. But that will not help them to spell "victory" next Saturday. Last year the first annual home coming was held at the time of the Missouri game and the attendance of the graduates was large. It was beyond all expectations. The fact that the game was with the ancient Missouri rival helped some and the day was ideal. The K. U. spirit is irrepressible, and no inclementy of weather can keep away an old grad when his University team is fighting a decisive battle. This year the homecoming was set for the day of the Nebraska game. And even though the day was cold and drizzly and the prospects for a fast game were not the best many came back. At the University of Pennsylvania a dental smoker was recently held, and nobody was allowed to look down in the mouth. An announcement states that the Sachems will meet at the Sigba Nu house. Better keep that copy read out of the draught. OVERCHARGING OUR GUESTS Many visitors here Saturday complained of the treatment given them by restaurants and cab drivers. The ground for the complaint was in the advanced prices that were charged for service. The same problem arose last year at the Missouri game. Is it right that visitors should be subjected to such treatment when by reason of their numbers they are compelled to put up with mediocre service? A Virginia lexicographer has just invented another definition for a monocle. He says a monocle is a pane of glass worn in one eye so hat its wearer may not see at one time more than he can understand Hello Bill! You are just the "V" I have been looking for to square that Columbia trip. A comparison of 625 star athletes of the Naval Academy with 580 non-athletes in both cases from the classes of 1892-1911, shows that apparently the non-athletes are in better physical condition than the athletes The Gargantuan appetite of a great university for money claims justification in the case of Columbia by something better than its recent growth and demonstrable physical needs. The report of our university emphasizes, not statistics of reguler emphasizes, not statistics of regler expenditures, but the thoroughness and variety of the University's service. President Butler can point with pride, on the one hand, to the concern felt for the character, preparation, and homogeneity of the 800 students of Columbia College and the 600 of Barnard; to the productive scholarship of faculty; to the prosequence with the universities of the Old World. On the other, he points out that the enrollment of 3,692 students in the summer session, 1,684 in Teachers College, 1,828 in extension teaching, and 1,913 in evening technical classes, has brought the registration up to 13,120—an extraordinary total; to the prosecution of politics of expansion was formulated, public donations have arisen from a mere dribble to the aggregate of $25,776,704; and that many of the 900 university officers are doing notable work in their association with governmental or voluntary enterprises of various sorts. Columbia, in other words, can go before the giving public upon a concrete basis; some State universities appeal to the taxpayer and that by which the most conservative Eastern colleges have always claimed their clientele—the Nation. The University of Virginia has a new method for getting college yellows and songs. A contest is put upon a competitive basis, and the winner is picked up to one of the football games, which takes place in another city. OUR DAILY QUIZ Use honor system and grade yourself MISSOURI 1 - Where is the University of Missouri Columbia, Boone county, Missouri 2 - Why there instead of somewhere else the county offered a bonus on Boehne county $117,900 for it. 3—Was it worth it? The merchants and landlades of College Park will have a week before every big football game the majority of the citizens wish the whole University was in Helena, Montana, or 4- How many times has it been established? Three times. First in 1839 by the U.S. government, and in the county of Boone. Next in 1870 by James S. Rollins and Lately he rattles厉ly by a notable named Ropes. When was the first commencement? When was the last? When were students graduated. When were students graduating. At K, C, with the football team. 7 the Master's graduates think of their Alma mater. 6 — Where were the rest? At K. G. with the football team *probably no institution founded in the West Coast, such as Ashbury, but such an adverse influence has left a more profound impress on our Western civilization. We graduate grades themselves as impress.) s But when is the institution "buffeted?" Every year along about Thanksgiving 10—What is the average age of the students? 9- How have the students compared with those of K. U.? Only mediore is a rule but quite favorably, Nicholson and Hackney for it. Fifty-four. They leave for Columbia, while yet in their teens but the transportation facilities are not of the best and— To bring me joy and soft-peaced peace, And make my pulses beat more strong And on the far hills a crimson shines, And in my heart a dawn of light— Today Lone's rose will be red. AT DAYBREAK In the high tree a cheerful bird, birds on a bird of some And white and star-like, trembling stu By God upon my life-string hung. In the blue sky one little star And in my soul a hope so young In all the years, a mydred compressed, What the breed, what sky, what potent earth, What the soil? Today my hours will be bright. WILLIAM J. FISHER. in the Literary Digest Out of the West a man, What arms his creature be? What scenes and men shall mold his infancy? Shall give him birth? What arms his cradle be. And in my soul a soo young And while and star-like, trembling still 'his typal man, this latest, strongest, best, This hero of the West? FRED L. PATTEE, CAMPUS OPINION (Communications to the Dily-Karun must be delivered in compliance with the column not mandatory for publication. The column must be addressed to me.) To the Editor of the Daily Kansas: It has been announced that there will be no training trip this year before the Missouri game. One more time they abolished and for what reason? Are not the players entitled to a few days' rest up from the Nebraska game in some out-of-the-way place, where none of the noise and disorder before the game will bother them? NO TRAINING TRIP It has always been the custom of the coaches to take the team away so it would be in the best possible condition for the annual game and ever one knows how beneficial it was. This year the long and tiresome trip to Columbia will be made the night before the game, and the kind of condition will the team be at about the opinion of many that the abolishment of the training trip is not a wise one and shows very little consideration for the feelings of the men who have to fight Missouri. M. SMOKERS Editor the Daily Kaitano frequently given by the University organizations the proper thing for students and professors of a State University? The question will admit of discussion in which will discredit the practice. Editor the Daily Kansan: Many new men who have never smoked come to the University each year. At these smokers they take their first smoke. Should the University of Kansas foster such a practice? Student. Viewed from the standpoint of health, one of two things is evident:—either the students believe that the teaching of hygiene is false or they are too weak to follow it; or the audacity to face science and say, "You know not where you speak," or does he shamely admit that he is not equal to the test? Again what can be said for the coach who does not permit his men to smoke but applaud or at the game muffin his cigar? "FEETBALLING" (Togo continues his remarks) "Are not Hon. Walter Camp and other Supreme Courts doing consider- able to make football more safer?" my ignorantuous Cousin ask it. "Feetballing in Connecticut are like railroading in that same State," I olicate distinctly. "Considerable are being done and nothing accomplished. Reforming Yale are like commissioning Just when we are setting on sidelines with score book, attempting to figure whether death-rate can be more quickly discouraged by semaphore system or electric signal —screach!!—another jarr occur and fractures are picked up by hospice. Only way to make them safer is of solidified steel, which would make them more comfortable but less amusing to see when they bump." "Are you now talking about Pullmans or Variesities?" Nogl ask it. ( "Should they be stopped by law?" be negotiate. "I am useless to tell," I say so. "If railroads was stopped it would discourage much happy education which goes by travel—eoplement, drummers, Wm. Jenny Bryan, and Misty Shrink's Conventions. Also, if you stop feetball you man of America must go to college and young man of America must go to college other saloon for drink beer and sing-song. This would be cheaper for H母, Parent, but young man never look so polished off who learn his education that way. Moreoverly, I am not sure America could get along without learning feetballing in early date of youth. How otherwise could they become sufficiently trained in brutality to take up profession of grown-up life? How Wall Street, choke & throwdown of Life insurance, slam-bang and run-away of politics?" I ask to know! Yes, I say it! Without feetballing America could never learn to do so." "Japan got pretty considerable learning that form of "Both," O snigly calmly. "Both are equally dangerous weasons." "Yes so!" I hola. "But Japan has always had another kind of healthy National Sport to teach her cruelty." "Japan got pretty considerable brave without learning that form of college kick-uu," snuggest Cousin Noël. "What is it?" he require. "Hara-kiri," I pronounce, making suicide motion peculiar to Samurai cut-up. Hopink you are the same "What is?" he require. (Per Wallace Irwin in Life.) The Bible tells us we should love our enemies. I wonder if that is why women always kiss each other. —N. Y. Times. Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx OLD POWER ENGINE BEGINS LIFE ANEW IN FAR WEST We want you to see them. No other clothes to compare with them. Special values $25, others $18 to $30. Six Star Special Suits at $15.00 Another old landmark in the shape of an antiquated power engine has passed on to better times and will be seen no more on Mt. Oread. It was an old Rudslau Semi-trail car and a landmark about 1887 in the Fowler shops. It went through the fire of 1898 and after being repaired and overhauled did duty for some time after. When the new power plant was built it was used as a station and been sold to western firm where it will begin life over in a planning mill. No more W. S. G. A. dances will be given before Thanksgiving because of the many other events of student interest before that time. The next dance will probably be given the first Saturday after the Thanksgiving holiday. The girls will have to have the members of each student district act, in turn, as hostesses for the succeeding dances. MATINEE DANCES SUBSIDE TILL TURKEY DAY PASSE RALLY'S MORE IMPORTANT THAN QUIZ, PROF DECIDES Just a hint to others. A certain member of the faculty had a quiz scheduled for tomorrow morning at eight o'clock. His words "boys, between the moonlight and the peg going on lately, the nights to tumultuous times," I think we ought to postpone our quiz until next week. All in favor say I." The ayes spake volumes. Equal to any $20 suit shown in other stores. K. U. Approves Olathe Water K. U. Approves Oathe water Plans for a new water supply for Oathe, including a new rapid sand filter, have been approved by the sanitary engineering department and will be installed immediately. Hart, Schaffner & Marx YOU'LL be particularly interested this season in some of the very new "kinks" that have been introduced into our young men's suit models, designed for us by Not only the general effects of fashionable style, and the correctness of fit are right in these clothes; but there are a lot of little points, new ideas in sleeve and shoulder shapes; new things in the waistcoat front and collar; new features in trouser cuffs and waistbands. OTHER SCHOOLS IGNORE THAT MEDIC GAUNTLET The football challenge sent out by the Medics last week has not been accepted by any of the schools yet. There is all kinds of talk around the engineering building, but talk is in the form of undertakings of the "boots" so far. Analyzes Emporia Coal Prof. A. H. Sluus is making an analysis of which were sent in by the Electric Light Co., of Emporia. Swimming contests, teas and a vaudievel show by Swarthmore College "co-eds" were events in the convention of the Intercollegiate Association for Self-Government which was held last week at Swarthmore. Fifty-one girl delegates representing virtually every important girls' college in the east were attending the convention. Herb Coleman, captain of the doctors' eleven says he thinks they have the angoras of the other schools. The Medics had their first practice in suits yesterday afternoon, with Coach Capps present. PECKHAM'S SAM S. SHUBERT Matinees Wednesday and Saturday PROTSCH The College Tailor LITTLE WOMEN Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 Vermont ROYAL ROCHESTER Phones 139 KENNEDY & ERNST 829 MASS. ST. PHONES 3142 Chafing dishes, casseroles, coffee machines and percolators. The finest line of metal and wood serving trays in the SAVE THE PIECES We have added Lens Grinding Machinery to our Optical department. Any Lens Duplicated Glasses Fitted. HESTER Jeweler and Optician LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. W. H. Quakenbush, Pres.; E. S. Weatherby, Supt. Rexall Cold Tablets will break it up 25c boxes and sold at McCOLLOCH'S Drug Store Prof. Croissant Speaks Prof. D. C. Croissant of the extension division addressed The Federation of Women's Clubs at Prefecture Anial aid Hall and the afternoon name and the New Age" Former Governor Stubbs was to have addressed the meeting but was unable to attend. Vitta L. Dunn, a graduate of the University who is teaching manual training at Ransom is here visiting friends. GOV. HODGES ASKS SANITARY BOARD TO AID POND PLAN As a result of the severe drouth of the past summer Governor Hodges has asked the sanitary board to work in co-operation with the state irrigation engineer in giving advice and assistance to farmers in construction of ponds for a water supply. Several requests have come to Prof. F. R. Hesser, who has charge of this work. Notice Students Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 501, Home 180 O. P. Leonard's Pentatulum is on the job again this year. We Give Club Rates Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Lawrence Pantatorium 2 W. Warren, Bath Phone 5061 841 Mass. St. Upstairs. O AMERICAN DOLLING BORG TRADE SPALDING MARK A.D. 1874 A "Square Deal" for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantee each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding Trade-Mark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. A. G. SPALDING & BROS. 1120 Grand Ave. Kansas City, Mo. Send for our Catalogue. See the New Parker Self-Filling Fountain Pen Office Supplies, Typewriters F. I. CARTER 025 Mass. Bell phone 1064 Come on Down Come on to JIM'S Tonight 1101 Mass. St. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. FeaturingMilk Chocolates "SWEDE" Phones 540 BERT WADHAMS The College Inn Barber UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN GOVERNMENT WANTS KANSAS GRADUATES Civil Service Man Visits University To Get Teachers For Philippines "University graduates can earn $1,000 to $1,400 a year by teaching in the Philippines, with a possibility of an increase to $3,000," said George N. Briggs, who is president of the organizing the Philippine Bureau of Education at Washington. the purpose of Mr. Briggs' visit to the University is to get seniors interested in the opportunities offered in the Philippine service. "This large school system uses nearly 9,000 teachers and the staff is constantly being enlarged," said Mr. Briggs. "There is an open field for teachers of domestic science and for manual training instructors." "The government pays all transportation expenses from the teacher's home in this country to the city of Manilla. For the first year, the salary is $1,000 to $1,400. The highest salaries paid to experienced teachers is $3,000. Superintendents get as much as $6,000 a year." All positions are filled by civil service appointments. About fifty students from K. U. have gone to the Philippines and Mr. Briggs urges all seniors who expect to teach to test them for particular about the next civil service examinations which are to be held in Lawrence in December. Miss Mollie Ray Carroll entertained twenty-five girls Sunday from four to six o'clock at her regular Sunday afternoon "At Home." Miss Helen Jones of the German department read for the girls. Jasamine tea from China, presented by Mrs. A. M. Wilcox for this occasion, was poured by Miss Marie Russ. Middle laws—See my list of Quasi- Contract Books to be used the next quarter. J D. R. Miller, 1041 Vt. Phone 2511 B—Advent. 45-5 Fresh Allegretti and Douglas chocolates at Barber's Drug Store. Adv. Senior laws—I have a number of Willistons Cases on Bankruptcy to be used next quarter. J.D.R.Miller, 1041 Vt., Phone 2511 B.- Adv. 45-5 Our hot and cold drinks excel. Try one at Barber's fountain—Adv. Social Notes --the Kappa Sigma fraternity gave a dance at the chapter house Friday night. The guests were Ilsa Wilhelmi, Marjorie Hires, Agnes Smith, Clara Powell, Hazel Gould, Mildred Cole, Helen Hershberger, Margaret Fitch, Dorothy Brown, Jessica Paley, Mae Miller, Wynona McCroskley, Edna Davis, Jessie Ingram, Myra Philley, Gauna Finch, Mary Powell, Marie Anderson, Jane Shuey, Rowena Wilkinson, Agnes Abels, Margaret Davis, Maribell McGill, Helen Dawson, Ruth Ewing, Pathene Keith, Gerturet Lobbel, Bill Doyle, Isabel Gibb, and Margaret Butte. The out of town guests were Miss Myra Dillon, Kansas City; Miss Vita Rowlans, Parsons; Miss Gladys Stevenson, Kansas City; Miss Ruth Dille, Enterprise; Marjorie Killarney, Atchison; Phil James, Chanute; Boise, William; Geneal, Kingman Gilen Calen, Syvane Grove; Louis LaCoss, Kansas City; and Walter Hoffman, Enterprise. Kappa Alpha Theta entertained at dinner, Friday night for the following members of the Nebraska chapter: Louise Wedwell, Imogene Clark, Katherine Atwood, Maurine McAdams, and Louise Coe. Other guests were: Patricia Blakely and Miss Babcock, Pleasanton and Emily Foster and Florence Pratt, Kansas City, Mo. The Phi Kappa Psi fraternity entertained with a dance at Eckah's hall Friday night. The guests were Helen Topping, Marie Hendric, Mary Govier, Lyle Hayes, Kansas City; Brandy McKay, St. Michael; Erickley Alkison, Amarina Smith, Florence Pratt, Alice Coors, Virginia Goff, Agnes Moses, Virginia Lucas, Edith Cubbison, Bess Ulrich, Mary Stanaway, Evelyn Strong, Frances Sawyer, Katherine Stone, Glace Zooloon, Prey, Erikley Alkison, Rose Dear, Esther Crowley, Blanche Simons, Eric Aktonik, Elfrieda Fischer, Margaret Heizer, Dorman O'Leary, and Dick Wagtail. Out of town guests were Marguerite Swentzel, Louise Barrick, Guiniver Prey, Prey, Elfrieda Collins, Margaret Midfred Marr, Messrs. Jack Horner, Clarence Connor, Bob Campbell, Don Wheelock, Joe Dyer, Bill Dyer, and Clarence Falls of Kansas City; Mr. Frank Merrill and Mrs. Hoskie Hill, Paoik; Mr. Frank McFarland, Mr. Frank McFarland, Mr. Clark of Topeka. The chaperones were Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Haskins, Mr. and Mrs. Spalding and Mrs. Ralph Spotts. --the Kappa Sigma fraternity gave a dance at the chapter house Friday night. The guests were Ilsa Wilhelmi, Marjorie Hires, Agnes Smith, Clara Powell, Hazel Gould, Mildred Cole, Helen Hershberger, Margaret Fitch, Dorothy Brown, Jessica Paley, Mae Miller, Wynona McCroskley, Edna Davis, Jessie Ingram, Myra Philley, Gauna Finch, Mary Powell, Marie Anderson, Jane Shuey, Rowena Wilkinson, Agnes Abels, Margaret Davis, Maribell McGill, Helen Dawson, Ruth Ewing, Pathene Keith, Gerturet Lobbel, Bill Doyle, Isabel Gibb, and Margaret Butte. The out of town guests were Miss Myra Dillon, Kansas City; Miss Vita Rowlans, Parsons; Miss Gladys Stevenson, Kansas City; Miss Ruth Dille, Enterprise; Marjorie Killarney, Atchison; Phil James, Chanute; Boise, William; Geneal, Kingman Gilen Calen, Syvane Grove; Louis LaCoss, Kansas City; and Walter Hoffman, Enterprise. The Acacia fraternity gave a dance at Ecke's hall Saturday night. The guests were Gladys Elliot, Agnes McCorkle, Mannhattan; Charlotte Wagner,シャーナイ Sherri Wagner, Jake Waver, Marcavet Pettjohn, La Verne Baker, Marguerite Kelsall, Helen Gephart, Una Meredith, Lucy Chase, Iva McAly, Ethel Wakefield, Lake Benton, Minn.; Gladys Henley, Pearl Libengood, Vanessa Hoastow, Mrs. Shannon and Mr. and Mrs. J. Amick chapened. * * The Sigma Chi fraternity gave a party at Eagles' hall, Saturday night with a supper at the chapter house at the close of the dance. The guests were: Emily Foster, Helen Crane, Mabel Thornton, Katherine Brooks, Irene Johnson, Irma Wilhelm! Florence Pratt, Katherine Stone, Ethel Keeler, Julian Senhausen, Muriel Whitney, Dari Isles, Alice Coors, Miss Cubbertson, Mary Russell, Elizabeth Brown, Marie Hedrick. Louise Hedrick, Helen Sapp, Madeline Nachtmann, Virginia Lucas, Mr. and Mrs. Cady Lee Daniels, Kansas City; Gladys Clark, Helen Degan, Esther Degan, Kansas City, Mo.; Lina Coxedge, Shenandoah, Iowa; Elizabeth Dunaway, Bartlesville, Okla; Marie Tilford, Olathe; Helen Stubbs, and Agnes Artivern, Lincoln, Nebr.; William Butler, John Shinn, Mrs. Teacher, Josephine Sydan, Logan Abernathy, Zeuma Lake, Kansas City, Mo.; Please, Grae Johnson, Margarita Lucken, Thelma Welch, Davis, and Mr. Milliron, Hutchinson, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Sommers, Newton; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Jacks, Wichita. Prof. and Mrs. DeWitt Croissant, Prof. and Mrs. C. C. Young and Mrs. Petty were the chaperones. The Phi Beta Pi fraternity gave a dance at Eagles' hall, Friday night. The guests were Edna Klein, Olive Olson, Grace Herschell, Nell Templeton, Esther Oliver, Ember Berger, Pearl Emely, Helen Gerthart, Mary thornborrow, Irene Stratton, Gertrude Ferg, Ruth Horton, Ruth Jeremy, Lena Tripp, Florence Wensick, Bertha Okesen, Marian Baker, Muriel Winey, Eden Biglay, and guest McLaughlin. The out of town guests were Mr. and Mrs. C. Castles, Miss Vera Castles and Mr. Earl Morrison. Mr. and Mrs. S. Sterling, Mr. and Mrs. John Sundwall, and Mr. and Mrs. N. P. Sherwood acted as chaperones for the evening. . . . The Sigma Kappa sorority has announced a Thanksgiving dinner for Thursday evening of this week at the campus. Covers will be laid for fifty guests. *** Prof. and Mrs. Arthur Mitchell entertained the philosophy class at their home 408 West Pinkney on Saturday night. Thirty guests were present. The Phi Gamma Delta fraternity entertained with a dance Saturday evening at the F. A. a hall. The guests were Nora Cubbon, Wichita; Helen Gould, myra Van Zand, Mamie McFarland, Pearl Cox, Virginia Goff, Myra Stevens, Guenther Goff, Rachel Jacobsen May Iella May Schall, Helen Herbergier, Margaret Hughes, Margaret Roberts, Virginia Lucas, Nell Greenlees, Elizabeth Brown, Lois Greenlees, Thomas Boyd, Nelle Carrahran, Adrienne Atkinson, Helen Sapp, Edith Cubbison, Charline Smith,ithinism, Thomas Boyd, Mari Kansas City; Miss Francis Conklein, Kansas City; Miss Woolsey, Mrs. L. M. Eagan, Kansas City, Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Hamilton, Mr. and Mrs. Putman and Mrs. Ann Cahill chaperoned. Prof, and Mrs. Wise of Haskell entained the University students from Arkansas City at their home Friday evening. The guests were Ralph Swarz, John Moffat, Clarence Griffith, Ralph Endicott, Clara McClure, Charles Donald, Mary Javis, Mary Bassi Mussel Helen Bradley of Mary Rose Haworth, Mary Naismith, Mildred Light, Marie Woodruff, Sybil Woodruff, Monona Wise, Mr. Lyle Wise and Mandota Wise. . . . The Pi Beta Phi sorority gave a chocolate Saturday morning in honor of the visiting members of the Nebraska chapter. Eleanor Atkinson and Dorothy Morrow served chocolate and cakes and Margaret Fitch served ices. The members of the Nebraska chapter present were Lillian Chapen, Annette Ahlgron, Young Florinda Young, Ruth Mhern, Bernie Heckler, Edith Peyton, Irma Nabee. --the Kappa Sigma fraternity gave a dance at the chapter house Friday night. The guests were Ilsa Wilhelmi, Marjorie Hires, Agnes Smith, Clara Powell, Hazel Gould, Mildred Cole, Helen Hershberger, Margaret Fitch, Dorothy Brown, Jessica Paley, Mae Miller, Wynona McCroskley, Edna Davis, Jessie Ingram, Myra Philley, Gauna Finch, Mary Powell, Marie Anderson, Jane Shuey, Rowena Wilkinson, Agnes Abels, Margaret Davis, Maribell McGill, Helen Dawson, Ruth Ewing, Pathene Keith, Gerturet Lobbel, Bill Doyle, Isabel Gibb, and Margaret Butte. The out of town guests were Miss Myra Dillon, Kansas City; Miss Vita Rowlans, Parsons; Miss Gladys Stevenson, Kansas City; Miss Ruth Dille, Enterprise; Marjorie Killarney, Atchison; Phil James, Chanute; Boise, William; Geneal, Kingman Gilen Calen, Syvane Grove; Louis LaCoss, Kansas City; and Walter Hoffman, Enterprise. Other house guest swere Louise Darrick, Mildred Mann and Geneine Brooks, Carineine Brooks, Helen Hunter, and Constance Smythe, Wichita. Razors, safety razors, blades, strips and rakes in Barber's drug Store--Adv. Subscribe for the Daily Kansan. FOOTBALL ON TO COLUMBIA! Tiger Hunt SPECIAL TRAIN Via Santa Fe SENDS INDIAN RELICS TO VARSITY MUSEUM With K. U. Band, Team, Subs, and Rooters will leave Santa Fe Depot at 9 p. m. sharp, Friday, Nov. 21st. Will arrive at Columbia via Wabash at 7 a.m. Saturday. Through cars. Train equipped with Santa Fe's most modern equipment, also Tourist and Standard Sleepers. Standard Pullman, Lower Berth $2.00. Tourist lower, $1.00 Upper berths, 20 per cent less It will be necessary to buy round trip tickets to secure benefit of $5.35 rate. Returning, Special Train will leave Columbia 10 p.m. arriving at K.C. about 7 a.m. and Lawrence about 8 o'clock Sunday morning. BE GAME R.R. Fare $5.35 for Round Trip About 2,000 Missourians came to Lawrence last year. SHOW THEM that Kansas can support its team. Dr. R. S Dinsmore Donates Another Collection of Pottery, Arrow-heads and Knives For further information call either phone 32 or address W. W. BURNETT, Agent. Mr. H. T. Martin, assistant curator of anthropology and paleontology, has just received another shipment of relios unearthed from an old Indian village site near Troy. The material was collected by Dr. R. S. Dinsmore, who donated it to the museum. Among the material are fragments of pottery, many varieties of spear and arrowheads, scrapers, and knives of flint. The particular variety of flint of which these are made is not often found in Kansas; therefore, it is thought that these Indians must have traded with tribes from the Dakotas, where such is abundant. They would have used which fire around air pits give a clue to their articles of food. The larger part of the material consists of fragments of pottery, on which are many ingenious designs. Santa Fe "Although it is evident that these people were savage," Mr. Martin said this afternoon, "nevertheless, they had a very highly developed pottery and was designed by hand. It was made of clay tempered with gypsum. The basket-weave pottery in the collection was made by putting wet clay in a basket woven in the shape of a vessel; the clay is then hollowed out and thrown into the fire. The brick basket the basket off, leaving the basket-weave on it." JUNCTION STUDENTS BACK BASKET-BALL WITH NOTES (By Erma Yates) Junction City, Nov 15 - Because high school authorities feared that basketball would not be a financial success, and therefore might have to be abolished, notes were circulated among the students Wednesday asking a guarantee against loss. Out of a body of 140 students 130 signed. This means that basket-ball will be continued. The girls have already begun practice, but the kills will not begin until after the football season. Contests will be scheduled until after Christmas. New Courses at Concordia (By Della Marcy) Concordia, Nov. 12—Domestic science and manual training have been introduced into the Concordia high school this year under the direction of Reva Lint and Earl W. Martin of the Agricultural College. The high school will not be connected with the new gas plant until about the middle of November so that the class in cooking will not begin work until the mid-term. The first term is taken up in sewing. CALENDAR Week of November 17-23 1913 Tuesday Tuesday 11:00 Chapel, Mr. Roy Guild of Topeka. 2:30 Entomological Club, (Mu.) 3-4 Chancellor's hour to faculty. 3:30 Economics Seminar, (Lib.) 7:30 Glee Club practice, (Fra.) 7:30 Christian Science Society, (Myers hall) 8:15 Violin recital, Otto Meyer (Fraser) Wednesday 4:30 Mining journal, (201 Ha.) 4:30 Cave Francis, (306 Fra.) 7:30 Band rehearsal, Fraser) 7:30 Hawk Dramatic Club, (110 Fraser) 7:30 Mandolin Club rehearsal, (116 Fraser) 7:30 Botany club (Snow). Thursday 7:00 Amer. Society Mech. Eng. (1607 Tenn.) 7:30 Orchestra practice, (Fra.) 8:00 K-U debating society, (313 Fraser) 8:00 Football rally. Friday 11:00 Chapel. Students' mass meeting; auspices Student Gov't Associations. Saturday 2:45 Football K-U vs. Missouri at Columbia. 8-12 Student Council dance. Future Events Nov. 22 Sophomore Bum, 8-12 Nov. 23 Y-M-Y. W. joint meeting in chapel, 3:30. All announcements or items for the University calendar either for the coming week or for future events should be given to Mr. Cronemeyer, at the department of journalism office, by 4:30 p.m. Friday. It is desired to make the calendar a complete schedule of University events and the co-operation of those interested is requested. The University of Missouri has installed a course in butchering. A complete butcher shop has been fitted out in the basement of one of the agricultural buildings. PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M'CONNELLY, Phydian and and his wife, Wendy M. McConnelly, adolescence, 1346 Tenn. Hos. 1023 Horns, Hosea. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist Office 802 Mass. Bell, Bp phone 600. HARRY REDING. M. D. Eyes ear, nose Able. Phone, 813. Home 512. Able. Phone, 813. Home 512. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. E. Carr, ear, car, Satte-Taffer, Dick Building. Gaurenteed, Dick Building. W. O. B'RYCHI Dandel, Over Wilson's W. O. B'RYCHI Dandel, Over Wilson's J. R. BCKHEL T. M., D., D., O. 833 Mass. J. R. BCKHEL T. M., D., D., O. 833 Mass. J. W. O'BRYON Dentist, Over Wilson's DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. DR. H., L. C. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires' Studio. Both phones. R. B. RECHIELT, M. D. O. D. 833 Massachuset Street. Both phone, office and achuetsuit Street. DR. H, T. JONES. Room 12 F. A. A. Bldg. Residence 1130 Tenn. Phone 211. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. D. Diseases of Neurology, 24, 1985. Both phone numbers: Residence, 130 North Pkwy. Both phone numbers: CLASSIFI Barbers S. T. Gillippe, M. D. Offen, corp. Vermont Hockey. Residence, 728 Indiana St. 600s 400 CLASSIFIED E. J. Blair, Physician and Surgeon. OMfos to 300 to 900 mL in 40 to 48 hr, in 300 to 900 to 1500 mL in 40 to 48 hr, in 300 to 900 to 2000 mL in 40 to 48 hr. Frank liff's *Barber Shop*, 1025 Mass. Two good baggins. Satisfaction assured. C. J. Houk's *Barber Shop*, 913 Mass. Never have to wait. Chair; chairs; never have to wait. Razor honed. Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co. $ _{4}$ for, gas Maxda lamps. 957. Mass. phones 605. Prices reasonable, work the best. Let us visit our office at 486 Broadway & 11th St. 429 343 Ladies Tailors Mrs. Ellison, Dressmaking and Ladies Phone 2141, over Phone Johansson & Gargl. Laverne Sweening school, Leduc 'dailies' lettering Phones 560. Miss Powers: Miss C. McAlearn Phone 560. Miss Powers: Miss C. McAlearn Queen City College. System and sewing museum. Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 K. Bell and Mrs. M. Mark Brown, 834 K. Bell. Ladies *Talorbing and Dreammaking*. Gowns for all occaions. All work guaranteed. Mrs. R. B. Dally, 914 Mass. Sanitary establishment in connection. Phones 421 Bell. Hair Dressers Sporting Goods D & M sporting goods and athletic supplies. Kennedy & Erast. 826 Mass. S. Phones. Miscellaneous Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-gifts, "Martial Arts," salon attire, meals calls Bell 1572. Home : S1. The Select Hair Dressings店, 927 Mass St. Hilawata Cafe for regular meals, lunch and dinner. Cafe when down town. Open after the show. Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Beller Bell Phone 717 Mansfield 317 Main One oral meal no risk, small investment, fine service with homely smile. W. T. W. smoke with homely smear. I have a nice line of plain china for painting at the Northern Europei Northport 783 Mass. St. au- partment. I bought it from Riese. Student's Co-op Club $2.50 to $3.00 per week. OK. Goo. Hau Vansell doubled it. LOST-Theta pin, between 740 Miss. St., and the Theta house. Flies toward Carolyn Nutt at the Theta house and receive reward. LOST-Pocket size, paper covered note book containing notes on Philosophy between Ohio street and Fraser hall at 8 o'clock this morning. Return to N. P. Knight, 1320 Ohio street, Bell 1538. LOST - Small jeweled Fraternity pin, in shape of triangle on Mass. St or at Eagles' Hall. Name on back. Bell phone 1789. LOST-Parker self filling fountain pen and gold horse shoe shaped stick pin set with torquoise. H. Mac L on back. Call 1754 Bell. LOST—Suit of clothes by K. U. Pantatorium. Kindly call Bocker 2764 Bell. 47-3* THE Topeka Capital Delivered Daily from 6 to 7:30 a. m. 10 CENTS PER WEEK JAS, G. ALLEN, Agent Phone 2433B 931 MAINT Junior's laws - A number of second hand Mechams Outline and wall pillow and them next quarter, J. D. R, Miller, 1041 Vt, Phone 2511 Bell—Ady. Try the sandwiches at the lunch counter in Fraser hall—Adv. 42-1 The K. U. Dames will meet with Mrs. N. P. Sherwood at 1733 Mississippi Wednesday at 3 o'clock. The chapter of Alpha Xi Delta, of the University of Illinois, has denied the reports that it has taken action against the tango. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Special SHOE SALE for Men All short lots from our regular $5 and $6 lines. Many of them are "Nettletons."—Several different leathers in black and tan. About 300 pair of 'em. Your choice $3.95 Better hurry while we have your Size See Window Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS See Window "Fair Missouri!" walked on the Washington Pikers Saturday 19 to 0. The Tigers only took 72 men, six full teams down to St. Louis and as a result were shifting men constantly to prevent any one getting hurt. Intent on conserving their resources for Saturday's game with the Jay-hawkers, they did not care about piling up a large score. Good old Michigan defeated Pennsylvania in their annual encounter 13 to 0. The Philadelphia athletes were completely outclassed, and but few times were within striking distance of the fan. An Arbor speed artist, scored both touchdowns for the Northern eleven. Read your own KANSAN. Fine Arts Concert Course Piano Recital By HENIOT LEVY Polish Pianist at Fraser Hall Tonight Admission 50 cents Everybody's Going to That First College Smoker Eagles' Hall Tuesday Night-8:00 Smakes Eats Speeches Velvet THE SMOOTHEST TOBACCO SEE the singer full of glee piping up! See the pipe full of Velvet helping out! Velvet, the finest of leaf—aged over two years—toned down—mellowed—fit for "Prexie" himself. Time alone can eliminate all harshness—bring about real smoothness and develop the taste that's good. When exams, loom up and uncertainty is ripe—a tin of Velvet will help concentration and study—it's smooth! At all dealers! Liggatt Myers Tobacco 10c Full 2 oz. Tins One ounce bags, 5c, convenient for cigarette smokers WAC.19 Velvet TOBACCO WHEN THE MIDNIGHT CHOO CHOO LEAVES Students Not Previously Going By Freight Will Then Leave SEVEN WASHERS PAYS WAY Enough Will be Left of That Ten Great Offer, Returning to Buy nough Will be Left of The Spot After Returning to Buy Throat Remedy All aboard for Columbia! That "midnight choo-choo" is going to pull out of here some Friday evening, and if you don't hop that rattler and go along with the bunch, you're the worst sort of a piker, that's all. ("Them's my sentiments exactly," remarked W. O. Hamilton, manager of athletics at the University of Kansas, when he read the above spasm of the Daily Kansan reporter.) But seriously, fellows, let's all get on Friday night, and ride on down to the lair of the Tigers, and see them whipped as soundly as they were last year. The railroad runs between Lexington and another at Kansas City will be enough "chow" to last you for the big day, admission to the game can be provided for you and there you are! Forty-five well, well, well, well! And you have the best game the Jayhawkers have won this year. So what's holding you, lean and hungry stude? Forget Her for a week, the Aurora won't miss you. Buy those chocolate smooths and lemon "cokes" when you come in (you'll have money) to stuff an Arrow in your clean handkerchief in your pocket, and come alone! You never regret it! Mosse says we'll win, Frank says we'll lick 'em, Hamilton says we'll wipe 'em, and Red Lupton merely chortles at the general idea. Just send your moniker, and your roommate too, in to the Kansan, (we're compiling a directory of 'Loyal' Kansas. You want to go to the game from Manager Hamilton, and come down on the train Friday night. We'll all be there! TAKE A SIDE AND TALK Chance For Disputationes Ones to Get Into Inter-Collegiate Debate Debating team tryouts Wednesday, December 3 and December 17. All candidates must appear in the first try-out except those who have been on intercollegiate teams for K. U. Prof. H. T. Hill expects the above call will cause a large number of debaters to enter, so that it will be necessary to divide the squad of candidates for the first try-out. Therefore each candidate is asked to hand Professor Hill his name, the question, and side he will take, before Wednesday. Candidates may either side of either query may each be given a main speech of six minutes, and a rebuttal of three. The Missouri question is: "Resolved, That immigration into the U. S. should be further restricted by apply to all immigrants with ordinary prose in at least one language, or dialect." The Oklahoma - Colorado question is: "Resolved, That the several states should adopt a unicameral form of legislature." The contract, which will probably be adapted by K. U.-Okhaloma and Colorado provides; that any member of the University may accept them taken bachelor's degrees and are working exclusively for an advanced degree. KANSAS GIRL MARRIED BAKER STUDENT SATURDAY Miss Hassel Templeton and Mr. W. A. Irwin of Denver were married at seven o'clock Saturday evening at the Alpa Delta Pi house. The Rev. N. S. Elderkin read the service. Mrs. Irwin was a freshman in the College this year and Mr. Irwin attended Baker University where he was a member of the Delta Pi Deta fraternity. ON DUTY Mr. and Mrs. Irwin will be at home at Hiawatha, after December 1. Matinee and Night, Wed. Nov. 19 The guests included all the members of the Sigma Delta Pi sorority, Mrs. Templeton of Denver, Colo.; Mr. and Mrs. Lons, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. O. Foster, Miss Mildred Pettit, Colorado, and Miss May Sellars. Football will be compulsory at the University of Wisconsin for all freshmen The Screamingly Funny Farce "OFFICER 666" Bowersock Theater THREE SIXES ARE HARD TO SHAKE By Augustin Machugh One Long Laugh With Thrills Galore Kept New York and Chicago Laughing For One Solid Year Parquet. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75c Balcony. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50c Second Balcony . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25c Special Bargain Matinee MANY FROM FACULTY ARE ON HONOR ROLLS Is Large Membership In Phi Beta Kappa And Sigma Xi About one third of the faculty members at the University of Kansas are members of either the Phi Beta Kappa or Sigma Hacker rolls on their membership rolls show 116 names at the present time. A complete list follows: The Phi Beta Kappa The Phi Beta Kappa, W Blackmar, C Crawford, Lulu B. Gardher, H B Gardner, H. B Hungerford, Rose Morgan, Emma M. H Palmer, M. W Saldew, Hopkins, W. S Dolphine B. Ernst, R F Rice, W H Twenhof. The Phi Beta Kappa society. W. L. Burdick, Edith M. Clarke, W. J. Baughartner, Myrtle Greenfield, S. J. Hunter, E. W. Murray, W. H. Rodehbauer, Olin Templin, F. O. Marvin, F. C. Dockeray, Eugenia Galloo, L. E. Sisson, S. L. Whitcomb. E. W. Higgins, E. Helen M. Clarce, E. F. Engel, Haworth, W. H. Johnson, A. T. O'Leary, W. H. Stanton, A. T. Walker, F. A. G. Cooper, C. G. Dunlap, W. S. Johnson, A. M. Sturtevant, Marion B. White. Frank Strong, Alberta L. Corbin, L. N Flint, F. H. Hodder, U. G. Mitchell, Hannah Oliver, C. M. Ster- laling, A. M. Wilcox, E. P. R. Duval, Ana Jule Enke, Helen G. Jones, M. T. Sudler. Sigma Xi: B. M Allen, H. C. Allen, E. H. S. Bailey, W. J. Baugartner, F. H. Billings, T. H. Boughton, F. P. Brock, F. L. Brown, F. W. Bruckmiller, H. P. Cady, Grace Charles, Helen M. Clarke, Grace Charles, E.C. Coghill, E.C. Coghill, F. Dains, B. Dalton, Edna D. Day, Clark I. Dodd, Carl O. Dunbar P. V. Faragher, Myrtle Greenfield, L. D. Havenhill, E. Haworth, Ruby C. Hosford, Geo J. Wood, H. H Hungerford, S. J. Hunter, H. Hydie, C. A. Hurd, E. Jordan Marcin, L. Lefschetz, F. O Marvin, S. A. Matthews, U. G. Mitchell, C. F. Nelson, Nadine Nowlin L. V. Redman, H. A. Rice. M. E. Rice, Mrs. M. E. Rice, W. R. B. Robertson, W. H. Rodehush, B. E. Sayre, G. C. Shaad, C. A. Shull, N. P. Sherwood, S. S. Schooley, P. H. Sibley, Inez F. Smith, M. S. Stevenson, M. T. Suddell, J. Sundwall, E. J. Todd, M. T. Twenhofel, J. N. Van der Vries, P. F. Walker, Laila Walling, J. Weith, J. J Wheeler, C. C. Young, C. M. Young. COX FISCHER'S SHOES ARE GOOD SHOES The Broker This is a Strong and Garfield Gentlemen's shoe on a gentlemen's last if there ever was one. Nothing flashy or extreme about it. everything in good taste, sufficient toe room to make it a fitter, and the proper width of toe to insure the maximum of comfort. We are showing the "Broker" in Tan Russia and Black Leather, Blucher or Straight Lace. $6.00 FISCHER'S HONORS COME TO K.U. PHYSICIANS American College of Surgeons Grants Degrees to State Medi cal Men at Chicago cal Men at Chicago Ciheago, Ill., Nov. 17- Five Kansas surgeons were granted degrees in the American College of Surgeons at the first convocation of that body held in Chicago during the Clinical Congress of Surgeons of North America which has just closed its six day convention here. The Jayhawkers so honored were Drs. Bowers and Basham of Wichita; Dr. Geo. M. Gray and Dr. Walter S. Sutton of Kansas City, and Dr. Richard L. Sudler of Lawrence. The latter three are members of the faculty of the School of Medicine of the University of Kansas. More than one thousand of the country's most prominent surgeons clad in their academic robes of black and scarlet and headed by Sir Richard Godlee, the President of the Corps of Surgeons of England, filed through the corridors of Congress Hotel and received their honorary degrees. Under Other Goal Posts Washburn and the College of Emporia tied Friday 0 to 1. The ground was so damp that good football was impossible, and line buckling was the mainstay of both teams. Granger and Gray instructed their men to attempt goals from the field but each shot went wild. Ulma trounced Ames 45 to 7. In truth Purdy's men should worry over Saturday's game with the Iowa City lads. If Iowa State doesn't whip the Cornhuskers next week, we miss our "horrible" guess. Washington and Jefferson, the minor eleven that held the Yale Balletdogs to a tie, again proved its valor Saturday by defeating the University of Pittsburgh 19 to 6. Pittburg had previously defeated both Cornell and Carlisle, Carlisle had defeated Dartmouth, Dartmouth whip- sed Princeton, and Princeton lost by a narrow squeak to Harvard. Looks pretty good for old Wash and Jeff, h what! Old Eli came back Saturday and held Princeton to a 3 to 3 tie game. The Tigers had been doped to trounce decisively their New Haven adversaries but the Blue showed unexpected strength, and brought joy home to their supporters by the Guernsey and Baker each hit a goal from the field and the scoring was a stand off for the remainder of the game. Harvard's game with Brown Saturday proved to be but a mere practice. Thirty-seven to nothing was the tune to which they defeated the Providence Colegians. Harvard is the class of the East this year; that's been shown time and again. They fight against the Crimson this Saturday, but dope easily shows that it will be a fight from defeat. The Carlisle Indians battered Dartmouth around to a 55 to 10 score Saturday. The Green team which had defeated Princeton and was estimated as the fierest offensive team in the East, was easy picking for the Carlisle Indians. They were played on the Polo Gounds in New York and over 15,000 people gathered to witness the fray. With the Army beating Villa Nova 55 to 0, and the Navy trouncing Penn State by a 10 point lead, indications point to the closest game in these two teams at the Polo Grounds a week from Saturday. FORTY COUNTY SCHOOLS FORM UNDER BARNES LAW "There have been at least forty new county high schools formed under the Barnes law this fall," said Prof. W. H. Johnson, state high school visitor, this morning. "While I have not been able to visit them yet to ascertain whether they are ready to be accredited, the majority of them will be, by the time I make my visits in December." Send the Daily Kansan home. THE OREAD Cafeteria and Tea Room We guarantee a larger variety of properly cooked food from which to select your meal than is handled by any lunch room or club house in the city. We sell meal tickets and can serve you a better meal for less money. We use McNish distilled water for cooking purposes and to serve with your meals. We are especially proud of the many steaks and chops. Try them for a good short order. Our new waiters make our service unexcelled. Fountain--Candy--Cigars 1241 OREAD TOPEKA KAN. VOLUME XI. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 19. 1912 NUMBER 49. KANSAS WOMEN WILL WITNESS TIGER GAME Party Of Jayhawkins To Travel To Columbia For Big Contest OTHERS EXPECTED TO COME Mrs. Hamilton and Mrs. Mosse to Chaperone Girls; Scores of Men To Make Trip In addition to the hundreds of Jahawkers who will cheer the team to victory at Columbia one party of fans came from the Columbia grandstand. The Kansas women will be chaperoned by Mrs. W. O. Hamilton and Mrs. Arthur St. Leger Mosse. Included among the girls will be Evelyn Strong, Doris Iles, Hazel Williams, Virginia Lucas, Caroline McNutt, Winona Cmckris, and Phyllis Burroughs. Several others are expected to join the party before Friday. Erroll Welch, Harold Lyle, Vic La Mer, Coeff, Goffell, Allen Brown, W. A. Dodge, Orland Lyle, C. Baldwin, H. R. Huntsman, H. D. Benham, Chester Roberts, N. J. Brennan, B. Robber, Fritt Hartman, C. G. Bayles, I. W. Clark, Earl Metcalf, H. Grutzmacher, C. O. Doub, Leo Smith, H. E. Hoffman, Gei Coliett, C. Sproull, W. E. Harkrader, N. J. Pierce, V. C. Oldfield, W. E James, C. Dean Robinson, W. E Marker, C. E. Eagsinger, W. O. Darby, W. D. Sorgatz, W. Preston, A. R. Maltbay, K. W. Hill, J. C. McCanes. Scores of additional names were added today to the list of men who will make the trip. The following will accompany the team: Rogers Bishop, Cale Carson, Frank Carson, Joe Smith, Clair Ritter, Bryan Davis, Ernest Weber, Don Smith, Clyde Braden, Sal Lanyon, Sam Degen, William Powder, Robert Lindsay, Warmer Kel Eugene Davis, C. L. Moore, H. P. Simpson, L. L. Smith, John Hamilton, R. S. Springer, Jim Simpson, F. C. Campbell, J. Hoffman, Hoffman, Jeff Simpson, Lawrence Morris, Eden Lawrence Morris, Lyme Arnold, Walter Borders, E. F. Schooley, Dick Small, Willis Benson, Tom Ashley, Edgar Blanton, Charles Alexander, Joseph Gaitskows, "Bill" Morrow, Clyde Constant, David Norman, Normier Pierre, Louis Park, Frank Royse, Boyd Prugh, Sam Johnson, Melvin Johnson. F. M. McClellan, C. O. Conkey, C. O. Buckles, Burney Dunham, D. C. Moffit, H. C. Hansen, H. C. Pauley, Fred Leasure, O. J. Fisk, A. W. Hill, Bayseger Leon, Leon Winns, Hart, Scully Waugh, Ralph Segeer, Frank Miller, Wendell Lyman, Philip Sprot, JoeHull, Alfred Harris, Humphrey Jones, Leon Hurst, Calvin Lambert, Fred Notzgert, Calvin Lambert, Jenkins, Jenkins, Russell Clark, Calliday Curran, John Blair, Jack Casties, John Cunnick. Dickens Markell, Ben Berger, Junius Dyche, Lucien Dyche, Neelye Toss, Ward Lockwood, J. Detwiler, John Smith, William Morton, Roland Boyton, James Harris, Neelye Toss, Watson Dodge, George O'Neil, Vermillion, McClara, Mathan Resenberg, William Lesite, Harry Evans, William E. Janes, Eugene B. Hydman, Bruce Shomber, William Howden, John L. Laird, Robert Skinner, Howard Heerawitz, Charles Daub, Albert Hughes, Nathan Isenberg, Steve Siger, Fred S. Degen, Norman Strachan, John Madden. And Uncle Jimmy Green AND CHOICE L. E. Fowler, V. J. Sina, A. J. Fecht, C. V. Fowler, H. C. Hansen, F. L. Jinch, H. C. Pauley, G. A. Washburn, T. D. Wise, Joseph Segel, A. J. Rouke, J. K. Bunn, H. L. Dodd, W. F. Fox, G. C. Glenn, E. L. Harbarger, M. V. Holmes, W. L. Wine- near, R. F. Moore, G. R. Murphy, D. Reid, B. Underwood, C. R. Viers, Harry Stale, N. W. Brown. C. O. Ammons, E. C. Burke, A. H. Lindsey, Ro Robbins, R. T. Cowshaw, Hillory Bohannan, G. P. Hinshaw, J. A. Meke, Konehle C陆craig, Philip B. Miller, Blair Hackney, "Duke" Kennedy, Paul Surber, Harry Schores, Maynard Egan, DeLaskie Miller, Joe Bishop. W. E. Brown, E. T. Newcomer, R. E. Templin, L. E. Nofsinger, W. H. Severs, D. B. Klehege, W. J. Malcolson, D. R. Butler, M. L. Allison, D. F. Hazen, L. C. Angevine, C. L. Coggins, N. H. Bauger, D. Devon, K. M. Haugel, Sam Fairchild, F. N. Vestach, Prof. B. J. Dalton, Prof. A. H. Sluss, Dean James Green, Herbert Flint, Philip Ferguson. OLD RIP VAN COLLEGE AWAKENS AT SMOKER Adopts New Yell And Plans To Make A Holiday All Its Own BARRELS OF GINGER SHOWN Chancellor and Professors Orate Crowd Launches Cheer With Much Noise—Discus Program The Chancellor entered the hall puffing at the College smoker last night. Oh, no! It wasn't a cigar—just out of breath from climbing the stairs. And each of the two hundred men at the smoker cheered him while he was getting on the outside of three great big, juicy apples. There was lots of pep at the meeting, Prof. J. N. Van der Vries told the fellows that the College ought to make as much noise as the laws and the engineers put together. They promised to do it as follows: You have the yell, You have the yen. We have the knowledge, Rock Chalk K. U. College Plans were discussed for a College Day. There will be a holiday (if the faculty approval is forthcoming) some time next spring and the College will have a parade, track meet, women's basketball game, matinee dance, and a banquet. This will be made an annual event and will help to make the College a closer organization. It was decided that the men of the College should sit together in chapel. The right hand section downstairs just in front of the aisle was selectable place where effectual opposition to the laws could be ingred in. Besides Chancellor Strong and Professor Van der Jries Prof. Purdue Putnam University, H Hill, Coach Mose, and the Rev. E. A. Edwards spoke at the smoker. GIVE GIRLS PRIZES FOR KEEPING HOUSE Y.W.C.A. Working To Help Country Lass, Says Miss Jessie Field "It is time that the workers who are attempting to better country life conditions extend their field to the home," declared Miss Jessie Field of the National Board of Y. W. C. A. at Myers hall yesterday afternoon. "As yet the attempts made to improve the standard of living in the rural communities have been directed toward helping men and boys in their side of the work." It is time we were home makers as well as giving the boys rewards for increasing the yield of corn." Miss Field described in detail the building up of Y. W. C. A. units in rural communities and small towns, pointing out that they were great factors in solving the problems of providing desirable amusement and entertainment for country women; "I did field with women," she said. Field with women, "it is usually necessary to have a boys' auxiliary to these associations." "What development has been made in country schools has been along the same lines as city schools. One of the things we insist on is education for farm boys and girls in the terms of farm life. "We now have county Y. W. C. A. organizations for the country girls in eight different states and we are enlarging our territory all the time. Next year we plan to make a great year. Leaders are needed for this work but we want young people to service of service. No one is wanted for these places who is striving for popularity." The Johnson county club defeated the Linn county club in an exciting basket-ball game played in the gymnasium yesterday, 40 to 28. A second match will be played sometime next week. JOHNSON COUNTY WINS FAST GAME FROM LINN Postpone Debate Meeting On account of the rally Thursday evening the election of officers in the K. U. Debating society will be postponed until the first Thursday after the holidays. Postpone Debate Meeting Jay's Idea Of That Missouri Tiger CAN NEITHER KNOW NOR BITE BUT CAN MAKE AN AWFUL NOISE MAY S. RAINBOW PALY HITE, GARDNER & CO. TODINE DEAN SKILTON Daily Kansan Grads Plan Banquet At Fort Worth Thanksgiving The K. U. club, an organization of K. U. graduates and former students who live in Fort Worth, Texas, will give an elaborate Thanksgiving banquet in honor of Dean C. S. Skilton of the School of Fine Arts, who will spend Thanksgiving as the guest of his nephew Emile Grignard. The school has also have double cause for celebration—Dean Skilton's visit and the inevitable Kansas victory over Missouri, the Saturday before Thanksgiving. Ed. Stephens has been elected president of the club, Emile Grigard, secretary. The members who have signified their intention of being in office are F. Einney, F. B. Porter, Dr. M. Eilore, dr. J. H. Needham, Soloman W. Smith, Gay Neal, A. S. Wakhelde, Vale Nance, Jack Harrington, Hites R. L. Selbens, W. W. Ferguson, Ed. Grigard, and Emile Edgard. CORNHUSKERS WILL BURN K. U. JAYHAWK Other descriptive words for the poet are: Livinggood, Lovejoy, Lovewell, Lockett, Ketchum, Huntingsinger, Metcalf, Grabske, Hunt, Curry, Chase, DeMand, Diehl, Kruse, Lynch, Chase, DeMand, Diehl, Kruse, Lynch, Saile, Dart, Bodge, Buck, Cope, Bracewell, Down, Doggett, Blair, Wade, Waite, and Hyre. All budding poets, novelists, painters, and zooysters must consult the new student directory for ideas. In it the youthful poet can find the following descriptive adjectives: aesthetic, Howe Kuhl, Long, Lowe, Loveless, Lyle, Moore, Ney, Sharp, Small, Smart, Sprier, Steeper, Stiller, Still, Strong, Sweet, West, Wiley, Wise, Wright, Wylder, Young, Birth, Wood, Dreen, Gallen Hardy, Light, Lies, Malen, Stout and Venerable. For the painter the directory suggests these subjects for use in landscape work: Dale, Glenm, Greenfield, Meadows, Park, Bear, Park, Beach, Brooks, Dyche, Craig, Stone, Marsh, Heath, Oldfield, Graves, Greenrestreet, Street, Bower, Underwood, Bush, and Hill. Or if the painter prefers domestic scenes let him try: Alley, Barnes, Holmes, Castle, Gates, Hall, Garet, Kitchencs, Chambers; or amethyst, Kitecans; or amethyst, Kitecans; Heller, Bell, Clapper, Ise, Gee. Riggs, Stiles, Post, Cole, Peck, Keves, Snuck. Snuck. Sheets. the animals mentioned are: Badger, Baer, Campbell, Crow, Filip Filip, Fish, Fox, Hart, cook. Schwain, Wren, Fox, Hart, Lamb, Lyon, Wolf, and Fox. The Nebraskans captured the Jayhawk after the game, Saturday. Cheer-leaders Morris and Luke carried the bird around the field behind the band but neglected to watch the bird during the contest. The lawk had failed to landed and Nebraska had won, the Jayhawk could not be found. The vegetable kingdom is well represented by, Allvine, Appel, Kite, Berry, Berry, Sage, Gress, Keach, Root, Reed, Rush, Thorn, Sapp, and Rosewurm. The Nebraska Cornhuskers not only walloped the Jayhawk on McCook field, Saturday afternoon, but carried the bird with them to Lincoln's dungeon at Lincoln waiting for a big Nebraska rally when the bird will be brought forth and roasted to death. Thoughts For The Cubist Nebraska Will Consign Bird Taken At Saturday's Game To Flames WHAT'S IN A NAME? LOTS, SAYS K. U.'S NEW DIRECTORY Word was received from the Cornhusher stronghold depicting the fortunate Jayhawk's imprisonment, which is in store for the Kansas bird. Among others these occupations are enumerated: Baker, Banker, Barber, Butcher, Butler, Carpenter, Cook, Diver, Fisher, Gardner, Householder, Hunter, Huntsman, King, Kaiser, Bishop, Knight, Major, Lackey, Mason, Miller, Painter, Porter, Priest, Shepard, Steismith, Pharoah, Spinner, Spider, Springer, Turner, Tanner, Walker, and Weaver. From The Seven Seas English, French, German, and Welsh are represented, as is Poland, Hague, Glassco, Killarney, Kent, Nottingham, Moberly, Houston, Elgin, Hampton Rhodes, and Washburn. These relationships are mentioned: Friend, Ward, Childs, Foster, Folks, Haskins, Troup, Garrison, and Hurd. From The Seven Seas Despite the fact that the directory contains Kitchens, it furnishes a very limited menu; only Coffey and three Bunns, with a sample of the soup, meat, and cheese one solitary Crum, together with the Rice furnished by the faculty. The parts of the body are represented by: Beard, Foote, Hand, Shinn, Shanks, Trueblood, Mann, and Curl, which appear with these colors: Black, Brown, Gray, Green, White, Grey, during a Knapp, Sommers or Winter, Noonan Knight, Early or by Day. Several Saints on Campus BIG PEP GENERATOR TOMORROW EVENING Several Saints on Campus Biblical characters are numerous Matthew of the disciples appear: Matthews, St. John, James, James the Baptist, Simons, and Phillips, Abraham, Adams, Abel, Kane, Jacobs, Daniel, Herrod, Lott, Moses, Samson, Ruth, and Joseph are there. Other great men are: Dryden, Burns, Burke, Newton, Alexander- Hamilton, Benedict-Arnold, and expresidents, Adams, Harrison, Jackson, Johnson, Grant, and McKinley. Jayhawk Men And Womer Will Rally In Gymnasium Tickets 15 Cents THEME. "TWIST THAT TAIL" Final Enthusiasm and Preparations to be Made at the Mass Rally Hey, you Jayhawkers and Jayhawkins! Listen to the birdies sing! You are scheduled to purchase a fifteen cent tag and attend the big, big game. "On To Mizzou" rally titling "On To Mizzou" rally Thursday night in the gymnasium. Honest, you're it. Mr. Morris said so. And is there any use in ecting a cheerleader if you don't go where a cheerleader Answer to "Are we disgusted?" But laying all serious things aside, it is going to be up to you students to attend that rally and spill out a little enthusiasm. Take a peek at what they are going to have: Boxing matches between the following: Oscar Dingman and Ute Smith; Don Joseph and Vic LeMer; Wayne Fowler and Ed. Bobdinton. Wrestling matches between Early and Home. Other entries not an Then we will have with us Uncle Jimmy Green, and Dr. Burdick of the law secretary Strong, the lawyer Foster and Parson Spotts. And there will be others too. Those girls who do not wish to mix with the yelling are welcomed as spectators, and seats will be put around the balcony for their accommodation. The rooters are warned that they must seize the door as possible as the seats will be sent back to Missouri Thursday night. The proceeds from the sale of tickets will be used to pay the expenses not only of this rally, but of previous rallies. There was some expense which was borne by members of the committee. Razzie Dazzle! Number 13 Wins Trip To Missouri Maybe the number thirteen is unlucky, but then there are exceptions to all rules. That's what Errett E. Lamb, a sophomore in the College and a member of the Franklins thinks. At the breakfast table this morning, the Franklin numbers and drew to see who would get to go to Missouri for the game Saturday, Tuesday, and he is the one that goes with the bunch that leaves Friday evening. CHEMICAL ASSOCIATION WILL MEET SATURDAY The 96th regular meeting of the Kansas City Section of the American Chemical Association will be held on another building, Saturday at 3 p. m. Prof, L. E. Sayre, dean of the School of Pharmacy will present a paper on "Medical Fraud as Exposed by Chemical and Pharmaceutical Methods." "Some Rules and Specifications 'Governing Transactions in Soap Making Materials,' is the subject of the paper to be read by W. J. Reese, chemist Peet Bros.' Manufacturing company. POLISH PIANIST APPEARS IN RECITAL AT FRASER Heniot Levy, the famous Polish pianist, played last night in Fraser chapel. The program consisted of several rather heavy numbers with very little variety. His execution was excellent. Engineers to Meet The American Society of Mechanical Engineers will meet tomorrow evening at the home of Prof. F. H. Sibley, 1670 Tennessee street. After the regular business meeting the following program will be given: Technical Report by F. S. Degan, and magazine reports on "Cassius Magazine," "The Engineers' News," and "The Industrial Engineer" by F. Benedict, C. Maris, and J. E. Stillwell. Sigma Xi, national scientific honorary fraternity will meet at the home of Prof. C. M. Young, 1227 Ohio, Thursday night. The address of the evening will be given by Prof. C. A. Shull on the subject, "A Method of Measuring Surface Forces in Soils." COACHES LOAD GUNS FOR BIG GAME HUNT Jayhawkers Go Through Harddest Practice Of This Season TO TAKE NO TRAINING TRIP Team Will Start on Annual "Show Mizzou" Junket Later Than The Jayhawkers went through their hardest workout of the season last night. Mosse and Frank are drilling their men to go down on punts, and in some measure to improve their tackling. Inability of Kansas tacklers to leave their feet was responsible for many of the long runs made by the team, strengthened by continual drill, as Missouri is supposed to be an exponent of the light, open variety of playing. It is probable that the same lineup will start the Missouri game that started the Nebraska game. With a dry field, and the shift working in the ball park, he should have no trouble in following the heavy forwards. Mud Prevents Injuries The field is still heavy from the rains, and it is improbable that Kansas will receive any injuries before the game. "This mud stuff is great," said Mosse last night. "Cant hurt 'em a bit." The squad is in good condition, no injuries being reported from the pinhuskies James and Bibien are back on the squad after being out for two weeks. The team will leave for Columbia some time Friday. Although it has been the custom for the Kansas team to leave early in the week and give the players a chance to rest up before the big game of the season, it was thought that the trip was unnecessary this year. Pray For Dry Field If Kansas is praying for one thing it for a life in the field. Not the team's objects to eating a little Missouri mud, but the last two battles have demonstrated that a muddy field can neither be kicked nor passed. With a dry field Wilson and Strothers can hold up the Kanser game, but with a muddy ball—well—we should worry a little. The coaches, and the team are not so confident of victory that they are chortling about it. But in their scrimmage this week they attacked the freshmen with about twice as much vizer as they have before this season. The other players gives Missouri all the edges, yet the Jayhawks know that Kansas has some of the famous old stuff left in her system from the years gone by. MUSEUM PARTY LEARNS CIVET CATS EAT GOPHERS And Picks up 115 Small Mammals to Add to University's Natural History Collection A collecting party, consisting of Mr. C. D. Bunker and three student assistants of the museum secured 115 small mammals Friday and Saturday, within 10 miles of Lawrence, the skins of which are the thickest of the year, since the pelage is heavier, better colored, and of fine texture. The collectors have recently noted that civet cats are performing a valuable service for farmers in this vicinity by destroying gophers. Civet cats, which have been trapped in gopher holes, were examined and their stomachs showed the remains of gophers. DOCTORS URGE PATIENTS TO REPORT FOR INOCULATION Students, faculty members and employees of the University may be inoculated for typhoid fever Friday afternoon, from a 4 until 5 c clock in the school building. Inoculation is given free of charge and requires only a short time. The doctors in charge of the work have requested that those students who have received one treatment and have not reported since, will appear Friday to take the second treatment or let the doctors know that they do not intend to have the work finished. Mr. and Mrs. Harry T. Lander, 17 West Adams, entertained the following guests last night at a four course supper. Edward Boddington, Edward Boddington, Eugene Talierfero, Charles Hagenbun, Rex Miller, and Landon Laid. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSIY DAILY KANSAN The official student paper of the University EDITORIAL STAFF HERBERT FLINE ... Editor-in-Chief GLENNON ALVINE ... Associate Editor JOHN LARRY ... Management JOEL LARRY ... Content Editor JOHN GLENSSBERN ... High School Editor BUSINESS STAFF RAY EIDERING . . . Circulation Manager Ivy BANNE . . . . . . . Advertising REPORTIAL STAFF RANDOLPH KENNEDY SAM DEGEN Entered as secon- tclass mail matter Lawrence, Kanaas, under the act of March Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance; one term, $1.50. Published in the afternoon, five times a week. In 1932 he went to Kansas, from the press of the department of Agriculture. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kamanan aims to picture the undergraduate experience of a student on further than merely printing the news by standing up for their rights and not favoring it; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be kind; to be more serious problems to wiser heads; to be able to adapt the students of the University. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19. Editorial assistants for today's paper. Helu Hayes and Maurine Fairweather. Newseditor, John Henry ; assistants, Leon Howe, Charles Philippe Exchange editor, John M. Henry. Society reporter, Lucie Hildinger. Action may not always bring happiness, but there is no happiness in action. DISHARM ACTION GOING TO MISSOURI? Every student should make a special effort to accompany the team to Columbia. First we can give our men the moral support of a large band of rooters. Second, this is a fine opportunity to see a university no older, no better, no more beautiful than our own, but one that is rich in traditions not so plenient as might be desired. Missouri has a university that is well worth visiting, and surely there could never be a better time to see it than next Saturday. Let's go to Missouri, look the school over, in the morning, and show 'em how to play the game in the afternoon. LIBRARY COURTESY That K. U. graduate who is directing a twenty million dollar project is not related to G. R. Q. Wallingford either. Next to the "library hop" who takes books from the reserve shelf, or the one who gets all the reference books on a given subject and piles them up around him, the worst pest is the one who grabs ten or a dozen of the best magazines and keeps his arm on them while he reads, successfull resisting all attempts to get even one away from him. Death and taxes seem to be only moderately certain compared with the certainty that the usual per cent of freshmen will underestimate the height of the first hurdle. The smartest student on the hill can't possibly read more than two magazines at once. The dog-in-the-manger attitude is bad enough in a small child but in a college student it is enough worse to be extremely unbecoming. DON'T STOP ON THIRD No better advice can be given to the college student than that offered by R.B. Guild Tuesday morning in chanel, "Get home from third." Students in the institutions of higher learning have “reached third.” It is immaterial whether they have been boasted there or are on third from their own efforts. The point is that they are on third and it is their duty to “reach home.” The crowd in the bleachers is only too ready to yell "bonehead" and "take him out" at the man who doesn't score. It is this spirit that is responsible for the widespread criticism of colleges and college students. On the contrary the bleachers will yell their heads off in approval if we reach home. Thousands of eyes are on us. Our every movement is being watched. It is up to us to score. Why not steal home? Probably the Daily Kansan has abandoned the wide measure in its editorial columns, ventures the writer of Kansas Notes in the Kansas City Star, because Professor Flint does not think that wide columns necessarily indicate a broad editorial outlook. This confusion of Professor Flint's name with that of the editor of the student paper is not cause for legal action, but the Professor says that Charley Blakesley's attempt to put him back twenty years into his undergraduate days is designed to rob him of too much dearly bought experience to be agreed to cheerfully. Safe for Linn County! It "comes across" with the first announcement if a holiday reunion. Now let the other 104 get into the game. AN INDIVIDUAL MATTER AN INDIVIDUAL MATTER In order to govern themselves Kansas students have established two student councils, one for men and one for women. Why can't they take an additional step by installing an honor or honor sentiment system? The time has come when something must be done to eliminate dishonesty not only in examinations but in every day work. This can only be done by the earnest endear of each student to bring about a change in student sentiment. Why not let the different clubs discuss this subject so that interest will be aroused? Better still, let the debating societies argue the honor question rather than some topic regarding constitutional amendments. It's time for Kansas students to assert their inborn love of honesty and honorable conduct in all things. If the afternoon classes are moved a half hour even the Physics clock ought to be able to catch up with the schedule. COLLEGE SNOBBERY One of the liveliest movements of the hour is the effort to make our colleges more democratic. There is not much agreement as to method. But almost the country over undergraduates and graduates are up in arms and eager to attack the demon of snobbery. As to the right and wrong ways of approaching the problem, John Corbin present some exceedingly clear insights. He says that Harvard claimed Mr. Corbin's early college years and Oxford his later. So that he speaks from a pretty catholic experience, and, be it added, from someone toward his own homes of learning. For his text there is the classic tale of the Harvard professor, walking the college yard who asked a troubled and forlorn youth, "Are you looking for any future on the side of the Rocky mountains," came the answer. Of such is the wilderness of the "outs" in our large colleges. And, on the other hand, for those who would be "ins" there lies a period of campaigning which使 Corbin very accurately depicts the feminine business of social climbing. How avoid all this and permit undergraduates to come together, man to man, on their merits? Mr. Corbin's recipe is frankly based on the Oxford and Cambridge idea. There a man must have an understanding by reason of his residence in his college. The English college small enough to be thoroughly individual. It is large enough to give a student the spirit and life of the whole institution. For the men of special distinction there are the clubs that the students can powerful tradition, working in a directly opposite direction from the narrow American fraternity or society—New York Tribune. OUR DAILY QUIZ Use honor system and grade yourself It is a book containing street addresses, telephone numbers, and other useful information about campus people. What is the purpose of the DX? The stude in search of a date, or the bill collector in search of a delinquent. 4-Who borrows the Directory from his neighbor. To reduce calls for "Information" to the minimum THE DIRECTORY 3—To whom is it the most useful? 6- For whose address does the student first look? 5. What should the careful Stude do with his Directory? The same student who borrows the Kansan. 8-How *i* did *d'* D? By apply it to the Registrar's office. Then give errors in the book? Yes, one. Special in the College says the Directory has it that he is only a Sophomore. He thinks a new edition should be printed. What other questions? By applying at the **book** level: 9 - Are there any errors in the book? Give your answer. 7—Whose next? Yes, her name is Helene, and the book's title is "Insider"; I think the edition is necessary. Hers. 8—How is a Directory obtained? LIFE AT K. S. U. Earth's no vision rarer, not a landscape fairer Then each day before our eyes expands. Kansas skies are blue, Kansas hearts are Then the hearts and skies of other lands. Then what'er the weather, let us sing them. took Chak in the Criminal and the Blue, either prince nor pessant leads a life As the student's life at K. S. U., WILLIAM HERBERT CARRUTH. Drill Sergent (after worrying Brown for two hours)—"Right about heath." Consoling Brown "Thank goodness, I'm right about something at last." Bits. "So you were at the wedding. Did you give the bride away?" —Wisconsin Sphinx. Wise Freshie—No woman ever made a fool of me. Senior—Who did? —Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. Senior —Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. Cornell Widow. "Dye make a living writing?" "Yep,writing father." When you hear a prominent alumnus telling about the good old days, he usually means the nights.—Ohio State Dun Dial. The baby ate some worsted "Don't worry" said his pater, "He'll likely swallow all the yarns He hears a little later." R. G.-"I'm so sore that I can't stand or sit." Cornell Widow. L. E. “If you're telling the truth, you're living.” -Williams Purple Cow. She (after angry silence)—Why don't you play football, Jim? He (off guard)—Why it takes a big brute to play the game. He (off guard)—Why it takes a bite to play the game She (with honeyed sweetness)– Well? Williams Purple Cow. Stagehand—they say this tragedy is very sad. Super-Yes, at the first performance even the seats in tears. Miss Innocence--Why do they always cheer when a man is hurt? Wise Guy—So the girls can't hear what he says. what he says. — Minnesota Minnehaha. Why is she like a violin maker? She strings beaus. Cornell Widow. TAKE CHORES AS CREDIT TOWARD AN A. B. DEGREE In the November Woman's Home Companion appear accounts of several public schools in the United States where great progress is being made. One of the stories told is the story of a Wisconsin in an elementary pupils school credits for home work. Following is an account of this teacher and his plan: "There is a country school in Manitowoc county, Wisconsin, where the teacher, Mr. H. E. Antholz, has introduced a thoroughly original and practical course in mathematics,ability, Mr. Antholz gives 'school credits for home work.' That is the children do chores at home and get credit for them at school. Each child has a small memorandum book in which he writes a list of the home duties he performs, between classes. The member of credit points received for each. The list, which is kept on honor,' includes sweeping, making a bed, preparing a meal, baking a cake, baking bread, scrubbing the floor, washing and wiping dishes, milking, feeding horses, cleaning the house, splitting and carrying wood, sleeping with open window, cleaning the teeth, coming home with feet dry in wet weather. Nothing too good for Lawrence People. The Policy at The Innes Store "At the end of each month the names of the three pupils who have the best records, with number of points each received, are published in the local paper. The head of the highest number of credits in each class are awarded prizes by the school board. This scheme proved successful from the beginning. Nearly all of the pupils entered the contest at once and one dropped out. One farmer told Mr. Antholz: 'Before you started the credit system I couldn't get my boy out of bed in the morning to do chores.' Since then he is in the barn before I am.' More than one mother described his girl as the hired girl, for there was nothing left for her to do by the ambitious daughters of the house." The prodigal son is about the only figure in history that really ever came back.-N. Y. Times Depends largely upon the correct material, properly selected as to texture, color combinations, etc. The Innes Store as usual is expected to be authority along these lines and we announce today an excellent showing of new materials and new shades, shown for the first time and shown only at this store, in exclusive patterns, no two alike. A collection of 5th Ave. New York choice productions. Don't worry about your evening gown. See Our East Window, then come to our silk counter; you will be astonished at the extreme beauty and excellent harmony being shown here. Your Evening or Party Dress SATIN CREPE DE-LUXE a 42 in. material, comes in 7 shades, all new, very beautifully broached. in the window only one 4% to 5 yard pattern on each color. selectionclusive, at a yard. $4.50 BROCADED METEOR CLOTH Not the dimay crepes shown in small stores, but an all pure silk, heavy meteor, comes in the new blues and purple, 42 in. wide, very choice material, specially intended for particul- ar people, at a yard . . . $3.75 FIGURED METEORS 42 in. wide, in handsome new ground shades, with the newest figure designs, in harmonizing color effects, or new materials not shown elsewhere, yard. . . $2.00 SILK CREPES 40 in. wide, light ground with small figures, a very pretty material, $1.00 SILK AND WOOL POPLIN 38 in. a few good shades, not all colors, can be used in combination with any of the above broaches or individually, a spelidd fabric, a yd...$1.50 Give Us a Trial Cluett, Peabody & Co. Arrow Shirts LA SALLE A New Lightweight, Deep Pointed ARROW COLLAR W. A. Guenther 721 Liesn J. A. Keeler 939 MASS. J. We have some good values in Pennants Pictures & Posters Innes, Bullene & Hackman Four Regulation Allies with loop-the-loop return. 714 Mass. FOR TAXI PHONES 12 Brunswick Bowling Alley Robert Hudson, Pierson's Hand Made When calling for a good brand of 5c CIGARS SMOKE At all first class dealers LADIES' CAPE GLOVES SCOUT GAUNTLET GLOVES RUFFLING A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND for boys, in glove department, a pair. 85c 36 INCH TAFFETA JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. in chifon and net plaiting, white and cream, new, choice styles. More fitted and up to 86 JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGTS, 10cts.—Adv. 49-3 READ'S LANSDOWN in tan, brown, gun metal, and white, a pair. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.50 LARGE ASSORTMENTS of plain and figured crops, meteors, chromeweed, etc., at prices ranging from $10 to $40 per yard rne well known fabric of silk and wool, 40 in. wide, sold everywhere at craft stores; we have hard about 25 shades which are able to offer tomorrow on a bargain table, at a d.y..79c Black only, $10.0 value, very special, at a yard. . . . . . . . . . . 69c Matinees Wednesday and Saturday SAM S. SHUBERT LITTLE WOMEN PROTSCH The College Tailor Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 Vermont Phone 139 ROYAL ROCHESTER Chaing dishes, casseroles, coffee machines and percolators. The finest line of metal and wood serving trays in the city. KENNEDY & ERNST 826 MASS ST. PHONES 341 SAVE THE PIECES We have added Lens Grinding Machinery to our Optical department. Any Lens Duplicated Glasses Fited. HESTER Jeweler and Optician Lawrence, Kansas. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. All Kinds of Razor Blades Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. W. H. Quenaken, Pres.; E. W. S. Weatherby, Supt. FeaturingMilk Chocolates "SWEDE" McCOLLOCH'S Drug Store Phones 540 Read your own KANSAN. Notice Students Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 501, Home 180 O. P. Leonard's Pantotium is on the job again this year. We Give Club Rates 841 Mass. St. Upstairs. Particular Cleaning and FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Lawrence Pantatorium 2 W. Warren Both Phone 506 ALEX BOLING GROUP TRADE SPALDING MARK A.D. 1974 A "Square Deal" for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantee each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding TradeMark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. A. G. SPALDING & BROS. A. G. SPALDING & BROS. 1120 HAMMETTON ST. Send for our Catalog. Send for our Catalog. See the New Parker Self-Filling Fountain Pen Office Supplies, Typewriters F. I. CARTER Mass. Bell phone 14 1025 Mass. Bell phone 1081 Come on Down to JIM'S Tonight 1101 Mass. St JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGGS, 16ozs—Adv. 49-3 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN New Veilings The largest line shown in the city. Be sure and see these. All shades in Maline Chiffon Auto Veils. Lace Draped Veils. WEAVER'S THE MAN AND THE Woman PRICES TO SUIT ALL NOTE the style in the new LION 'SHADOW.' And the LION comfort features make 'SHADOW' one of the easiest collars smart dressers have ever worn. Has the famous "Slip-Over" button-hole, "Easy-Tie-Slide" space and "Pliable-Points." for 6 to 75c-2 for 25c. Lion Collars Oltest Brand in America Lion Collars Ousted Brand in America UNITED SHIRT & COLLAR CO., Maker, TROY, N. Y Middle laws—See my list of Quasi- Construct Books to be used the next quarter. J. D. R. Miller, 1041 Vt. Phone 2511 B—Adv. 45-5 Just received a fresh shipment of reception sticks at Wiedemann's.— Adx. 49 Send the Daily Kansan home. JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGGS, 10cts. — Adv. 49-3 DEFINES LIMITATIONS OF SPECIAL STUDENTS Faculty Action Clears Confusion Concerning Unclassed Collegian Requirements Persons of maturity and of serious purpose, who are not candidates for the College degree and who present satisfactory reasons for asking such exceptional consideration may be admitted to the College as special students. This action taken at a meeting of the College faculty Thursday, clears up confusion in regard to special students. The following provisions were made: "Anyone regularly enrolled in another school of the University may be admitted as a special student to College classes but all applications for such enrollment must be accompanied by the formal presentation of the school concerned. Such students are subject to the same regulations as other special students. "Each candidate for admission as a special student must personally file with the faculty committee an application stating his reasons for his request to attend schools previously attended showing character and extent of preparation for the classes to which he desires admission. He must also submit to such examination as the committee or administrator prescribe. This application must be renewed each semester." "The faculty committee subject to the approval of instructors or heads of the departments concerned, will determine what courses the candidate is prepared to pursue with profit and will outline his program of studies for the semester. The registrar will admit a special student only upon the authorization of the faculty committee. "Special students are subject to the general regulations regarding prerequisites, number of hours, attendance, examinations, quality of work, etc. Failure in any course or a low grade in required ground for refusal to allow subsequent enrollment as a specific student. "If a special student later become a candidate for a degree, the credits he has received while enrolled as a special student will not be allowed to count towards this degree, except by approval of the faculty. "The Dean may withdraw the priv- illeges of any special student who, in his judgment is falling to comply with the spirit of the foregoing provisions." All "time" subscriptions for the University Daily Kansan taken at the timing of the school year are DUE NOW Day Eldridge, Circulation Manager. ANNOUNCEMENTS If the young men who play the cornet on Ohio, Oread and Kentucky do their own evening will call the Kaiden office to help them learn something to their advantage. Debating team tryouts Wednesday, December 3 and December 17. All candidates must appear in the first try-out except those who have been on intercollegiate teams for K. U. A sacred concert will be given in the chapel of Fraser hall next Sunday afternoon in charge of the M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. The University Glee club and orchestra will vocal solos students will also be on the program. All student and faculty members are invited. The Daily Kansan board will meet the Daily Kansan board to 7 sharp in the journalism building. AMUSEMENTS The most irresistible "peeler" that ever swung a night stick, in a better detective play than ever came out of France, is "Officer 666," a play that has scored the most definite success both in New York and Chicago recorded on the theatrical record for years. Everyone to whom the show world appeals will want to see this splendid play which is announced for local production at the Bowersock theater, downtown Edinburgh. It is a delight of 'prophylactic,' good in a dramatic way for that tired feeling. "Officer 666," is a melodramatic facial stage film with a word plot of laughes and thrills in the same way as *A Holckhuis field piece storming an enemy's entrance. and the audience that it attracts! My goodness, how they do enjoy it! The stout ones chorel over the swift fun or grasp at the thrill punctuations. In fact, interested in the handsome picture pilferer who, they hope, will get away with the swag, and when that prince of scamps is finally caught, vote him the dearest villain that ever had his thumb K. U. REACHES OUT TO THE SEVEN SEAS Extension Division Has Japanese, Convict, Mission ary And Sailors Enrolled For further information call either phone 32 or address W.W.BURNETT, Agent. About 2,000 Missourians came to Lawrence last year. SHOW THEM that Kansas can support its team. It will be necessary to buy round trip tickets to secure benefit of $5.35 rate. Returning, Special Train will leave Columbia 10 p.m. arriving at K.C. about 7 a.m. and Lawrence about 8 o'clock Sunday morning. FOOTBALL ON TO COLUMBIA! Tiger Hunt SPECIAL TRAIN Via Santa Fe A convict, a missionary a Japanese, and four U. S. blue-jackets are enrolled in the extension department of the University of Kansas this year. The geographical range of the islander is the opposite but it is no greater than the breach between the convict and the missionary. BE GAME With K. U. Band, Team, Subs, and Rooters will leave Santa Fe Depot at 9 p. m. sharp, Friday, Nov. 21st. Will arrive at Columbia via Wabash at 7 a. m. Saturday. Through cars. Train equipped with Santa Fe's most modern equipment, also Tourist and Standard Sleepers. The missionary is in the West Indies and spends his spare time in studying English and Latin. The young man from Japan works in Kansas City, but finds time to study English Composition and Rhetoric. Last but not least interesting, are the four "blue-jackets" aboard men-o-war on the western coast who receive their "mail order" lessons sometimes at San Francisco, sometimes at Alaska or South America, and sometimes across the Pacific in Honolulu. The convict at Lansing has been striving to better his condition when he gets out and for one and a half years has been laboring on the case. He has completed the course but has not taken the examination. Standard Pullman, Lower Berth $2.00. Tourist lower,$1.00. Upper berths, 20 per cent less K. U. ACTOR A HIT IN LONDON R.R. Fare $5.35 for Round Trip Hale Hamilton, The Star in Ameri can show at English Opera Hale Hamilton the actor who has taken London by storm in the leading role of "Get-Rich-Quick-Wallingford," is a former student of the University of Kansas where he was a member of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. His debut as an actor was made in the University Dramatic Club under the direction of Mrs. Georgia Brown of Kansas City. Hamilton is now playing in "Sealed Orders," the Drury Lane melodrama. He is planning, however, to take over the management of a London theater and stage an American play with an all-American company. It is the general opinion among actors that Hamilton plays in an American show of the best sort would make a big hit in the British metropolis. The Kansas actor is described in brightly, cheerful and breastly *Kansas*. CALENDAR Santa Fe Week of November 17-23 1913 Wednesday wEDnesday 4:30 Mining journal, (201 Ha 1) 7:30 Caricature (306 Fra.) 7:30 Band rehearsal, Fraser) 7:30 Hawk Dramatic Club, (110 Fraser) 7:30 Mandolin Club rehearsal, (116 Fraser) 7:30 Botany club (Snow). Thursday 7:00 Amer. Society Mech. Eng. (1607 Tenn.) 7:30 Orchestra practice, (Fra.) 8:00 K. U. debating society, (313 Fraser). 8:00 Football rally. Friday 11:00 Chapel Students' mass meeting; auspices Student Gov't Associations. Saturday 2:45 Football, K. U. vs. Missouri, at Columbia. 8-12 Student court dance. Student Council events Nov. 22 Sophomore Bum, St. 8-12 Nov. 23 Y. M.-Y. W. joint meeting in chapel, 3:30. All announcements or items for the University calendar either for the coming week or for future events should be given to Mr. Cronemeyer, at the department of journalism office, by 4:30 p.m. Friday. It is desired to make the calendar a complete schedule of University events and the co-operation of those interested is requested. Juniors laws—A number of second hand Mechems Outlines and cases on Agency. You will need them next quarter. J. D. R Miller, 1041 Vt., Phone 2511 Bell--Adv. 45. JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGES, 10cts—Adv. 49-3 For your parties and receptions order your ice cream and ices from Wiedemann's. Either phone, 182.— Adv. 49 Thanksgiving postcards 5c pen dozen at Hoadleys 17 W. Warren.— Adv. JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGGS, 10s—Adv. 39-3 Senior laws—I have a number of Willistons Cases on bankruptcy to be used next quarter. J. D. R. Miler, 1041 Vt. Phone, 2311 B.— PROFESSIONAL CARDS 4. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist Office 802 Mass. St. Bell phone 805. W. C. M'COONELLY, Phydician and chirurg. Hum. Med. 1934; Houdoncoe, 1940; Hommer 1934; Hadisoncoe, 1940; Teuori 187. Hudson 186. HARRY REDING. M. D Eye ear, nose. Bronx. Phone: 513. Bell 513. Home: A A12B. Phone: Bleege. Bell 513. Home: A A12B. G. A HAMMAN M. D. D. eye ear, or DR, H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. ©BRYON, Dantel. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bulk Phone 507. J. R. BRCHJELT, D. D. O. 833 Mass aurestreet. Both phones, office and phone. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires' Studio. Both phones. Q, W. JONES, A. M., M. D. *Dlessas of* *Maryville*, 128th Street, Residence, 129th Street, Botham Plain. DR. BURT R. WHITE Osteopath. Phones. Bell 938, Home 257, Office. 745 Mass. 87. DR. H. T. JONES. Room 12 F. A. Bldg. Residence 1130 Tenn. Phone 211. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Sources' Studio. Both phone. S. T. Gillispie, M. D. O. Residence, corer Vermont Arnold Sts. Residence, 728 Indiana St. Kirkland, WA Barbers CLASSIFIED E. J. Blair, Physician and Surgeon. Oifoo @ 95010. Physicians of the Northwest. To be @ 909.80, m, 12:30 p.m., jm, and mw to @ 899.80, m, 12:30 p.m., jm, and mw to @ 799.80, m, 12:30 p.m., jm, and mw to @ 699.80, m, 12:30 p.m., jm, and mw to @ 599.80, m, 12:30 p.m., jm, and mw to @ 499.80, m, 12:30 p.m., jm, and mw to @ 399.80, m, 12:30 p.m., jm, and mw to @ 299.80, m, 12:30 p.m., jm, and mw to @ 199.80, m, 12:30 p.m., jm, and mw to @ 1 Plumbers Frank lilt's Barber Shop. 1023 Mass Two good barbers. Satisfaction assured. J. C Monk's Barber Shop. 913 Mass chairs; never have to wear. Razors haven’t. Prices reasonable, work the best. Let us know if you are interested. **Benoit *&* Co.** & **Bi64. Mass** 816, 493 Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co., for gas Phones 888. Maada lamps. 937 Mass. Phones 888. Mrs. Ellison Dressmaking and Ladies Johnson & Carl G. Phones 2411, over Johnson & Carl G. Ladies Tailors LaWrence dabbles in School. Ladies' tailoring Phones 550. Misses Power; Mrs. C McClaray. Phones 550. Misses Power; Mrs. C McClaray. Ladies Talboring and Dressmaking. Gowns for all occasions. All work guaranteed. B. Daily. 914 Mass. Sanitary cleaning establishment in connection. Phone 421 Bell. Hair Dressers Queen City College. System and sewing Queen City College. System and sewing Mrs. G. Mark Brown. 834 Ky. Bail Mrs. G. Mark Brown. 834 Ky. Bail Sporting Goods D & M sporting goods and athletic supplies. Damneds & Ernst. 202 Mass. S. Phones. 348 N. 5th St. Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-gifts, Martial Arts training, apparel and applications call Bell 1372, Home : 51. The Select Hair Dressing Shop, 927 Mass St. Miscellaneous Haiwatha Cafe for regular meals, lunch and the orders when down town. Open after peacock dinner. Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Tel. 713-717-7175, Cardinal and Jewelry, Bolt Phone 713-717-7175, Mass. Phone One trial means no risk, small investment, fno money, homemade smoke, smoke W, T, William, homemade cigarette I have a nice line of plain china for painting: Extinct Northridge, studio 783 Mass. St., 8c附近 Extinct Northridge, studio 783 Mass. St., 8c附近 Student's Coop Club. $2.50 to $3.00 per LOST-THE* that min., between .746 Miss, St., and the Theta house. Finder please return to Carolyn McNutt at the Theta house and receive reward. LOST-Pocket size, paper covered note book containing notes on Philosophy between Ohio street and Fraser hall at 8 o'clock this morning. Return to N. P. Knight, 1320 Ohio street, Bell 1538. LOST-Small jeweled Fraternity pin, in shape of triangle on Mass. St or at Eagles' Hall. Name on back. Bell phone 1789. LOST-Parker self filling fountain pen and gold horse shoe shaped stick pin set with torquoise. H. Mac L on back. Call 1754 Bell. LOST—Suit of clothes by K. U. Pantatorium. Kindly call Bocker 2764 Bell. 47-3* WANTED-Board and room for man near campus. Address X Y, Daily Kansan. LOST—A solid gold watch charm with the following engraved on it: H. C, from the Invincible Bail Club. Return to H. C. 748-43. Street. LOST—On Lee between Myers hall and 1237 Louisiana, a illly bud candle holder belonging to a brass candle holder. Finder please return to 1237 Oread. LOST—A gold 32nd degree bar pin. Return to Kassan office. THE Topeka Capital Delivered Daily from 6 to 7:30 a. m. 10 CENTS PER WEEK 30 CENTS PER DAY VAS. G. MALENN, Agnes Phone 24338 931 MAINE JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGJS, 10ta...Adv. 49-3 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Make your Christmas selections now! We'll gladly reserve them for you. Don't wait until the last moment, when our stock is depleted —when the best and prettiest things are gone—when you and our salesmen are crowded for time. Shop now! Come in today and look over our very complete stock at your leisure. We shall be glad to reserve your orders until you call for them. Gistation GRUEN VERITHIN WATCH The Most Admired of Timepieces ******* JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGTS, 10cts—Adv. 49-38 Bowerstock Theater Matinee and Night, Wed. Nov. 1 ON DUTY The Screamingly Funny Farce Bowersock Theater "OFFICER 666" By Augustin Machugh THREE SIXES ARE HARD TO SHAKE One Long Laugh With Thrills Galore Kept New York and Chicago Laugh ing For One Solid Year Parquet. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75c Balcony. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50c Second Balcony . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25c JAYHAWK-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGGS, 10cts—Adv. 49-3 Says Ed. Cochrane of the Kansas City Journal: "If Missouri wins from Kansas it will be because of the end runs of the Tiger aggregation." Somehow, the Kansas City papers seem to have gotten the impression that the Jayhawker ends are the weakest point on the whole eve. They're going to be shown up some at Columbia Saturday. ON SALE TOMORROW Ladies Home Journal Christmas number, "Nuf Sed" The Criterion Ladies Home Journal styles Christmas number Saturday Evening Post 60 pages GOOD reading New serial by E. Phillips Oppenheim The Country Gentleman 50 pages Considerable about grafting This ought to be interesting to some of you. GRIGGS Curtis Agency 827 Mass. JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGTS, 10cta—Adv. 49-3 BASKET-BALL TEAM WORKS IN GOOD FORM Fans Predict Prize Team For Kansas—Three Accidents Last Night According to those who have been watching this year's basket-ball team at work, the prospects give evidence of the best team that has appeared in the Missouri Valley for years. Of course it is far too early to decisively decide on the men, who will open the first game for Manager Hamilton's brigade; the complete schedule has not even been made out, but any chance to make up a team, as good as any seen in the Missouri Valley last year. "Slick" Floor Causes Injuries At the work out last night three accidents occurred and Coach Hargill was kept busy tying up the injured. "Fat" Nelson, captain of last year's freshmen, was first to come to grief with a dislocated knee. He was playing hard, against mire when he stepped on a stone at the back floor which was too heavy resisted; the accident happened when he became over balanced at this point. The same accident occurred to Nelson last year and since that time the injured member has never fully recovered from the strain. Players to Have Day Off There will be no regular practice Thursday night. The team will exercise too high for much attention to be paid to any other sport, and Captain Sproull wishes every candidate for either the freshman or the Varsity eleven to turn out to the big cheer rally which will be held in Fraser hall instead of taking place on campus. Sproull promises that this day off will not be repeated again during the entire season. Neither of the other injuries, however, were as severe or as painful as the injury to the star sophomore. Lefty Smith, K man and guard on last year's regulars, was hit in the nose and it was feared for a moment that the blow had broken it. The swelling had considerably increased, however, and the coach's fears were cased. Exactly the same accident happened to another Smith, a freshman center. It was a night of bloody battle. Baldwin, a K man two years ago, and Sweeeney, a member of the 1911 freshman aggregation came out last night for the first time they heard of hopefuls. Both looked in good condition after their long removal from the game. The Columbia correspondent of the Kansas City Star points with pride to the fact that for the first time in the history of the school, telegraph accommodations will be installed at Rollins Field for the benefit of the press reporters of the out-of-town papers. Such a building was for telegraph accommodations at the field that the Western Union was forced to install a wire for Saturday's game almost in self-defense. Under Other Goal Posts All records for receipts at a football game were broken Saturday when $32,274 were paid by spectators to see the big event in the All-Star Ball Field. Export sport writers who had gained facility in estimating attendances The Texas Longhorns were forced to remove two of their star players from the line-up for tomorrow's game with the Kansas Aggies owing to the fact that Lowman insisted that the Southern eleven should play according to Missouri Valley Conference rules. The Farmers are under pressure of being beaten at Austin tomorrow but nevertheless they want to have as many things as possible in their favor before they start the game. Harvard went through a strenuous signal practice yesterday in preparation for Saturdays' game with the Blue and White. The game is taking no chance of injuring any of his prize athletes before the big contest, so has abandoned all scrimmage for the rest of the week. Walter Trumbull, their star center, who has been out of the game since last week, returned to Haughton's squad yesterday, and Cambridge is correspondingly happy. had given big guesses as to the crowd which witnessed the game, but even the most savage had included the total attendance figures where near to this. The Yale Bulldogs held a slight rest yesterday after their strenuous battle with the Princeton Tigers the Saturday previous. Coach Jones is working hard to whip his men into good form for the coming Harvard game, and the eleven at present looks much better than it did earlier in the season immediately after the Colgate game. FIRST TIGER DEFEAT UNDER COACH HOPKINS Team Of 1891 Won Three Games And Tied Prof. E. M. Hopkins, of the English department, was the first football coach of the University of Kansas. Another "The first football team team had no regular coach," said Professor Hopkins yesterday afternoon. "It was organized in the fall of 1924 and captained by J. Wade Pearsal. He played for the first time in 1891. I had never played any football and only knew what I had seen at Eastern games. The captain of the team was W. A. Kinzie. We played two games. We played Washington University, and for the first time played against Missouri. "That season we won three games and tied the one with Washington. The business men down town raised a purse and had souvenirs made for the members of the team. These souvenirs were three cornered gold plates with a football pictured in the center. From this souvenir or- K FIRST SEASON 91 NEVER DEFEATED S Fac-simile of gold locket presented to Coach Hopkins by Lawrence Brush inginated the title, 'Never Defeated,' from the team of 1891. There was a question as to what the inscription on the plate should be; we had tied the game with Washington and could not call our team. 'Even Victorio tried,' finally 'Never Victory' was decided upon. In 1892 A. W. Shepard from Cornell coached the team. Professor Hopkins was manager that year until after the beginning of the season when Shepard assumed the duty also. "After the difficulty the teacher," he has been interrupted only as I am now, as an onlocker. I offered my resignation as manager from the top of a dry goods box at a bon fire." W. H. Cowan was coach in 1894, '95, and '96, Wylie G. Woodruff came in 1897. In 1899, since time the coaches have Boynton, 1900; Outland, 1901; Curtiss, 1902; Weeks, 1903; Kennedy, 1904-10; Sherwin, 1911; Mosse, 1912. Coach Mose commenced playing football when Cowen was on coach in 1895. He was captain in 1888 and since has had something to do with developing each The Triangular League was the name of the first football organization to which Kansas belonged. It was made up of Baker University, Washburn, and the University of Kansas. In 1892 the Inter-State League was formed, and later came the Missouri Man of Kansas Conference. A man of Man Kansas City, Hal W, Reed, was the first to propose an Inter-State football association and had much to do in the organization of it. JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGUES, 10cts...Adv. 49-3 Special! Brown bread ice cream, at Wiedemann's—Adv. 49 MINING ENGINEERS HOLD FOREIGN JOBS South America, Africa, And Europe Fields For Daddy Haworth's Boys Prof. Erasmus Haworth is proud of his boys. He says so himself and seems to have reason for his struc-ting. Of course, it must be understood that he means his mining engineers. He has lately been in correspondence with the graduates of the School of Mining and finds that they are not satisfied positions and are steadily advancing. Williard E. Shaler, who was graduated in 1904, worked in the United States Geological Survey and the American Syndicate for a short time and then went to Africa, where he remained three years. While there, he made important gold discoveries and is now European representative with offices at Brussels, Syndicate with offices at Brussels, Belgium. He draws a salary of $5,000 a year with $1,000 for traveling expenses. Another "Boy" Gets $5,000 After graduation in 1904, A. H. Hoffman went to Mexico and had considerable success in the copper mines there. He was steadily advanced and, in 1912, was made superintendent with a senior position by the he went to South America, where he has charge of the construction of a new $30,000,000 smelter. Wallace E. Pratt, who was graduated in 1908, secured a position with the government and was sent to the Philippines. He has published a number of articles and is one of leading scientists in Manila today. Six were graduated from the school in 1913 and the are all employed now with good salaries. All of them are in the United States and three out of the six have already been promoted. He'd Back 'Em Against Any "I'll take my whole bunch of graduates and put them up against an equal number that can be picked from any of the other schools and show that my boys have advanced faster and are drawing better pay than the others," he said. Professor Irwin's morning, "I am proud of the showing and will be satisfied if all of them from now on are as successful as the fellows have been so far." AMUSEMENTS "Officer 666," when it appeared in New York and Chicago, was accorded the most flattering expressions of approval by both the press and public. It lived up to the prediction of its censors by recording the longest runs ever registered in either cities named for a play of the class, and now that we are at the Bowersock theater, Wednesday Nov. 19 interest in the piece has been further aroused—Adv. Brown bread ice cream a whole meal, at Wiedemann's—Adv. 49 When you pay us $25.00 it is not for a Suit---It's for Satisfaction Style Individuality Distinction-- and every other winning feature that goes with a Benjamin. -Johnson & Carl- "Ask about us." PHONE 100 FOR TAXICABS PEERLESS GARAGE, Phone 100. The FLOWER SHOP CUT FLOWERS FLORAL ARRANGEMENTS, ETC. 8251/2 Mass. Phones 621 OF AWARDING CUP TO CHANGE MEANS OF AWARDING CUP Last year when Coach Mose called for men to appear for spring football practice, the Sachem society offered a silver trophy to the winner and a bronze trophy to be held May 3. But on the day of the contest no kickers appeared. The Sachems, a senior organization, will not award a cup this year to the best football kicker as was to be awarded last year. Elmer Whitney, president of the Sachems, said this morning that a meeting of the society would be called soon and new arrangements would be made as to the method of awarding the trophy. At the first spring football practice twenty-five men showed up, but the next week there were only six men out and still it was hoped to develop new material for the fall team. Because there were no games scheduled the JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGGS, 10cts—Adv. 49-3 football aspirants did not take kindly on the idea. Whitney says that the awarding of a cup is not dead at all but the nature of the awarding will with all probability be changed. The Chicago Maroons after defeating Minnesota Saturday, are beginning to fear the Wisconsin Badgers, the team which they meet next week. A victory over Minnesota should make them fearless of the world, say we. The Gophers are a much stronger team now than they were when the fall easy prey at the hands of the Nebraska Cornhuskers. Berlin Excludes Russians Berlin University has settled the vexed question of the admission of students from other countries to Berlin, deciding that Russian students shall be prohibited, for the present at any rate, from further enrollment at the University of Berlin. JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGTS, 10cts—Adv. 48-3 THE OREAD Cafeteria and Tea Room MENU FOR THURSDAY Cream of Tomato Soup Pureee of Navy Bean Soup Fish and Oysters Blue Points on Half Shell Scalloped Oysters Baked Lake Trout Maitre de Hotel Sauce Fried Halibut Steak Creole Sauce Roast Young Turkey with Celery Dressing Prime Ribs of Beef Au Jus Stuffed Leg of Pork Pan Gravy Hungarian Beef Stew Chicken a la King Country Sausage Corn Fritters Mashed Potatoes Carameled Sweet Potatoes Cauliflower in Cream Scalloped Tomatoes Hot Tea Biscuits Salads—Shrimp, Lobster, Potato, Tuna, Salmon, Waldorf. Jonathan Apples with Whipped Cream Celery Fountain--Candy--Cigars 1241 OREAD STUDENT DANCE ROYER and FRANK MUSIC ADMISSION 75c FRIDAY NIGHT F. A. A. Hall STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. JAYHAWKERS READY TO MEET THE TIGERS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 20. 1019 Final Scrimmage Shows Team Well-Prepared For Biggest Game SHIFT IN LINE-UP EXPECTED Backfield Not Yet Selected—Som mers and Martin May Work at Half-Bonfire Ends Practice Statements of the Authorities Arthur St. St. Leger Mosez—It will be a tight game, an exciting game. The Jayhawkers have a good chance win; the Tigers have an equally good chance. Don't bet on it; root on them. Leonard Frank—The Jayhawks will play the best game Saturday that they have played all season. The players no slouches either. Take your choice. Red Lapton--We'll beat 'em. Gee, I hope mamma lets me go! "How can we help but beat them after that?" said Leonard Frank late yesterday afternoon. The Varsity eleven had just held its last scrimage of the year. Jay Bond's freshmen had just scrimmaged for the last time against the big huskies who have bruised and battered them around all season. The anxious newspaper reporters had paced up and down the sidelines, searching eagerly for news, for the last time. Practice was over. The Varsity had gathered in a large circle in the center of the field. Lefty Sproull, running from the club house, bore in one hand a pale and emaciated bread of "no account" newspapers, and a dozen matches. Volte offerings were to be held. Leonard Frank and Arthur Moseh had decided finally to propitiate the gods in the Jayhwakers' favor having one grand big bonfire. And those was the "piece de résistance." War Dance Around Shoe War Jance Moulton she. She Loftey Eldred she. She papers. A small flame sprank up, then a larger one, then the whole pile was a fire. Whooping and yelling, hand in hand, the Varsity men danced around the fire. At one end of the line was Leonard Frank, at another end Arthur Mosse, at another end Arthur Mosse, Carl Rouse, Pat Crowell, and Jay Bond looked on and applauded. "That dispels the jinx, fellows," cried Mosew. "Will we win?" "Decidedly, yes," thundered back the husky regulars. Final Showing Good Line-un Uncertain The Jehovahwars looked good yesterday afternoon. Bishop, the big halfback who has been kept out of the game with an attack of appendicitis was in at half, and booting the ball fifty yards at a clip. Bishop, the quality man, was at the other half. Stuewe played full, Wilson quarter. The whole back-field line-up, with the exception of Stuewe at full, is up in the air, and if the coaches have yet fully determined just what two backs will trot out on the field Saturday in response to Jack Grover's whistle, they're not telling the press reporters. Tony James worked at his usual place in the line. Mulloy took Tudor's old position at right guard. Strothers and Reber were on the ends. The rejuvenated team looked good. It is doubtful yet exactly what line-up will start the game against the Tigers Saturday. Sommers and Martin may work at half instead of Bishop and Pudor. Greenlees and Foster from former pair which may start the game. Line About The Same Line Above the Sea The Line Above the Sea will be the same as started the game against the Cornhuskers last Saturday. Strothers will be at end, in case Fudor goes to the backfield. The big ad from Holton will surely start the game at some position; he is too man to be left idling on the idleings. Reber will be on the end opposite Strothers, Weidlein and Burton, the two "old faithfuls" at left and right tackle. James if he is in form, Hammond if James is not, will play left guard. Mulloy seems a fixture on the other side of center. Keeling, if course, will pass the ball. After a rather strenuous practice in signal drill last night came the scrimmage, the last scrimmage with the freshmen. Two touchdw-s were scored against the tyros in less than ten minutes. Then came a brief but snappy talk to the players and then the bonfire. TYROS, WORK DONE, TO SEE COLUMBIA GAME Freshman Squad To Watch Team It Made Beat Tigers Saturday SELECT W. WOOD CAPTAIN Twenty Yearlings Name Leader Be foregoing With Varsity to See Season's Last Contest "Heaven is blest with perfect rest, but the blessing of earth is toil." So sobbed the meek and weary freshmen of days past when they slept under a roof, they slowly creep to their shed at the end of each night's practice with the Varsity. But the "melancholy days have passed" and all is peace and joy in Tyroville. The yearlings' days of practice against the Varsity, their hours and murmurs and unimbing blocks for the more aggressive and experienced men, have passed. They now have nothing to look forward to but a trip to Columbia in a private car, the guests of the University of Kansas, and seat at the big Miesi-Kansas game Saturday, a reward of merit. The freshmen are going to have a good time on the trip; they're bound to! Anyone would to if he were traveling in a special car, meals in a big Pullman berth ready at night, a big seat in a bunch at the game. The freshmen are just going to have that much more fun. And they deserve it. A better crowd, a more willing crowd, a more capable bunch of yearlings have never turned out for Bond's eleven, and from Woods, and from Dulley and Hinshaw, the "freighters", in the line, every man on Bond's eleven promises to grow into splendid Varsity material. They have mixed with more seasoned players, they have learned the finer points about the game, the "tricks of the trade," and next year they will turn out for football in the fall, with three months of Varsity training, and a world of splendid experience behind them. After the game yesterday the freshies elected a captain, Walter Woods, their shifty litle quarter, the kid who came "clear from Illinois" to play football. The tyre made it clear that all the men stay in fair condition this winter, that they all turn out for spring training next May. Bond has picked the following men to take the trip: Ammons, Arnold, Burk, Gregg, Lindsey, Hide, Hide, Cowell, Kampert, McKone, Cowgill, Gray, Bohannon, Heath, and Thiele. UNIVERSITY CHEMISTS TO TELL ABOUT FLOUR Dean L. E. Sayre, Prof. E. H. S. Bailey, and Prof. W. S. Long will go to Topeka Monday to appear before the State Board of Health. The food department has been working for some time analysing flour on the board, but now he must make this meeting. The question will be decided whether flour which is bleached or matured by age is the best for family use. MISSOURI GAME CONTRACT HAS NOT YET ARRIVEI The contract for the M. U.-K. U. game at Columbia has not been received by Manager Hamilton yet. He left this morning for the Tiger camp and left word for it to be forwarded as soon as it arrived here. The K. U. Dana met at the home of Mrs. N. P. Sherwood yesterday afternoon. Tea and wafers were served. Those present were Mrs. Herbert Hungerford, Mrs. B. J. Clawson, Mrs. R. Yeonan, Mrs. M. Watson, Mrs. Glen Thore, Mrs. A. Winsor, Mrs. C. S. Stewart, Mrs. W. Doggett, and Mrs. McMillion. The guests were Mrs. J. A. Campbell, Mrs. U. G. Mitchell and Mrs. McCullough of Baldwin City. M. E. Society Meets Tonight The American Society of Mechanical Engineers will meet this evening at 7 o'clock in the home of Prof. F. H. Shay, 1407 Tennessee. The following program will be given: Cassier's magazine, Frank Benedict; A technical report, Fred Degen; The engineering News, Clyde Marvis; The industrial engineer, Jerry Stillwell. M. E. Society Meets Tonight K U Dames Meet Eugene McKone, of Tonganoxie has pledged Phil Delta Theta. HAWK WHAT'S THIS? AMERE HAWK BEATING MY RECORD 1913 1914 1925 1926 1928 1929 1930 1932 1935 MALUY FRESHMEN SHOULDN'T WEAR H. S. BADGES Student Council Ruling Forbids Little Pins Says Secretary Maloy NUMBER 50. "There has been considerable violation of the Student Council ruling against the wearing of high school pins," said Henry Maloy, secretary of the Meir's Student Council, today in the absence of President Dodd. "On page sixty-three of the new directory, will be found a rule to this effect: 'The sentiment of the Uni-commencement of high school pins and letters.' "Many freshmen and sophomores are disregarding this rule," says Maloy, "but the officers of the Council feel that it will be only necessary to call the attention of the students to the rule they served. The infringements are only by those who do not know of the rule, I think." "Every University has such a ruling," he continued, "and many are very strict in the enforcement of it. Most universities paddle the freshmen caught wearing the badge of his high school or the pin of some local literary society not known at the University. There is no penalty here for violation of the rule; students are put on their honor." The chief reason for the ruling, explained Maloy, is that the pins and letters mean nothing here at the University. Prof. D. C. Croissant Believes Secretary Of State Will Accept Invitation Unless the United States is involved in a war with Mexico or unless Congress has tied Secretary of States W. J. Bryan to his official chair by January 6, students of the university may hear him in chapel at that date. BRYAN MAY TALK HERE Secretary Bryan speaks at the Democratic State Banquet at Topeka January 5, and Prof. D. C. C. Annisle gives his closing speech, mites he will accept the invitation tendered him to speak in chapel the following day. The new conduits laid this summer made the poles unnecessary. Mr. Crocker says that the pole east of Snow hall has stood there since 1888. Three telephone poles standing in a line south from Snow hall originally used to carry the transmission wires which supplied light and power to the buildings each of Snow hall this morning. The wires were dead. Advisory Dean F. O. Marvin of the School of Engineering met his classes yesterday for the first time when he delivered a lecture to the freshman engineers. DEAN MARIN MEETS HIS CLASSES FOR FIRST TIME Old Poles Blown Down Lazy Bugs, Lazy Bugs; They're Coming To K.U. Prof. B. M. Allen of the zoology department expects soon to receive hookworm samples from the penitentiary at Leavenworth, Dr. Faulkner the prison physician suspects that the parasite which causes laziness is thriving in the prison and is going to have forty men tested. E. B. COWGILL DEAD End Came to Former University Instructor in Kansas City Mr. E. B. Cowill, a former instructor in the University and a widely known Kansas newspaper man, died Tuesday night at the Hotel Kupper in Kansas City, Mo. Mr. Cowill was 68 years old and had been in poor health for some time. Since leaving the University, where he was an assistant in the department of journalism and public agency for the extension department, he was appointed to the faculty in 1909 and served until the spring of 1912. "Mr. Cowgill was a fine man," said Dr. Strong today. "He did good work for the extension department." K. U. ENGINEERS REACH KEOOKU'S DAM SAFELY Special to the Kansan. Keoku, Ia., Nov. 18. —The party of forty-six engineers from the University of Kansas arrived in Keoku this morning from Kansas City. The men accompanied by six professors are on an inspection tour. Keoku will have lunch pointed in the artery. the trip will end Saturday at the Kansas-Missouri rame. The engineers met at the Union Station in Kansas City Monday evening, and after giving their assortment of Hyperbolic, Rock Chalk, etc., the whole bunch piled into one bed and they went to Mo., the home of William Jewell and gave the natives a bunch of rea vells. THEYLL PRAY, EAT AND ROOT FOR OLD KANSAS The entire Kansas alumni body at Schenectady, N. Y., consisting of twenty or thirty men will have their annual banquet on the night of the Kansas-Missouri game. This has been the custom for a number of years and, the affair being being spoken to the electrical engineers here at their regular meeting a few weeks ago. The alumni are anxious to obtain the result of the game at the earliest possible time and have arranged reports to mean to send reports from the field. KANSAS EDITOR TO TALK BEFORE NEWS CLASSES Charles H. Browne, editor of the Horton Headlight will address students of the department of journalism tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock on "The Business Side of the Newspaper." Visitors are invited. Vernon Bothe, a sophomore from Kiowa, was called to Topeka yesterday to be with his father, who was operated on there. SOCIOLOGISTS WILL INVESTIGATE GREEKS Department Will Send Questionnaire To Graduates On Fraternity Situation The department of sociology completed plans today to make a thorough investigation of the fraternity situation at the University and to formulate constructive criticism from its findings. The department will send out questionnaire to all graduates requesting an account of their peronal experiences and observation either as Greeks or independents as asked by the University whether there should be closer cooperation between the University and the fraternities. "Most of the recent discussion about fraternity and sorority life has been individual surface opinion," said Prof. V. E. Helleberg of the department of sociology this afternoon. "There has been no actual investigation of conditions. The department proposes to make a thorough and impartial examination of the problem. "As this is a matter of such vitai importance to the whole student world, it is assumed that every graduate and undergraduate will cooperate by throwing all the light on the problem. Due to the present time there has really been no adequate constructive criticism of the situation." TO DEBATE WASHBURN Cooley Club Accepts Challenge Of Blackstone Society Of Law School The Cooley club decided to accept the challenge of the Blackston Society of the Washburn Law School for a debate at its meeting yester day. A team will not be chosen until after the Varsity debating squad named, but the club will practice more questions in the meantime. Officers of the club are urging all members to come out and work. El Atenco Meets Tonight There will be a special meeting on El Ateneo, the Spanish club, at the home of Miss Ido O'Brien, 1106 Ohio street, this evening. This special meeting is made necessary because holidays break in on the regular week. All students enrolled in Spanish courses are requested to be present. Makes Nomenclature Address Dr. H. L. Vierce, who is making a classification of the Dr. Snow ontological collection, gave an address on "Nomenclature" before the Entomological club in the museum at 2:30 yesterday afternoon. Cloudy tonight and Friday Cooler west portion tonight. The Weather THEY'LL PUNISH THAT TIGER AT LAST RALLY Crowd Will Assault Him Tonight And Burn Him On Morrow KANSAS GIRLS WILL HELP Women to Assist in Cheering at Both Performances; Entire Campus Purchases Tags "The gang's all here" will be one of the favorite hymns at the big "On to Missouri" rally in the gymnasium tonight. The Jayhawkers, old and young, will all be there with pep to burn. Large numbers have purchased the little brown tags, others have broken dates, and the absent sign will have to be hung out at the entrance of the building to announce their intention to help begin the annual task of twisting the Tiger's tail. There will be something more than pep. Six of the best pugilists of the school will don the gloves: Oscar Dingman and Ute Smith; Dan Joseph and Lloyd Lockhart; Rob Bedington. Several artists will try the toe-hole on each other. The only entries announced are Early and Hume. Of course there will be speeches by the following: Uncle Jimmy Green and Dr. Burdick of the law school, Chancellor Strong, Registrar Foster and Parson Spotts. The Glee club will sing, the band play, and "Swede" Wilson will strum soothing melodies from his banjo. Another big rally will be staged tomorrow morning during chapel time. A number of carpenters have been working on the Tiger and he will be in fine shape for his annual incineration. This rally will be the last regular rally, except the send-off at the train Friday night. COUNTY CLUB PLANS CHRISTMAS BANQUET Wilson Students Will Have Feed and Basket-ball Game During Holidays Students from Wilson county met last night in room 110 Fraser and elected Russell Gear of Buffalo, president; Bion Beeber, of Neodesha, vice-president; and William S. Cady, of Fredonia, secretary-treasurer. After the election of officers, the matter of a gathering of University of Kansas students, past and present, was discussed. It was decided that a basket-ball game with the Fredonia high school five at Fredonia on the night of December 31 should be arranged for by the secretary, who is manager of the Wilson County team, and that further arrangements for a big banquet after the game should be made by a committee appointed for that purpose. The plates will be sol to the presenctors of the class of Blue and the senior classes of the Neodesha, Altona, Buffalo, and Fredonia high schools invited as guests. The proceeds from the basket-ball game will be used to cover the extra expense incurred in having the high school members there. BOARD GRANTS DEGREES AND NAMES ASSISTANTS The Board of Administration appointed the following student assistant yesterday; Edmund Greenfield, Raymond Beamer, Ruth Bottomly, Leo S. Brooks, Howard Phillips, A. K. Nelson, A. J. Fecht, Julia Moore, Clarence Smith, Elizabeth Morrow, Stanley Moore, George H. Vansell, W. M. Alberti, Lester A. Smith, Cora Downs, Miss Nadine Nowlin was raised to the rank of assistant professor in zoology. An appropriation of $300 was made for pellagra investigation by the department of entomology and state board of health, and an appropriation of $1500 a year for the next two years for work in connection with the biological sociology work in exterminating grass-hoppers. Degrees were granted to B. Alvin Ruth, George Chester Daum, Isaiah John Brook, Robert James Campbell, Frances Carter, Homer Hoyt, G. Francesco Holton Sewat Ealst, Alfreda Lindley Horner, and Marston E. Herrick. Send the Daily Kansan home. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSIY DAILY KANSAN The official student paper of the University Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF HERRBERT FLIE - - - - Editor-in-Chief GLENSON ALLYNVE - - - Associate Editor JONN C. MADDEN - - - Managing Editor LARSON LAUDIN - - - High School Editor High School Editor BUSINESS STAFF EAST BAY LORING...Circulation Manager JOHN BISHOP...Advertising REPORTIAL STAFF RANDOLPH KENNEDY R. D. PLEASANT Entered as second-blass mail matter lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of journalism. Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance; one term, $1.50. Phone, Bolt K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate students farther than merely printing the news by standing up for their opinions and giving no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be positive; to be more serious problems to usher heads; to be more aware of our ability the students of the University. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1913 Editorial assistants for today's paper, Frank O'Sullivan, Jack Greenies. News Editor, John Gielsen; assistants, Frank O'Sullivan, John Henry. Exchange editor, John M. Henry. Exchange editor, John M. Henry, Society reporter, Lucile Hildinger Agreeable advice is seldom useful advice —MASSILON. LOYALTY AND SELF-CONTROL TOURY The trip to Missouri is going to test something besides the loyalty of Kansas students to their team. It is going to test their manliness and self-control. We may as well speak frankly about this matter, because it comes up every time a team accompanied by a number of students, large or small, leaves the University for an outside town. The excitement of the trip and the holiday tend to make students "turn loose" or "throw the lid off". "We're in a strange town where no one knows us; let's have a time," is the feeling. Such will the Kansas roots face in going to Columbia Saturday, and it is going to take the courage of manly convictions to come back without some of us having broken over the bounds of propriety. Let's go to Missouri with self-control as well as loyalty. Yes, there are a few who will not behave; there always are. But their example should not encourage others to do the same; rather, it should serve as an incentive for the rest to act like University students twenty-one years old, able to vote and able to think. How shiftless that Missouri game will be, anyway, if Coach Frank doesn't use his famous system. K. U. SPIRIT AT COLUMBIA K. U. SPIRIT AT COLUMBIA Real Kansas spirit won the Missouri game last year. It is going to take that same spirit of confidence and strength to win it again this year, for the team and the Minnesota Shift are useless unless they have that real Kansas support back of them. Get out and root. You don't need to blush when you rise and take your hat off to your Alma Mater. You don't need to be quiet in the Rock Chalk, for fear some one will think your poor, little, croaked voice is out of harmony. If you're that kind of a rooter, get out. Kansas doesn't want you. Stand back of the team. Don't knock, because a few Nebraska men outplayed themselves and defeated us. And if there's any possible way for you to go to Columbia, go. A little sacrilege shows real spirit, and real spirit will win that game. The University of Missouri has now installed a chair of butchering, a story says. Better get shaved before you go. GOES ON FOREVER Not all of the University professors are optimists. Dean Olin Templin declares that there will be as many flunks for the same period of time, twenty years from now as there have been this semester. Or to express it in the words of a former K. U. post: As long as the grass keeps growing. ing. And as long as the rivers run The freshman will keep on flunking As freshmen have ever done. But the "Winners" will stay in the fight Till the battle of life is won. It is announced that there will be no training trip for the football men. Chances are that anybody who takes the steam cars to Columbia will think he has had "training" enough USE THAT SEAT The empty seats which wawn before the speaker who has been secured as an attraction at either the Tuesday or Friday morning chapel cannot be strictly designated as the student section, for a certain portion of them are at some time or another occupied by members of the faculty. It is agreed that members of the faculty should set the example for the student body. When the instructors absent themselves from the chapel exercises how can the undergraduates be expected to be promptly on hand for the bi-weekly assembles. The Tuesday and Friday morning chapel should not be regarded as long-faced affairs. They are the best get-together occasions. University Council favors changing hour of beginning of afternoon classes from 1:30 to 1:00. Has it forgotten that it takes the ordinary boarding house "fodder" an hour or more to digest? WEARING YOUR HAT? A number of students appear to think that their hats should be kept continuously upon their heads whether they are on the inside or outside of the University buildings. Ignoring for the moment the great danger of premature baldness arising out of this practice, it may yet be safely said that the practice is bad. University training does not stop with the mastering of a few catalogue subjects and the gaining of a sheepskin, but should cloth the finished scholar with the niceties of social etiquette so as to help him to meet situations arising in his future career. Habits unconsciously acquired and permitted undue license, in time prove difficult to overcome. It is the little things that count in a man's life. Should not a gentleman doff his hat in the presence of a lady, his superior, instructor, or chief, and at the entrance of the home, place of business and college hall? Is it a safe bet that the student who wrote to the Daily Kansan knocking the smokers takes a little chew of pepsin gum on the side once in a while. OUR DAILY QUIZ Use honor system and grade yourself LANGUAGE Philology? There are many hundreds, but certain groups of them are so like one another, that the members of each group may use that variety of names for a variety of one of them.3 What is meant by *a* "patiot?" "Patois" is a French term for the corrupt dialect spoken by the illiterate class, which is rarely seen in literature. 4 - What is meant by the Aperephpha? In 1535, by Miles Coverdale; but the New Testament and a part of the Old had been executed a few years previous to Tyndale. It is the science which treats of the nature and relations of languages. 2- How many languages are there in the world? It was a preparation of the system of the papyrus, an Egyptian plant, used as a writing instrument; the word paper is derived from the papyrus. The video is Video 2. The Apoerpyra is from a Greek word, which means that which is hidden, but latterly anything which is spurious, or false, or without authority; it is not applied to certain persons which have the power to the canon of Scripture as being of doubtful authenticity, or not worthy to be included in the Holy Bible. They are the most ancient and most authoritative Hindu books on religious subjects. They are in Sanscript. What is an Ode? Ode is from the Greek, and signifies literally a song, but it is applied specially to verses or songs which consist of personal addresses to persons or things. 5- When was the first English version of the whole Bible executed? 9- What is the libretto of an opera? It is the words of the piece which is one word in the libretto on; another word the libretto is Italian for "a little book." 10— I rhume ancien? the papyrus. 7—What are the Vedas? It has been known from the earliest times; but the systematic use of final rhymes, was first introduced in the Latin hymns of the Middle Ages. IF I SHOULD DIE TONIGHT I'll should die tonight. And you should come to my cold corpse and say, you should come in deepest grief And we all are waves of white orchid Weeping and heartstick over my lifeless clay ove. I might arise in my large white cavat And say "What's that?" If I should die tonight And you should come to my cold corpse Clasping my bier to show the grief你 feel me, I say, if I should die tonight And you should come to me and then, and there Just you knit 'bout paying me that ten, I might arise the white, But I'd drop dead again. BEN KING. RE-DISCOVERING SCOTT By Richard Le Gallienne The man who is his own worst enemy seldom buries the hatchet,—N. Y. Times. I suppose that to be caught red-handed with Scott is most incriminating of al. Dickens and Thackeray a man may still read and escape the suspicion of secondhand blood. But Scott's support in suppose that when we period when we felt like that. Probably it was what we might call our Meredith period—generally our formative, fermenting period, when we were busy finding ourselves spiritually and mentally, impatiently shattering the world, which we had been reared, and feverishly rebuilding another, nearer to the heart's desire. Scott is not for such periods. He is for the boy, and the grown man. For the intermediate evolution and revolution adolescent, he seems wingless, filamentless, lacking in sidal fire. The romanticism which charmed the boy seems a plaything and the humanity which holds the man seems earth-born. ed. Here, says the young impatient, draws as if natural; and flies off somewhere in search of the thrill, the ache, the rapture of life. He reads the fashionable doctors of the soul, inevitably fascinated by sunny brilliant quacks of the mind, drawn as if natural, by flashing novelty in utterance, which he fondly takes for newly sounded profundities. All is so new, so amazing. Because he is living life for the first time, it never occurs, because that it is lived in almost precisely the same manner by that old fogy, who, in a world of radium and airplanes, not to speak of "eugenics," is discovered in the criminal enjoyment of Scott. But I must not sound too superior. It is comparatively only the other day that I re-discovered Scott for myself. I had come to the end of Dumas for the third or fourth time, and, happening to take themselves, I had asked myself—"Is it possible to read Scott nowadays?" I determined to try, and, for the good fortune of my experiment, I lighted on the "Fortunes of Niegel." It was, indeed, a fortunate movement. What a vivid, real world I found myself in! What character, what movement, what effect? I tried "Quentin Durward," then "Rob Roy." We are supposed to have improved on the historical novel since Scott's day. In certain minor matters of artistry, doubtless, we have. Yet, I should like to know what we have to match those three full-blooded, high-mettled, wise-hearted people, myself, Mr Maurie Hewlett's willing slave. But, after all, whatever class of book we are dealing with, it is the man behind the book that counts, that finally decides its relative caller.-Harper's Weekly. RISIBLE REMARKS FOR THE SOMBRE STUDENT Poetry, it is declared, is about the worst-paid form of writing. That may be true regarded from a standpoint of dollars and cents, but the man who can get a poem out of his system should feel that he is pretty well paid for his efforts—Toledo Blade. Why She Sang Ministerial Friend (on a visit)—wonder what makes your mamma so happy today? She is singing all over the house. Little Mary; I dess she's thought of something to do. "Happy Birthday," Happer's Magazine. "Jest as he am, Pahson," said the muscuar, colored scrub-lady, "j Jest as he am. Ef he gits any betah Abll know de good Lawd's a-gwine that “Susannah,” said the preacher, when it came her turn to answer the questions. “does you take dis man to be yawning; wedded husband, for better marriage.” "All right dear, remind me of it again; this is only Tuesday. I am here on Post." "Papa, I want an ice-cream sun-nd The farmer feeds the chickens. The woman stands nearby, holding a basket. In the background, two children watch from behind a fence. Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx YOU know what's coming: the annual feast-day is almost here; the bird is prepared to do his part. You can probably manage it successfully, but we suggest that you leave the "dressing" to us. We'll dress you in our special Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes; you'll be dressed right, too. If you need full dress, or Tuxedo, or frock suit, we'll see that you have the right thing. If you prefer to be in "everyday" attire, or if you want a good overcoat, here's the place to get what you need. Dress or Tuxedo suits, $35 and up. Sack suits, $18 and up. Overcoats, $18 and up. Six styles special $15 Serge Suits, silk lined. PECKHAM'S This store is the home of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes, Emery Shirts Regal Shoes BOWERSOCK THEATRE Monday and Tuesday Nights, Nov. 24-25 The GENUINE EDISON TALKING PICTURES MARY C. BROWN THOMAS A. EDISON "Their Majesties expressed great delight."—London Daily Chronicle Prices Parquet, 50c 1st 3 rows Balcony, 50c Next rows balcony, 35c All 2nd Balcony, 25c SEATS ON SALE AT WOODWARD & CO. One performance nightly beginning 8:15 p. m. Presented on the Edison Kinetophone by Edison Kinetophone Company Exhibited July 10, 1913 before the King and Queen of England Notice Students O. P. Leonard's Pantatorium is on the job again this year. Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 501, Home 180 We Give Club Rates 841 Mass. St. Upstairs. Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Lawrence Pantatorium W. Warner Bath Place 500 1120 Grand Ave. Kansas City, Mo. Send for our Catalogue. for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantee eachbuyer of an article bearing the Spalding Trade-Mark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. SPALDING & BROS SPALDING TRADE MARK A "Square Deal" Mister Dooley Says: "Whiniver annybody offers to give ye somethin' fr nawthin' or somethin' fr less thin it's worth, or more fr somethin' thin it's worth, don't take any chances-yell fr a policeman." Remember this when arranging for your pantatorium work. Our prices are not the cheapest but our work will please you. Punch ticket, 10 pieces, $1.50. Orders taken for International clothes. CLARK LEANS LOTHES Phone Your Order 730 Mass. St. Pies at the lunch room in Fraser. -Adv. 50-3 Coffee at the lunch rom in Fraser. -Adv. 50-3 Senior laws—I have a number of Willistons账务 on Bankruptcy to be used next quarter. J. D. R. Miler, 1041 Vt., Phone 2511 B-. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Week End Bargains at the Innes Store Just to stimulate the week end sales we are offering the following specials for FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY. CHRISTMAS RIBBONS. 20 pieces of fancy wide ribbons for all purposes, beautiful patterns, 40 to 50c values, see window, a vard. 25c PERRINS MENDED KID GLOVES Not all sizes but a fairly good line of sizes and colors, the $1.25 and $1.50 values, Friday morning a pair ... 69c SILKS—SILKS—SILKS— 200 years of plain and fancy silks, including 36 in. fancy chiffon taffetas, neat check and stripe patterns, 27 in. two tone satin De-Luxe, very heavy quality, 27 in. fabrics and 36 in. brocaded crepe chiffon, 36 in. black taffeta, etc., all values, ranging from $1.00 to $1.50 a yard, these goods on sale Friday morning at a yard. . . . . . . . . WOOL DRESS GOODS WOOL DRESS GOODS 100 pieces of 50 in. 40 in. all wool dress goods, all colour and black silvers, cashmere, veilings, tamee, challies, etc, goods worth up to 75c on Sale Friday morning, at a yard. 42c SUIT ROOM SPECIALS Sport coats in chinchillas, astrachan and duve- tyne, blue, green, red and cerise, $18 values at each. . . . . **PLAID SKIRTS** Just received late shipment newest styles in peg top and twine effect . . . . . . . . . . $10, $7.50, $6.50 THANKSGIVING LINKS Sale pricing on linens, towels, ready made sheets, will be discontinued after Saturday; better look after your supplies now and save a few dollars. Come Friday morning. In Mrs. Bulline Hackman Just received a fresh shipment of reception sticks at Wiedemann's.— Adv. 49 JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTIONS AT GRIGTS, 16ws.—Adact. 49-3 Middle laws—See my list of Quasi- Conduct Books to be used the next quarter. J. D. R. Miller, 1041 Vt. Phone 2511 B—Adv. 45-5 to JIM'S Tonight 101 Mass. St. Come on Down ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS All "time" subscriptions for the University Daily Kansan taken at the beginning of the school year are DUE NOW. Ray Eldridge, Circulation Manager. JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGGS, 103—Adav. 49-3 If the young men who play the cornet on Ohio, Oread and Kentucky at late hour each evening will call them up to offer advice and learn something to their advantage. The Anderson County club will meet Friday evening at 7:15 shire, Myers. Every member is urged to be present. Important work to be done. Debating team tryouts Wednesday, December 3 and December 17. All candidates must appear in the first try-out except those who have been on intercollegiate teams for K. U. A sacred concert will be given in the chapel of Fraser hall next Sunday afternoon in charge of the Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. The University Glee club and orchestra will vocal solos by students will also be on the program. All student and faculty members are invited. Students, faculty members and employees of the University may be inoculated for typhoid fever Friday afternoon until January 4. Snow hall. The inoculation is given free of charge and requires only a short time. Sigma Xi, national scientific honorary fraternity will meet at the home of Prof. C. M. Young, 1227 Ohio, Thursday night. The address of the evening will be given by Prof. C. A. Shull on the subject, "A Method of Measuring Surface Forces in Soils." On account of the rally Thursday evening the election of officers in the K. U. Debating society will be postponed on the first Thursday after the holidays. The 96th regular meeting of the Kansas City Section of the American Chemical Association will be held at the National Library building, Saturday at 3 p. m. All announcements or items for the University calendar either for the coming week or for future events should be given to Mr. Cronemeyer, at the department of journalism office, by 4:30 p.m. Friday. It is desired to make the calendar a complete schedule of University events and the co-operation of those interested is requested. NOTICE All persons going to Columbia should secure tickets for the game at once. On sale, 203 Robinson Gymnastium, 10 to 12 o'clock and 2:30 to 5:30 or at Carroll's. Bleacher seats $2.00. Box seats $2.50. These are choice seats. There will be a few kept to be sold on the train but as we can only keep a FEW it will be best to get them before leaving time. Seats gotten at Columbia will not be as good. Tickets will be in charge of Mr. Lindsay on the train. W. O. HAMILTON Thanksgiving postcards 5c per dozen at Hoadleys 17 W. Warren.— Adv. Special! Brown bread ice cream, at Wiedemann's—Adv. 49 JAYHAWK-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGGS, 10cts—Adv. 49-3 Juniors laws—a Number of second hand Meeches Outlines and cases on Agency. You will need them next quarter. J. D. R Miller, 1041 Vt., Phone 2511 Bell—Adv. 45.5 JYAHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGGS, 10cts—Adv. 49-3 See the New Parker Self-Filling Fountain Pen Office Supplies, Typewriters F. I. CARTER 25 Mass. Bell phone 1051 A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. Brunswick Bowling Alley Four Regulation Allies with loop-the-loop return. 714 Mass. About 2,000 Missourians came to Lawrence last year. SHOW THEM that Kansas can support its team. It will be necessary to buy round trip tickets to secure benefit of $5.35 rate. Returning, Special Train will leave Columbia 10 p.m. arriving at K.C. about 7 a.m. and Lawrence about 8 o'clock Sunday morning. SAM S. SHUBERT FOOTBALL ON TO COLUMBIA! Tiger Hunt SPECIAL TRAIN Via Santa Fe With K. U. Band, Team, Subs, and Rooters will leave Santa Fe Depot at 9 p.m.sharp,Friday,Nov.21st.Will arrive at Columbia via Wabash at 7 a.m.Saturday. Through cars.Train equipped with Santa Fe's most modern equipment, also Tourist and Standard Sleepers. BE GAME For further information call either phone 32 or address W. W. BURNETT, Agent. Standard Pullman, Lower Berth $2.00. Tourist lower,$1.00. Upper berths, 20 per cent less R.R. Fare $5.35 for Round Trip Matinees Wednesday and Saturday LITTLE WOMEN PROTSCH The College Tailor Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 Vermont Phone 189 Santa Tra KENNEDY & ERNST 820 MASS. ST. PHONES 341- Chafing dishes, casseroles, coffee machines and percolators. The finest line of metal and wood serving trays in the ROYAL ROCHESTER SAVE THE PIECES We have added Lens Grinding Machinery to our Optical department. Any Lens Duplicated Glasses Fited. HESTER Jeweler and Optician, Bius Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. W. H. Quakenbush, Pres.; E. S. Weatherby, Supt. Symphony Lawan Paper Correct Sizes and Shapes 50c Boxes and Sold At McCOLLOCK'S Drug Store. LAWRENCE BUSINESS COLlege Lawrence, Kansas. FeaturingMilk Chocolates "SWEDE" THE Topeka Capital Delivered Daily from 6 to 7:30 a.m. 10 CENTS PER WEEK JAS. G. ALLEN, Agent Phone 911 MAINF PROFESSIONAL CARDS JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGGS, 10s.—Adv. 49-3 HARRY REDING. M. D. Eve ear, nose and chin. 602-349-8000. A. N. A. and chrysanthemum. B131. Home 513. Hotel 602. W. C. MCCONNELL, Physician and Median Residence, 1304 N. 14th St. Hoboken, NJ 07032. 1346 Tenn. Hosp. Beth, NJ 07032. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist Office 602 Mass. St. Bell phone 605.1 G. A HAMMAN M. D. Eyes, ear, car, throat speech. Dianne PARKER Sats- tia Ann LINDEN Dick Building. DR. H. L. CHAMBERLS. Office over Squires' Studio. Both phones. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. W. G. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diasseus of Bute, R.I., Boston University, Readison, 1200 N. 6th St., Bute, R.I. J. W. O'BRYON, Dentist. Over Wilson A Drug Store. Bail Phone 507. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D. D. O. 833 Mass Street. Both phones, office and desk. DR. H, T. JONES, Room 12 F. A, F. Bldg. Residence 1130 Tenn. Phone 2115. DR. H, L. CHAMPSERS. Office over Studio, Room. Both phones. DR. BURT R. WHITE Osteopath, Phones, Bell 938, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. St. S. T. Gillippe, M. D. O'Neil, corper Vermont 867, Residence, 728 Indiana St. Phone 609 CLASSIFIED E. J. Blair, Physiology and Surgery. Obsolete from 300 to 900 m³, ml; 4 to 14, in mm³; not used for the 200 m³ dose. Barbers J. C. Houk's Barber Shop, 913 Mam- sie Street. Barber shops in Charsle- chow to have waltz. Frank Iii' barber's Barber Shop. 1025 Mass. Two good, barber. Satisfaction assured. Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co., for gas Phones Kennedy Mazda impares. 937 Mass. Phones 858. Prices reasonable, work the best. Let us assist you in your project. 429    T&O    Co.    416. Mass. St. 429 Ladies Tailors Mrs. Ellison Dressmaking and Ladies Johnson & Garl. Phones 2411, over Johnson & Garl. Ladies Tailoring and Dressmaking. Gowns for all occasions. All work guaranteed. Mrs. T. B., Daily. 914 Mass. Sanitary cleaning establishment in connection. Phone Lawrence Swearing School, Leduc Jr.'s tailoring class. Nassau County High School, Phi 550. Miss Powers. M c McClarra- Queen City College. System and sewing school. Mr. B. Haskins, school schore, Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 KY, Bell Hair Dressers Miscellaneous D & M sporting goods and athletic supplies. D & M sporting goods & Brist. 326 Mass. S. Phones. Sports & Athletics. Sporting Goods Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-goods, "Marianna," hair-appointments, to appoint the patient call Bell 1372. Hone, 1872. The Select Hair Dress Shop, 927 Mass Bt. Riwatha Cafe for regular meals, lunch and dinner when down town. Open after the show. Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and 717. Sales of Jewelry, Bell Phone 717. 717 Mass One trial means no risk, small investment, fine working. I use a camera, smoke W. T. W. bamboo mimicked him smoke. I have a nice line of plain china for painting at the Berkeley studio 733 Mass. St. upwards. Estancia Studio 733 Mass. St. upwards. Student's Co-op Club. $2.50 to $3.00 per week, 1:40 a.m. Geo.H. Vansell Steward. LOST—Suit of clothes by K. U. Pantatorium. Kindly call Bocker 2764 Bell. 47-3* WANTED-Board and room for man near campus. Address X Y, D, Z. LOST-A solid gold watch charm, with the following engraved on it: H. C, from the Invincible H. Club. Return to H. C. 754. Street. 19-3 LOST—On Lee between Myers hall and 1237 Louisiana, a lilly bud candle holder belonging to a brass head. Finder please return to 1237 Oread. LOST-A gold 32nd degree bar pin. Return to Kanson office. French Flannel Shirts With collar attached or with separate soft collar to match. A splendid assortment at $1.50 Others up to $2.50 See the latest in nifty, fancy plaited shirts in the small window, or better still, come in and look at them. The price is $1.50 Other shirts in plaited or neglige priced at 75c, $1.00, and $1.50. M. J. SKOFSTAD GOOD CLOTHES 829 Mass. St. JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGTS, 10cts—Adv. 49-3 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE OREAD Cafeteria and Tea Room We are serving over twenty different steaks and chops. Over fifty desserts for each meal. Fountain--Candy--Cigars QUALITY First—Always 1241 OREAD TRAIN SERVICE Columbia and Return for Mo.-Kans. Football Game VIA Union Pacific $5.35 Round Trip Leave Lawrence Arrive K. C. 3.05 p. m. 4.15 p. m. 5.52 p. m. 7.20 p. m. Special train via Wabash leaves K. C. 11.45 Friday night, arriving Columbia 7.00 a.m. Take either afternoon train from Lawrence, attend one of the theaters and leave on the Wabash Special, carrying chair cars, tourist and standard sleepers. Returning Special leaves Columbia 10.00 p. m. and arrives K. C. 6.00 a. m. U. P. Connections Leave K. C. Arrive Lawrence 8.05 a. m. 9.31 a. m. 10.30 a. m. 11.32 a. m. K. C. Theatrical Attractions: GRAND, One Woman's Life. SHUBERT, Little Women. Vaudeville, Orpheum. Hippidrome, Globe. For further information and reservations PHONE E. E. ALEXANDER CITY TICKET AGENT NO. 5 Social Notes - * * The Acoth sorority has pledged Dorothy Keeler and Ethel Keeler of Lawrence. The Delta Phi Delta art sorority met with Gladys Nelson at her home, 1340 Kentucky street Tuesday afternoon. After a discussion of the life and works of Rembrandt a dainty luncheon was served. The Kappa Kappa Gamma soror- ON SALE TODAY Ladies Home Journal Christmas number. "Nuf Sed" The Criterion Ladies Home Journal styles Christmas number Saturday Evening Post 60 pages GOOD reading New serial by E. Phillips Oppenheim The Country Gentleman 50 pages Considerable about grafting This ought to be interesting to some of you. GRIGGS Curtis Agency 827 Mass. it entertained the Phi Kappa Ps1 fraternity from 7 to 8 last evening. The Phi Delta Theta fraternity will give a Victoria party Sunday. The Achoth sorority entertained the Sigma Phi Sigma fraternity last night from 7 to 8. Mr. E. P. Sample, of San Diego, Cal., and Mr. Milton Kane, of Atchison, were guests at the Phi Gam house Monday. The following members of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity will be guests of Columbia next week: Blair Hackney, Randolph Kennedy, Mead Irwin, Jack Challiss, John Miller, Frank Bunn, Mayerndan Hallace, Maynard Egald, Ralph Bennett, Webster Kimbal, Donald Cooper, Herbert Sellers, Jimmy Parker, Charles Greenlees. The Alpha Tau Omega fraternity will give a party at the chapter house, Dec. 6. The Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will entertain the Phi Delta Theta fraternity from 7 to 8 tonight. Miss Vedia Rowland, of Parsons, and Miss Beatrice Betourney of Concordia are guests at the Chi Omega house. ** Miss Grace Davis, of Hutchinson, is a guest of her sister, Beulah Davis at the Kappa house. Miss Marie Fogarty, of Junction City, is visiting at the Kappa house his week. Samuel T. Seaton, executive clerk of Governor Hodges, is a guest at the Phi Gam house. CHICAGO ALUMNI TO CELEBRATE VICTORY Northern Grads To Get Returns From Tiger Game At Banquet Chicago alumni of the University of Kansas will celebrate in that city Saturday evening after the Kansas-Missouri game. Invitations were sent out this week for a smoker and dinner at the Grand Pacific hotel. Returns from the game will be received at the dinner by Howard Yekoft, who is the first time that alumni of the University of Kansas have met in Chicago. The committee in charge of the dinner is composed of Burton Sears, Howard Wykoff, Lawrence Browne and Robert Fisher. Those who will be present at the celebration are Roland Athay, "Cub" Baer, Lawrence Browne, Victor Chesky, Herbert Cowan, Elman Dittmar, F. H. Ellis, Robert Fisher, Thomas Gownicken, J. W. Harris, Homie Johnson, John Hoyt, August Keebrel, John Lovett, Malcolm McNaughton, Karl E. Moore, "Doc" Minor, Warren Miller, "Doc" Pleasanton, Charles Robinson, Thomas Stevenson, "Doc" Tywman and Ed. Van Houten. DR. CRUMBINE TO HELP U. S. STOP RADIUM FAKE Dr. S. J. Crumbine of the School of Medicine has received a request from the federal pure food and drug department to help carry on a campaign against a number of companies selling purported medicinal waters, having the property of radioactivity from springs. These waters, when fresh, frequently have valuable medicinal properties, but these qualities, according to Dr. Crumbine, generally are lost in a few hours after the water is exposed to light or air. Throughout the state of Kansas the companies will be apprehended by the state officials on the charge of misbranding. The water is shipped into the state in tank cars as common water. Leather goods in coin purses, card cases, letter and bill books, ladies' hand bags, collar bags, manicure, toilet, and writing sets. See them in north window—Wolf's Book Store. --Adv. 50-2 LOST—Conklin's fountain pen, Tuesday morning on Adams street, between Tennessee street and Chemistry building. Finder call Bell 1378. JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGTS, 10cta—Adv. 39-3 Did you know we had books, pictures, mottoes, calendars, novelties, hand-painted China ware and senate books? Wolf's Book Store—Adv. 50-2 LOST-Coral bar pin. Return to Kappa Alpha Theta house. LOST—Pair of ladies' brown dog- skin gloves, with initials I. R. on inside. Phone Bell 1241. Brown bread ice cream a whole meal, at Wiedemann's—Adv. 49 Ladies, you will meet with courteous treatment at the lunch room in Fraser.—Adv. 50-3. Kead your own KANSAN. Copyright by Garson Meyer Superior-Tailored Clothes Rochester, NY "Rip 'Em Up" Kansas —and "Good Luck" to all you K. U. men at Columbia Saturday And Remember, Team Work Counts Yes Sir:- Regardless whether it's smashing the line, cheering from the rooters' stand or selling good clothes it is Team Work that counts. The Team's received the best of coaching. So have the Rooters, that is, in "whoopin' her up" and now they need their final coaching on APPEARANCE. Let us do it. That's where our Team Work comes in. Spend half an hour tomorrow slipping into a few of the totally different suit and overcoat styles we are selling so fast this season. We'll coach you as to the newest fabrics and styles. Our tailor will coach them into a perfect fit. There's lots of 'em up to the minute in style at $15.00 and $17.00 and the finest assortment you have ever seen at $20.00 $25.00 and $30.00. Special showing of new winter ideas in furnishings— Hats, Caps, Shoes. Just in time for Thanksgiving and Homecoming Week. TAKE a PEEK at OUR WINDOWS Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUT FITTERS You'll meet all your Classmates AT THE SOPHOMORE BUM Monday, 8 p. m., Robinson gymnasium For all Sophs-Men and Women Tickets 25 cents Girls Free JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS T GRIGGS, 10cts.—Adv. AT GRIGGS, 10cts.—Adv. AT GRIGGS, 10cts.—Adv. 49-3 49-3 49-3 REYNOLDS BROS. FOR ICE CREAM AND ICES Bell 645 Home 358 Motor Delivery 1031 Mass. STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. NUMBER 51. TIGERS IN SHAPE TO MAKE GREAT FIGHT --- UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 21, 1913 Missouri Goes Through Last Practice and Rests Before Battle BREWER ANNOUNCES LINE-UP Coach Picks Men to Start Game Placing a Majority of Veterans on Team Columbia, Mo., Nov. 21, (1:00 p.m.) The Varsity football team practice yesterday for the last game in preparation for the big game with the Jayhawkers Saturday, and man for man for the Tigers look in good shape to give the Kansas athletes the battle of their lives. Late this morning Coach Brewer announced what will be probably the official line-up for the game. It includes: L. E. Speedman, T. E. Gallegue; R. G. Clay, R. T. Groves; R. E. Herdon; Q. M. Williams; L. H. Shepard or Wiggins; R. H., Moore or Lake; F. Wilson or Dunckel. The above eleven is the best Missouri can recruit. But Brewer thinks it's good enough. The line contains some old beads, a new few. The backfield is almost a "standat" on last year's, the only change being Moore for Lemire, and Wilson for Knobel. Kansas outweighs Missouri a little; Brewer thinks his team will make this up in speed. The team has been drilled thoroughly in the various formations of the Minnesota Shift, and is letter perfect in all of them. If the weather is fair the pigers are playing well if the field is in poor condition straight football will be reserved to. Gallegher at center seems to fill ably the gap left open by the transfer of Chuck Wilson to the back- field. Gallegher is the biggest man on the team and a whale on the defense. Columbia itself is on big edge over the approach of the "one big game." Old grads, alumni of former years, are pouring in, and the town is buzzing already with enthusiasm. The motto around town today is "Beat Kansas or to town," but signs aim to will greet the Jayhawks when they pull in Saturday morning. The routers will always remember the reception they got at Lawrence last year, and are trying their best to reciprocate. MONEY MAKES THE PAPER GO, HE SAYS Charles H. Browne, Editor of Horton Headlight—Commercial, Tells Students Needs of Efficiency Charles H. Browne, editor of the Horton Headlight-Commercial, addressed the classes in journalism this morning on "The Business Side of the newspaper." He emphasized the importance of the newspapers that would be possible to govern the editorial policy of the paper in an independent manner. Mr. Browne spoke of the vast advantage the students of journalism have over 95 per cent of the newspaper men in Kansas by feeling the knowledge of the cost system and practical experience in reporting. "Newspaper men fail because they are not prepared to handle all departments of the paper; Ive been in the game fifteen years and find you'll learn by hard knocks if you don't get your experiences here in school," was the way Mr. Browne summed up his experiences. LEAVENWORTH COUNTY CLUB WILL HOLD BANQUET The Leavenworth County K. U. club will hold its second annual banquet at the National Hotel in Leavenworth, December 29. Tickets may be obtained of W. A. Lambert, Sig Alpha house; Arthur J. O'Keefe, 1231 Tennessee St.; Miss Ruth Litchi, Sigma Kappa house; Miss Luella Cory, Westminster hall. There were fifty-four at the banquet last year, and this year the club hopes to make it seventy-five. Prof. C. A. Dykstra left for Lyona today where he will speak tonight on "Commission Form of Government for Cities," before an open session of the Federation of Women's Clubs. TIGER SIZZLES WHILE ALL KANSAS CHEERS Chapel Crowd Witnesses Annual Ceremony When the Beast Is Cremated DOSSE SENDS US GOOD NEWS Telegram Says: "Team in Good Shape. Expect Victory"—Special Leaves at 9 O'clock "Team in good condition and ready for battle. James and Bishop in lineup. Expect victory. Arthur S. Mose." This is the telegram which delighted students and set them rally-wild at this morning's chapel, "Uncle Jimmy" Green, Prof. Merle Thorpe, and Registrar George Foster made the enthusiasm speeches of the morning. Immediately after the graduation ceremony, the rallied around a huge bonfire given for the benefit of the Tiger in front of Fraser. To burn the Missouri Tiger is the custom of Kansas Jayhawkers just before they slip over into Missouri to give the Tiger team a drubbing. A fierce looking painted beast was given a position on a stack of boxes; the cheer leaders touched a match, and the rally began. There was no sympathy for the Tiger. He saw only an angry face, "no one! O my!" A prolonged "Rock Chalk, Jayhawk, K. U." was his dead knel. The K. U. special for Columbia will leave tonight at nine o'clock. The cheer leaders expect the entire student body at the depot to increase the amount of enthusiasm taken into Missouri. The special will return to Laverne and the team will be set with the proper Kansas spirit and taken to the Eldridge hotel in the tally-ho. Crowd Gives Good Vocal Blacking to Tiger's Eyes The crowd at the rally in the gym last night, wound up that Tiger's tail with as much enthusiasm as the Thundering Thousand ever did in years past. Several hundred students left their lessons to spend a couple of hours blacking Missouri's eye. "Athletes have changed wonderfully in the twelve years that $ \uparrow $ have been at K. U.," declared Chancellor Strong in opening the oratory. "When I came here we had the big excitement of winning, but nothing was to win from Oklahoma, the Anglers, Washburn, Missouri, or Nebraska. But now things are different. All these teams have fine coaches. The schools are larger and consequently better men are available for the teams. Therefore, I say that K. U. can win half the fun she will be getting her share of the fun." Then Uncle Jimmy arose. Then, ohhere jimmy! we would beat Nebraska," he said, "but we lost—because—well, let us say because the field was muddy. But that is all past now. It is our time to tweak it a bit more. I hope we can have a chance at it since last fall." Doctor Burdick was sure the team would win and told the fellows that the expense of the trip to tumble in front of a camera times over by the happy memories of later years. The only point not cleared up by Doctor Burdick was whether the boys should paw their knees when they fall and or bum their way on a freight train. Parson Spotts described the good old days when school spirit was different. He also suggested some sort of recognition for cheer leaders in the future, a swater with suitable emblem was advocated. Two boxing and two wrestling bouts sandwiched between speeches gave spice to the tail twisting af-fair. A seven-sheet calendar will be put on sale about the first of December by the Y. W. C. A, containing pies and unusual scenes around the campus. Y. W. C. A. WILL ISSUE XMAS POUCH CALENDAR The pictures will be different from those of last year and the price of the booklet will be fifty cents. The answer will be awarded the support of the Y, W, C, A. The Weather Forecast: Fair tonight; fair and colder tomorrow. Only Two Things Can Stop the Hawk JAYHAWK CROSSES BORDER AND RESTS ON TIGER SOIL IF YOU HELP THAT CAT OUT THERE'S GOING TO BE TROUBLE MATTEN MAN SLUSH MALGY K. U. TO GIVE THANKS AT VESPER SERVICE Students and Faculty Wi Gather in Chapel Sunday for Holiday Program The Thanksgiving giver services of the University will be held in Fraser hall at 3:30 Sunday in charge of the Y. M. C. A, and the W. Y. C. A. A good program has been arranged and an afternoon of good music promised. The public is invited to attend these services. The following program will be given by students and faculty members: Dexcelogy; prayer, The Rev. N. S. Elderkyn; hymn 333; organ solo, In The Chilied; Y. M. C. A. toucher "To the Angel," Y. M. C. A. quartet; "Harcarole," University Orchestra; "To the Angels," Miss Cora Reynolds; violin solo, Florence Cook; "Unfold ye Portal's," University Men's Glee club; "My God and Father, While I Pray." Davie R. Williams will read the Thanksgiving proclamation and the Rev. Wm. A. Powell will give the benediction. DISTRICT CHEMISTS TO HOLD CAMPUS SESSION The ninety-sixth regular meeting of the American Chemical Society Kansas City Section will be held in the Chemistry building tomorrow at This meeting is always attended by many chemists who have made their mark in the scientific world. Several chemists from the packing companies and soap companies of Kansas City will be present at this meeting. Prof. L. E. Sayre who has been instrumental in discovering a number of fraudulent medicines throughout the state will read a paper on "Medical Fraud as exposed by the FDA and Pharmaceutical Methods." W. J. Reese, chemist of Pect Bros., Manufacturing Company of Kansas City will give some rules and specifications governing the transaction in soap making materials. Subscribe for the Daily Kansan. SOPHOMORE CLASS WILL HOLD A "BUM" What's That? It's a Smoker Minus Smoke Plus Girls Monday Night The first sophomore bum will be held Monday evening in Robinson gymnasium at 8 o'clock. As this was the only available date before Christmas, the W. S. G. A. removed the mid-week rule for the occasion. What is a bum? Ans. A bum is a person of the class. A bum is dancing of course, and the program of a smoker, without smoking of course. The program is not entirely completed but numbers already anounced are, a mandolin quartet, a male quartet, a talk by Kate and Florence Cook, and readings by Helen Woolsey and a well-known imported reader. The class numerals won by the football and track men last year will be presented by Tony James, who will tell the memorial plans to the class. GEOLOGY CLASS WILL GO ON TOUR OF INSPECTION Prof. J. E. Todd will take his geology classes on an investigation tour Saturday morning. All the classes will meet at the library at 9 o'clock. They will first study some works of nature on the campus and will then go to the brick yard. From the brick yard they will go to the river bridge which can be seen from the stream which can be seen from the bridge. All the members of the class, who make the trip will be allowed extra credit . Student Volunteers to Meet Students interested in the Student Volunteer Movement will meet Sunday at 3 o'clock in my hall. The University of Kansas organization of Student Volunteers will have seventeen delegates at the International meeting in Kansas City January 1 to 4. All of the delegates will be students except Miss Mollie Carroll, Con Hoffman, and W. O. Hamilton. Send the Daily Kansan home. Detwiler and James Ready to Appear When Called; Rest of Men in Fine Condition Former Kansas-Missouri Scores TEAM IN EXCELLENT SHAPE How The Teams Line Up Players Take Day Off at Moberly and Plan to Start Early Tomorrow for Scene of Annual Contest Former Kansas-Missouri Selec- 1891-Kansas 22 Missouri 8. 1892-Kansas 12 Missouri 4. 1893-Kansas 14 Missouri 12. 1894-Kansas 18 Missouri 12. 1895-Kansas 6 Missouri 10. 1896-Kansas 30 Missouri 0. 1897-Kansas 16 Missouri 0. 1898-Kansas 12 Missouri 0. 1899-Kansas 36 Missouri 6. 1900-Kansas 6 Missouri 6. 1901-Kansas 12 Missouri 18. 1902-Kansas 17 Missouri 5. 1903-Kansas 5 Missouri 0. 1904-Kansas 29 Missouri 0. 1905-Kansas 24 Missouri 0. 1906-Kansas 4 Missouri 0. 1907-Kansas 4 Missouri 0. 1908-Kansas 10 Missouri 4. 1909-Kansas 6 Missouri 12. 1910-Kansas 5 Missouri 5. 1911-Kansas 3 Missouri 3. 1912-Kansas 12 Missouri Substitutes William C. Dunckel, Springfield C. R. Wooody, Ozark Roy G. Wiggins, Columbia Floyd H. Lake, Columbia DeWitt C. Collins, Lathrop Wentworth Wilder, St. Louis L. H. LaRue, Marshall' V. H. Muston, Sweet Springs J. V. Drumm, Columbia Kansas 1913 Record Kansas 7 William Jewell 0. Kansas 7 Washington 7. Kansas 11 Drake 0. Kansas 26 Aggies 0. Kansas 7 Oklahoma 21. Kansas 14 Washburn 0. Kansas 0 Nebraska 9. Tailwinds score!: Kansas 120 mentions 37. ENGINEERS TO SEE IT Teach Washington Girls Kansas Yells, But Will Start for Columbia Today St. Louis, Mo., Nov. 19—The K. U. engineers arrived from Keckuk this morning and will depart in time to play their final game against Missori- ton football game Saturday. The engineers visited Washington University this morning. They inspected the various buildings, called at the women's dormitory and taught the co-eds the K. U. yells, and as guests of the Engineering Faculty lunched at the cafeteria in the boys' dormitory. as and Missouri 22. Won by Kansas, 14. Won by Missouri, 4. Tie contests, 4. Number points scored: Kansas, 89. Missouri 108. In the afternoon the party divided, the civils going down to the river to inspect the bridges, the mechanicals and electricals inspecting the transformer station of the Keokuk transmittion line and the Wakuk machinery Manufacturing Co. The机械ics also visited the Plant of the Fulton Iron Works. Missouri Saturdays Record Missouri 1 Drury 9 Missouri 2 Illinois 24. Missouri 20 Oklahoma 17 Missouri 1 Armes 13 Missouri 4 Rolla 14 Missouri 1 Drake 4 Missouri 0 Washington 0 Missouri totaled 190 points. Missouri's opponents totaled 62 TIGERS Jacob Speelman, Grand Rapids, Mich. A. W. H. H. Yr. Po. Yr. H. W. A. 170 170 5:11 1 L.E. 1 5:10 1 180 29 Crosby Kemper, Kansas City 20 188 6:2 2 L.T. 3 5:11 190 22 A. W. Zimmerman, Marble Hill 20 188 7:10 1 L.1 5:9 190 21 J. J. Gallegher, Lanar 21 208 6:2 2 C. 1 6:00 185 22 J. A. Clay, Plattsburg 21 85 10:0 2 R.G. 1 6:00 105 22 J. L. Groves, Jr., Dover 19 169 5:10 1 R.T. 1 5:11 190 22 Frank W. Herndon, Lebanon 21 167 5:10 2 R.T. 1 6:1 190 22 Harvey L. McWilliams, Kirksville 23 155 5:6 2 Q. 3 5:11 143 24 Paul H. Shephard, Kansas City 20 160 5:11 2 L.H. 1 6:00 180 24 J. C. Moore, Brashare 21 158 5:9 1 R.H. 3 5:10 180 22 C. R. Wilson, Bethany 22 188 5:7 3 F. 2 5:11 173 22 20 160 5:10 2 S.E. 1 5:11 170 21 19 165 5:10 2 S.E. 1 5:9 170 21 20 140 5:6 2 S.H. 2 5:8 161 21 19 145 5:6 2 S.H. 1 5:8 161 21 19 145 5:8 1 S.H. 1 5:9 161 21 19 155 5:10 1 S.H. 1 5:40 143 22 19 155 5:10 1 S.H. 1 5:10 143 22 19 155 5:10 1 S.H. 1 5:10 143 22 20 145 5:7 1 S.Q. 2 5:7 140 20 20 176 5:11 1 S.G. 2 5:11 180 20 JAYHAWKERS JAYHAWKERS John Reber, Kansas City, Mo. William Waldheim, Cleveland Dahl Dellhofer, Delphos Ross Keeling, Oakley Thomas Mulloy, Lincoln Center Willard Burton, Mound City orge Strothers, Kansas City, Mo. Harold Wilson, Horton Lloyd Bishop, Conway Springs Herbert Turdion, Holton Edward Stuewe, Alma Substitutes Hubert Kane, Springer, N. M. Wills Calkins, Burlingame John Deshler, Smith College Harlen Abilene Harlan Russell, Lawrence Webb Martin, Lawrence Charles Greenlees, Lawrence James Parker, Independence John Hammond, Towanda Assistant Coach Schulte, Missouri--The Tigers stand an even show. Beyond that I can't express myself. Statements of the coaches C. L. Brewer, head coach, Missouri, the gavin team, I have the Tigers' will we've got a good team, and any way it's a poor coach who hasn't faith in his pupils, isn't it? Arthur St. Leger Mosse, Kansas —I don't feel like talking. I'm thinking too hard. Leonard Frank, Kansas—We've got a chance, an even chance with that bunch. The boys will fight to the death; always do; and that's what we want. Statements of the Captains Chuck Wilson, Missouri—I still remember last year's game with the Jayhawkers, so am making no boasts. Keep your eyes on them, however. If you don't, the Referee William Weidlein, Kansas—Our team will fight the Tigers to a triumph. There will be no fluke Saturday. You may depend on that. Today the Kansas team is on Missouri soil, resting up for tomorrow's game with the Tigers, and all Kansas can do is to get on board that special for Columbia tonight to cheer the men along. The team left Lawrence yesterday in excellent shape. Detwiler's injured leg still hurts him. James still suffers a slight bit from his recent attack of bronchitis, but the team as a whole looks good. The men rested up today in Moser, looking over the town. Early omorrow morning they will pull out or Columbia, arriving in that seaside old town. They will delay at once to Rollins led to war against the Tigers. The coaches did not give out much news when they boarded the train early yesterday morning. They announced their departure, E. Rebor; L. T. Weidel; L. G., James; C, Keeling; R. G., Mulloy; T. B, Turton; R. E., Strother; G, Wilson; L. H., Bishop; R. H, Tudor; F, Stueve. Hopes For That Holiday Banished By Chancellor The rumors that a holiday will be declared at the University commencing Tuesday noon providing Kansas defeats Missouri tomorrow are not well founded, according to the Chancellor. "Owing to the short session preceding the Thanksgiving holiday next week it is not probable that a holiday will be allowed," he said after the rally. "The University council has the matter in charge." Teams To Attend Play Together After Game Columbia, Mo. Nov. 21—Manager Hall of the Columbia Theater will give a box party to Bought and Gorrie for a box night for the Kansas and Missouri teams. A Wabash train will be held here to those who go to the show can get away after it is over in time to get to Centralia and catch the midnight train for K. C., putting them to K. C., Sunday morning at 7 bells. Columbia Prepares For Red-Letter Day of Year Columbia, Mo., Nov. 21—When tomorrow's sunrise, if there be any un, ushers in the day of the great fame, Columbia, will be ready. This has been a week of preparation and tymomorrow every detail will be completed. Even the city streets are being cleaned especially for the occasion. The big parede which starts at (Continued on page 4) UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The official student paper of the University EDITORIAL STAFF HERBERT PLINT - - - - Editor-in-Chief GLEENDON ALYLIE - - - Associate Editor JOHN C. MADDEEN - - - Managing Editor LANDON LAIRD - - - High School Editor High School Editor BUSINESS STAFF RAD EVIDENCE ... Circulation Manager JOE BISHOP ... Advertising REPORTIAL STAFF RANDOLPH KENNEDY SAM DEGEN Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance; one term, $1.50. Entered as second-Class matr mastier Lawrence, Kannas, under the act of Marci Lawnice. Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of journalism. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate program of the university further than merely printing the news by standing with students on their knees, to be clean; to be cheerful for students, to be cheerful for students, to leave serious problems to wiser head at it; to be aware of the ability of a faculty member at the University. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1913 Editorial Assistant for today, Leon Harsh. News editor, Charles Gilson; assistants, Luc Burger, John Glässer. Exchange editor, John M. Henry. Society reporter, Lucie Hildinger. Talent alone cannot make a writter, there must be a man who books the book. WIN TWICE Tomorrow at Columbia is the last chance Kansas will have this year to get two victories in one day. get two RESULTS. At Manhattan we beat the Aggies in score, but not in sportsmanship; at the Washburn game we had the score but not the sportsmanship; against Nebraska we had the spirit but not the score. spirit that was At Missouri tomorrow we should end the season right both by winning the game and by outdoing Missouri in sportsmanship and gentlemanly conduct. Place: Special sleeper nearing Columbia, Mo. Time: 6:00 or 7:00 a. m. Saturday morning. READ THIS, THEN START A University Missourian headline reads, "Prof. C. L. Brewer Orders Silence This Week in Haven of Tigers." Sort o' practicing for next week's deep silence, perhaps. You are going—even if some short-sighted professor did assign a quiz for Monday. Quizzes come often but Missouri-Kansas football games but once a year. You surely realize that your presence and voice at Columbia will increase our chances of winning the game tomorrow. What does a tenspot compare with the pleasure you will get from the trip? Here's your hat, now GO IT. In giving the results of the Jaya- hawker-Cornhusk game, the New York Sun reports; Nebraska 9, Missi- souri Valley 0. Football is not played at Columbia University. Neither is it played at Washington University. Thanksgiving is the official home-gathering day and each student can do wonders toward making a success of it in his particular home. HOME NEXT WEEK Leave all University activities at the University, go home to visit and do most of your visiting with your parents. Forget your text books and your problems and when you get home talk "sense." Mother doesn't know what a trapezoid is and dad doesn't care whether "doner" is conjugated with "etre" or with nitro-glycerin. And, too, it might be a good idea to leave that new mackinaw in Lawrence or the hired man when he sees you coming up the lane will think the red cow is out and will start a rock toward you. In short, let us all, all who can, journey homeward and for the three or four days be "just folks." "At the request of the freshman class, the Student Council granted first-year men permission to wear freshman caps," etc. Oh, ha, ho, hum, how beautiful the Wakarusa Valley looks this morning. MAKES A WINNING NOISE This "all-Kansas eleven" is proposed by the Manhattan Industrial. Bucklin, Downs, Andover, Strong City, Winfield, Shields, Kickapoo, Somerset, Dodge City, Chase, Rush Center. OH THAT NOON HOUR! It is to be hoped that the University Council will not see fit to make a ruling that afternoon classes begin at one o'clock. The main reason for the proposed change, is that sometimes it is necessary that lights be turned on before the end of the afternoon or that some of the Kansas City students have difficulty in catching a train. Should either of these horrid events happen it certainly would be a deadly blow to the University. The light plant is running all day and half dozen passenger trains run to the city after school hours. No doubt it is nice for the University Council to get home early and go a-puting on the golf links, or bounce the baby on its knees, or perhaps take the old gray mare out for a little exercise. Likewise it is also great for the average student to do a marathon to his restaurant and another marathon back before one o'clock. Should Missouri chance to beat K. U. at football this year it will be unfair for the Lawrence merchants to blame hard times on the Democratic administration—Kansas City Star. CAMPUS OPINION A WARNING TO CHAUFFEURS Editorial Daily Kansan: I appeal to the Daily Kansan to help save my life. It is useless to reply that it is of no value to anyone but the owner. It is the only one I have and I would hate to lose it by my own carelessness, let alone the carelessness of another. I have the great good fortune to live on one of the automobile and motorcycle speedways of Lawrence. Here pass in daily review all the horseless vehicles of the community, from the auto truck which jars the earth and which would have been a splendid feature for old Homer to have mounted Jove in, to the flashing, sputtering, shattering, blare, honking and smell as if I were expending $1.-000 a month. And every chauffeur, whether the owner wearing diamonds or the gentleman wearing his calves in leather chokers, seems to imagine when he reaches her. He knows that crossing of the Styx; he sets his face, throws the ten commandments overboard and turns loose for Hades. I have succeeded so far in dodging this bombardment of Lawrence autos but it has not been the fault of the drivers. They have done their best and some day they will get me. I am not as spry as I once was and it takes quick work to dodge an auto or cycle which adenly assails you when at 65 miles and that before you have got our breath the machine is out of sight and the sentiments you hurt after it land in the lap of the next one—thought, of course, nothing is wasted. I am led to make this appeal because last week, as I stepped from a street car in front of my home, I was saved from decorating the front of a buzz car only for the reason that, wary from experience, I cautiously looked behind. As it was I nearly lost the end of my nose. I should hate to occasion any sorrow to any chauffeur, kid-gloved or leather-shanked, and I know if one killed me he would be sorry, which would be very sad for him; would do me no good and would be but I would be dead and my wife and students would be wearing black. I have had dogs killed and said nothing. Dogs have no particular value, though much more than some people in autos. What I propose is to reverse things. I shall try to get the chauffeur first. Then he will be dead and I will be sorry—maybe. I appeal for leniency if such comes to pass. Facultatus. Out of the silence, song; Out of the bud, a rose; Out of the rose, the scent The wood wind bellow. —Independent. Out of the word, a war; Out of the steel, a ship, And,'so we are all going Out of the germ the grip. —Denver Republican. Out of the winter, spring; Out of the plantlet, grass; Out of the garden, seeds, And out of the garden, seeds. —St. Louis Post-Dispatch. GENESIS. Out of the bureau, a hat; Out of the drawer, a braid; Out of the closet, a rat; Out of the house, a maid. —Saint Post-Intelligencer. Out of the turkey, some scraps; Out of the "spuds," a mash; Out of the head, a lock of hair; Out of them all, some hash. —Yonkers Statesman. Out of the west, a cloud; Out of the cloud, two teams; Out of the fight the two put on The Missouri Tiger's screams. —University Daily Kansan. AN OLD FAVORITE "There was an answer expected, was there, Mr. Barkis?" said I, opening m eyes. For this was a new light to me. "When a man say he's willin'", said Mr. Barkis, turning his glance slowly on me again, "it's as much as that man 'aawait' for an awasser." "Nothing come of it," he explained, looked at me sideways. "No answer." "Well," said Mr. Barkis, carrying his eyes back to his horse's ears, "that man's been awaitin' for a answer ever since." "Well, Mr. Barkis?" "Have you told her so, Mr. Barkis?" "N—no." growled Mr. Barkis, reflecting about it. "I ain't got no call to go and tell her so. I never said you could myself. I ain't ansi-gt to tell her so." "Would you like me to do it, Mr. Barkis?" said I, doubtfully. soon or late, She finds some honest gander for me. "Ah!" said Mr. Barkis, with a nod of his head. "You might tell her, if you would," said Mr. Barkis, with anoth- omber: "the 'that Babies was awaken' for a answer. Sayles was— what name is it?" Barber (beginning the hair cut)—Have you heard the story about the man that—(resuming business)—it .short. sir? "Christian name? Or natural name," said Mr. Barkis. "Oh, it's not her Christian name. Her Christian name is Clara." "is it though" said Mr. Barkis. He seemed to find an immense strength in his patience, and sat pondering and inwardly whispering for some time. —Pope. Beggar—'Can you help a pore rent, mister?' "Well!" he resumed at length. "Says you, 'peggotty.' Barkis is awatin' for a answer "Says she, for a question what is he to问你, To what I told you," What is that? " says she. "Barkis is willin', says you."—David Copperfield. RISIBLE REMARKS FOR THE SOMBRE STUDENT Customer (a tired user)—Yes; a mere synopsis will do!-Tit-Bits. Passbyer? "Hum! What sort of a agent do you call yourself "as?" "He is in 'Who's Who,' I believe?" "Yes, but he is much more prominent in 'Here's How.'" There swims no goose so gay, but soon or late. It was in a schoolroom, and during a review of history since the crea- Boston Transcript "Washington," hastily repaired a bright boy, quoting a familiar slogan, "first in war, first in peace, first ___" When a pretty couette gets busy with her handkerchief, some silly young men is anxious to find out how the wild ways are saying—Popularity. A proposal never seems just right to a girl unless it is backed up by some moonlight scenery.—Personality. "Wrong, Adams was the first man." "Oh, the pupi sniffed disgusted, "you are talking about foreigner- "Who was the first man?" the examining teacher asked. —Puck. —New York Tribune. THE GRAND PIANO Distinctive Evening Dress for College Social Functions Everyone admires the gracefully attired college man but at no time is he the object of greater attention than when he attends evening social events. To be sure of clothes of marked refinement and quiet elegance have our local dealer, ® S. G. CLARKE Eldridge Hotel Building 707 Mass. St. C show you our line of handsome fabrics for Full Dress and Tuxedo styles, and send us your measure. We have one shop of skilled tailors whose entire time is devoted to making formal dress. So you see we know "what's what." And we save you one-third. Leave Your Order Today! F. N. GRIEEL CO Largest tailors in the world of GOOD made-to-order clothes Price Building Chicago, U. S. A. The GENUINE EDISON TALKING PICTURES 1 BOWERSOCK THEATRE Monday and Tuesday Nights, Nov. 24-25 TRADE MARK Thomas A. Edison "Their Majesties expressed great delight."—London Daily Chronicle Prices Parquet, 50c 1st 3 rows Balcony, 50c Next rows balcony, 35c All 2nd Balcony, 25c Dancing SEATS ON SALE AT WOODWARD & CO. One performance nightly beginning 8:15 p. m. Mrs. J. L. Newhouse's Mrs. J. L. Newhouse's Dancing School Saturday Presented on the Edison Kinetophone by Edison Kinetophone Company Exhibited July 10, 1913 before the King and Queen of England Rexall 93 Hair Tonic Phones 226 Give Us ajTrial as well as another kind 721 Liesn morning at 9 o'clock, Ecke's Hall. Private lessons by appointment. W. A. Guenther that you, might wish, at Bell 938 McCOLLOCH'S Drug Store. 939 MASS. We have some good values in Pennants & Posters to close out J. A. Keeler FOR TAXI PHONES 12 FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Particular Cleaning and Pressing Lawrence Pantatorium 2 W. Warren Both Phrages 506 Robert Hudson, Pierson's Hand Made When calling for a good brand of 5c CIGARS SMOKE At all first class dealers Notice Students O. P. Leonard's Pantatorium is on the job again this year. Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 501, Home 180 We Give Club Rates 841 Mass St, Ust阿拉斯 841 Mass. St. Upstairs. A. SPAILDING TRADE SPALDING MARK A.D. 1932 A "Square Deal" for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantee each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding Trade-Mark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. A. G. SPALDING & CO. 1230 Broadway, Clinton, Mo. Send for our Catalog. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT Miss Evelyn of New York is here for the week with A Tremendous Array of the Finest Human Hair Goods Procurable No shades too difficult to match, including material gray and white, and all at very attractive special prices. Be sure to see the Stemless Braid. Here's to the Team Saturday WEAVER'S But win or lose let SCHULZ make your Clothes, Suits and Overcoats that really have the fit, wear, and nobby style. Thanksgiving Dinner Cards, Favors, Booklets and Remembrance Cards. University Book Store 803 MASS. PHONE 100 FOR TAXICABS PEERLESS GARAGE, Phone 100. The FLOWER SHOP CUT FLOWERS FLORAL ARRANGEMENTS, ETC. 8251% Mass. Phones 621 Thanksgiving postcards 5c per dozen at Hoadleys 17 W. Warren.— Adv. JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGTS, 10cts—Adv. 49-3 Junior's laws—A number of second hand Mechems Outlines and cases on Agency. You will need them next quarter. J. D. R Miller, 1041 Vt., Phone 2511 Bell—Adv. 45.5 ANNOUNCEMENTS All "time" subscriptions for the University Daily Kansan taken at the beginning of the school year are DUE NOW. Ray Eldridge, Circulation Manager. If the young men who play the cornet on Ohio, Oread and Kentucky take hour each evening they call at the cornet shop will learn something to their advantage. Debating team tryouts Wednesday, December 3 and December 17. All candidates must appear in the first try-out except those who have been on intercollegiate teams for K. U. The Anderson County club will meet Friday evening at 7:15 sharp, in Myers. Every member is urged to be present. Important work to be done. A sacred concert will be given in the chapel of Fraser hall next Sunday afternoon in charge of the M. Y. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. The Virtuosity Global concert will enroll students with vocal numbers and vocal solos by students will also be on the program. All student and faculty members are invited. The 96th regular meeting of the Kansas City Section of the American Association will be held in the chemistry building, Saturday at 3 p. m. The German Dramatic club will meet Monday evening in room 116, Fraser at 8:00 o'clock. A play for the year has been recited upon and a date for a tryout will be set. Other important matters will be brought up and it is urgent that all members be present. Unitarian Church; Morning service 10:30; sermon subject, "The Unitarian Conception of Salvation." Sunday School 11:45 a.m. , topic for students' class "Miracles." Young People's meeting, 6:45 p. m., subject, "Cosmic Preparation for Life." Leader Professor Stevens. All announcements or items for the University calendar either for the coming week or for future events should be given to Mr. Cronemeyer, at the department of journalism office, by 4:30 p.m. Friday. It is desired to make the calendar a complete schedule of University events and the co-operation of those interested is requested. Leather goods in coin purses, card cases, letter and bill books, ladies' hand bags, collar bags, manneau, toilet, and writing sets. See them in north window—Wolf's Book Store —Adv. 50- Did you know we had books, pictures, mottos, calendars, novetiles, hand-painted comic war maps and seashell cards. Coo? We do! Wolf's Book Store—Adv. 50-2 Vivida When you want good fresh oysters for Thanksgiving see Dunmires. Phones 58..-Adv. 51-4 Middle laws—See my list of Quasi-Conact Books to be used the next quarter. J. D. R. Miller, 1041 Vt. Phone 2511 B—Aday. 45-5 Scene from Henry W. Savage's Musical Success "Little Boy Blue" Bowersock Theatre, Wednesday, November 26. Parquet, $2.00 and $1.50; Balcony, $1.00 and 75c; Second Balcony, 50c. JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGTS, 10cta—Adv. 49-3 W. S. G.A. WILL HOLD THANKSGIVING PARTY The W, S. G, A. will give its second Thanksgiving party for the students and faculty, who for various reasons are planning to spend their vacation here, Thursday, Nov. 1 from 2 to 5 o'clock, in the gymnasium. Association Plans To Make Life Merry For Those Who Can't Go Home The association plans to give a real big homechick chaser. There will be "eats" for refreshments, pumpkin pie and sandwiches, cider and apples. Old fashioned dances including the Virginia reel will be featured and all kinds of "kid games" played. During the afternoon there will be dancing and a College sing. Every student and faculty member who will be in Lawrence, Thursday, is invited to come and help the W. S. G. A. keep Thanksgiving. ALTA VISTA WILL HAVE FIRST ANNUAL IN 5 YEARS (By Harry H. Morgan) (By Harry H. Morgan) Alta Vista, Nov. 19—The Alta Vista high school, which has not issued an annual for five years, will publish one next spring. Work has already begun on it and the greater part of the printed matter will be ready soon after the holidays. KANSAS CITY STUDENTS SEE THEMELSVE GO BY (Bv Paul Brindel) Kansas City, Nov. 19—Kansas City high school students and the school building are well depicted in the one reel of motion pictures taken recently of this city under the direction of the Paragon Film Company of Denver, being shown this week at the different picture theater in the city. The fifty foot wide campus of the school students leaving the building after dismissal. The day the pictures were taken was declared a half holiday, so the faces of most of the students are "wreathed in smiles." WELLINGTON STUDENTS DO CIVIC RESEARCH (Bv Edwin E. Price) Wellington, Nov. 19.—The English 7 classes, composed of fifty-four seniors, have been doing some civic research work for the past two weeks. The various institutions of the city have been thoroughly investigated, and the themes, ranging in length from 800 to 1200 words, have been written on such subjects as these: Wellington Banking System, How Our City is Governed, The Santa Fe School, Wellington City Schools, Our Municipal Plants, Milling Facilities. PAOLA GLEE CLUB SANG AT TOPEKA Paola, Nov. 19—Paola high school was represented at the teachers' meeting at Topeka by the Girls' Glee Club, which sang by request before the teachers' in the auditorium, before the Music Teachers' Round Table, and at chapel in Wardhampton where part of the girls stopped at Lawrence, where they visited the University and attended the K. U.-Washburn football game. They are enthusiastic in praise of the University. (Bv Lawrence Long) PAOLA GLEE CLUB Ripe tomatoes, cucumbers, head lettuce, cauliflower, and in fact all the fresh vegetables on the market are at Dummies. 51-4 58--Adv. 51-4 Senior laws—I have a number of Willistons Cases on a Bankruptcy to be used next quarter. J. D. R. Miller, 1041, Vt. Phone, 3511 B..1 Ladies, you will meet with courteous treatment at the lunch room in Fraser.—Adv. 50-3. All Methodist students should hear Bishop Shepard at the Methodist church next Sunday...Adv. Bishop Shepard speaks in the First Methodist church Sunday.— Adv. Just received a fresh shipment of reception sticks at Wiedemann's— Adv. 49 Special! Brown bread ice cream, at Wiedemann's—Adv. 49 LOST—Pair of ladies' brown dogskin gloves, with initials I. R. on inside. Phone Bell 1241. JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGGS, 10cts—Adv. 49-8 Fresh Allegretti and Douglas chocolates at Barber's Drug Store—Ada. WINONA An ARROW Notch COLLAR A. Graceful High Band Notch Collar. 2 for 25 cents Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc. Maker A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. Brunswick Bowling Alley Four Regulation Allies with loop-the-loop return. 714 Mass. SAM S. SHUBERT Matinees Wednesday and Saturday LITTLE WOMEN PROTSCH The College Tailor Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 Vermont ROYAL ROCHESTER Chafing dishes, casseroles, coffee machines and percolators. The finest line of metal and wood serving trays in the city. KENNEDY & ERNST 829 MASS. ST. PHONES 341 SAVE THE PIECES We have added Lens Grinding Machinery to our Optical department. Any Lens Duplicated Glasses Fitted. HESTER Jeweler and Optician Jeweler and Optician Lawrence, Kansas. Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. W. H. Quakenbush, Pres.; E. S. Weatherby, Supt. FeaturingMilk Chocolates "SWEDE" THE Phones 540 Topeka Capital Delivered Daily from 6 to 7:30 a. m. 10 CENTS PER WEEK JAS, G. ALLEN, Agent Phone 2433B 931 MAINE See the New Parker Self-Filling Fountain Pen Office Supplies, Typewriters F. I. CARTER 1025 Mass. Bell phone 1061 Come on Down to JIM'S Tonight '01 M 1101 Mass. St. AMUSEMENTS The Edison Talking Pictures Another Edison triumph, the wonderful Talking Pictures will be produced for the first time locally at the Bowersock Hall on Monday and Tuesday, from 24 and 25. In witnessing a performance of these marvelous pictures, one forgets it is only a picture speaking. Do not miss them.-Adv. LOST-Watch rob. Black leather with carved ivory figure. A reward is offered. 1234 Mississippi street. 51-5 Phone Bell 645 or Home 358 for the best ice cream in town. Reynolds' Bros.-Adv. PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. Cramar M-CONNELLY, Physician and Nurse W. Cramar, Home Health, Indiana, 1346. Tenn. Hosp. Homes, Hora, Home Health, Indiana, 1346. Tenn. Hosp. J. F. BROCK, Optometrists and Specialist Office 602 Mass. St. Bell Phone 650-9154. HARRY REDING. M. D Eye, ear, nose Bell. Phone 813. Home 612. Bell. Phones. Bell 513. Home 612. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. D. Eye, ear, and B. A. HAMMAN, *D.* Building. Guaranteed. *D* Building. DR. H, W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BYON, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 607. Osteopath, Phones, Bell 938, Home 25 Office, 745 Mass. St. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D. D. O. 833 Mass- Street, Street. Both phones, office and address. DR. H, L. C CHAMBERS. Office over Squires' Studio. Both phones. DR. H, T. JONES. Room 12. F. A. Bldg. Residence 1300 Tenn. Phones 211. G, W. JONES, A. M., M. D. Diasseus of Boston, MA. Born on November 20, 1874. St. Bethlehem, Reherton, 128th St. Botham Place. J. C. Monk's Barber Shop 913 Massa Monk never have to wait, Rasens honored. S. T. Gillispie, M. D. Office, corner Vermont Residence, Residence 728 Indiana St. Phones 406 CLASSIFIED Barbers Frank Iild'i Barker Shop. 1025 Mass. Two good barbers. Satisfaction assured. E. J. Bair, Physician and Surgeon. Office and residence: 915 Mass. St. Office hours: 7:00 to 9:00 a.m., 12:00 to 4 p.m. and 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. Phones Bell 45. Home 500. Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co., for gas Phone Kenney Mazda lamps. 1957. Mass. Phone 685. Plumbers Prices reasonable, work the best. Let us know if you are interested in 4939, *Moore & Co.* or *816*. Mass. 545. Telephone: (208) 724-8155. Mrs. Ellison Dressmaking and Ladies Johnson & Osborne Phones 2411, over Johnson & Osborne Ladies Tailors Lawrence sewing School. Leducd's tailoring Phones 556. Miss Powers: M. C. McClera Ladies Taloring and Dressmaking. Gowns for all occasions. All work guaranteed. B. Daily, 914 Mass. Sanitary cleaning establishment in connection. Phone 121 Bell. university City College. System and sewing mills. Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 Kell. Boll houses. Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 Kell. Boll Hair Dressers Sporting Goods D & M sporting goods and athletic supplies. Damby & Ernst. 826 Mass. S. Phones 345-701-826. Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-gifts, Martial Arts courses, mental trainingments call Bell 1372. Home : 51. The Select Hair Dressing Shop, 927 Mass St. Miscellaneous Ed. W. Parmons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Sculptor, and Jewelry. Bell Phone 719-317-7115. Mia Max. Hiwatha Cafe for regular meals, lunch and show orders when down town. Open after One tetal means no risk, small investment. fun business. Smoke W. T. W. William & homemade cigarettes. Student's Co-op Club. $2.50 to $3.00 1349, KJ. Geo. H. Viennai Steward. I have a nice line of plain china for painting; it is made from a recycled Bali radio 729 Mass St. Uppsala. Click here to view sample photos. WANTED—Board and room for man new campus. Address X Y, M. LOST—A solid gold watch charm with the engraved on it; H. I. C., from the Invincible Ball Club. Return to H. C. 745. La. Street. 49-3 LOST-On Lee between Myers hall 1987 Lee - alllly hall LOST - On Lee between Myers and and 1237 Louisiana, a lily bud belonging to a brass candle candle stick. Finder please return to 1237 Oread. LOST-A gold 32nd degree bar pin. Return to Kansan office. LOST-Coral bar pin. Return to Kappa Alpha Theta house. LOST—Conklin's fountain pen, Tuesday morning on Adams street, between Tennessee street and Chemistry building. Finder call Bell 1378. Bowersock Theatre Wednesday, Nov. 26 Highest Standard Attractions. Henry W. Savage offers The Newest Musical Success "Little Boy Blue" With the following cast headed by OTIS HARLAN OTIS HARLAN Viyian Weissell, Elizabeth Goodall, Pearl Palmer, Thos. Burton, Frederick Lyon, Rollin Grimes, and Chas. Fletcher. The prettiest and best singing chorus ever sent on tour and Mr. Savage's complete Grand Opera Orchestra. Prices $2.00, 1.50, 1.00, .75 and .50 Curtain, 8:15 as usual. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN STUDENTS Are you taking full advantage of the ten per cent discount we are giving to K. U. students? We still have a nice assortment of suits and overcoats made by "Kuppenheimer" of Chicago, America's very best make. Come see them. J. HOUSE & SON 729 Mass. St. R.E.HOUSE, Propr. Running Report of K. U.-M. U. Game Come down and see Kansas TWIST the Tiger's Tail on our miniature field. JOURNAL-WORLD The Weather Tomorrow— Colder The Benjamin Pullman is what you are looking for A large roomy good-looking OVERCOAT either single or double breasted $25.00 Johnson & Carl ON SALE TODAY Ladies Home Journal Christmas number. "Nuf Sed" The Criterion Ladies Home Journal styles Christmas number Saturday Evening Post 60 pages GOOD reading New serial by E. Phillips Oppenheim The Country Gentleman 50 pages Considerable about grafting This ought to be interesting to some of you. GRIGGS Curtis Agency 827 Mass. JAYHAWK CROSSES TO MISSOURI TERRITORY (Continued from page 1). nine o'clock, with the governor and the alumni and the floats, will go down spotless streets past immaculate lawns. The five thousand visitors that are expected are already provided for. There is no doubt what ever bad impression of the city they may have carried away two years ago. The Tigers will stay in Columbia this year instead of spending the last few days before the game in the country as has been the custom. This will be their first "movie football ball game." A "movie" photographer of Kansas City, Missouri, and the game, a complete film of the day's events. Missouri will be seated in the chair of a letter M working in the color scheme of their black and yellow hats. The old grads will be massed around to help cheer the Tigers to victory. Our hot and cold drinks excel. Try one at Barber's field—Invad. JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGGS, 10s—Adv. 49-32 Pies at the lunch room in Fraser. - Adv. 50-3 Coffee at the lunch rom in Fraser. -Adv. 50-3 JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGTS, 10cts—Adv. 49-3 JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGTS, 10cta.—Adv. 49-3 We are open after the dance Reynolds' Bros—Adv. Jake Speelman, left end, hails from Grand Rapids, Mich. He is playing his first year of Varsity ball, having grown up on the man man man with which is 170, and his height 5'11. He is a heavy, fast end. JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGGS, 10s—Adv. 49-2 HERE'S THE TEAM THAT MEETS K. U. JAYHAWK-TEIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGGS, 10cts—Adv. 59-3 Bishop Shepard speaks in the First Methodist church Sunday. Adv. Come out and hear Bishop Shepard Sunday...Adv. Brown bread ice cream a whole meal, at Wiedemann's—Adv. 49 Come out and hear Bishop Sheepard Sunday.—Adv. JAYHAWKER-TIGER BUTTONS AT GRIGGS, 10tas.—Adv. 49-38 All Methodist students should hear Bishop Shepard at the Methodist church next Sunday.—Adv. Friday and Saturday are fruit salad days at Wiedemann's...Adv. Fruit salad, whipped cream and wafers, 10 cents a plate, at Wiedemann's.—Adv. If you like fruit salad try ours, Wiedemann's—Adv. Crosby Kemper, a Kansas City boy, will play left tackle for the Tigers. He will he remembered or be remembered last year's game on McCook field. He also is a power in the weights on the Tiger track team. Kemper is one of the best men on Brewer's 1984 team. He is 6:2 and his weight 188 pounds. A. W. Zimmerian of Marble Hill will work at left guard for Missouri. He played along with Speelman on last year's freshman squad. He is a great defender fast. His weight is 170 and his height. 5 feet 10 inches. J. J. Gallegher, the biggest man on Brewer's squad, will face Keeling at center for the Tigers. This is Gallegher's last year at Columbia, he having served as sub center to Chuck Wilson last year. Gallegher is as fast a man for his size as there is in the Valley. He is 6:2 tall and weighs 208 pounds. He is a resident of Lamar. At right guard Coach Brewer will work J. A. Clay of Plattsburg. Clay von his M last year at guard for the figers in the Kansas game, and is eared throughout the Conference or his steadiness on the defense. Clay weighs 185 pounds and is 6 feet tall. Bob Groves, "Big" Groves as he is named in Columbia, will work at right tackle for the Tigers. Groves tips the beam at 178 pounds and is 6 feet tall. He won his M last year at guard and tackle. He was the fastest men on his feet in the Missouri line. Groves lives in Dover. Frank Herndon of Lebanon will play right end, opposite Bobney Herrand. Herndon was a substitute end last year and made a good enough showing in the early games this fall to win the position regular. He weighs 167 pounds and is 5:10 inches tall. Herndon is a fast, clever lineman, especially good on getting down the field after Shepard's punts. Harvey McWilliams of Kirkville is the logical candidate at quarter for Bremerton in Brevard last year, and, before that played two years on the Kirkville Normal team. McWilliams is as clever a field general as has been turned up by his school coach and ten years. His measurements are 155 and $1.6\%$. DeWitt Collins may sub for McWilliams at quarter, in case the shifty first string man is injured early in the game. Collins comes from Lathrop, and is only 19 years old, the youngest man on Brewer's squad. He weighs 150 and is 5:8 tall. Roy Wiggins of Columbia may get a chance to fill in for Shep in the second or third quarter. He is another M athlete, and a clever shifty broken field runner. He is the lightest man on the squad weighing but 140 pounds. He is $5\cdot6\frac{1}{2}$ inches tall. Paul Shepard of Kansas City will start at left half for the Tigers. Little need be stated about this heavy athlete. Every Kansas student remembers his 45 yard drop kick against the Jayhawkers on McCook field last fall. Sheepowerful toe is the most drilled agent Brewer has this year. He weighs 160 pounds, and is 5 feet 11 inches Bill Dunekel, substitute end and half on last year's squad, will sub for Wilson at full. Dunekel is from Springfield, and is a team sense of the word. He weighs 160 pounds, and is 5 feet ten inches tall. J. C. Moore, right half, was a companion of McWilliams on the Kirkssire Normal team two years ago. He is a hardy fast half, but he was the best with the yeardings at Columbia last fall. His home is in Brashear. Our fruit sundaes, ice cream sodas, and claws are delicious. Try them, at Wiedemann's.—Adv. At full we find Chuck Wilson, the Tigers captain, and star center on last year's squad. Wilson, with Shepard, are the two most feared men on the whole Tiger eleven, they being undoubtedly recognized as Brewer's stars. Bretheran, and served two years as Bethany, and served two years as the All-Missouri Valley eleven. He weighs 158 pounds, and is 5 feet 7 inches tall. The program at the Deutsche Verein Monday afternoon will consist of two solos by Ivia Moser and a comic duet by Irma and Ilsa Wilhelmi. The meeting will be in room 313 Fraser at 4:30. A whole meal, the brown bread ice cream at Wiedemann's—Adv. DEUTSCHE VEREIN WILL GIVE MUSICAL PROGRAM Special brown bread ice cream at Wiedemann's--Adv. A full line of candies and cigars at Reynolds' Bros.-Adv. Reynolds' Bros. serve light lunches after the dance or show.— Adv. We are open after the dance and show. Reynolds' Bros.-Adv. University view post cards, 5c per dozen at Hoadley's, 17 W. Warren. —Adv. Novelty decorations at Hoadley's, 17 W. Warren · Adv. Razors, safety razors, blades, strops, and brushes at Barber's Drug Store.—Adv. FISCHER'S SHOES ARE GOOD SHOES Our ices and ice creams are made from the real cream. Reynolds' Bros.-Adv. We deliver our orders with a motor car, insuring prompt delivery. Reynolds' Bros.-Adv. FISCHER'S The most progressive store, or the store for progressive men—read it either way, it's true. The large increased sales of men's fine shoes indicate with certainty that many more men are finding out the the truth of it every day. No matter how particular you are in the selection of your footwear-you'll be satisfied here. FISCHER'S SHOES ARE GOOD SHOES THE OREAD Cafeteria and Tea Room SUNDAY MENU Boston Clam Chowder due Points on Half Shell Scalloped Filllets of Fresh Salmon with Tomato Sauce Prime Ribs of Beef with Yorkshire Pudding Roast Fresh Ham with Corn Fritters Fried Spring Chicken Maryland Style Roast Young Turkey with Oyster Dressing Braised Century Tenderloin Mushroom Sauce Breaded Veal Cutlets Tar Tar Sauce Mock Turtle Scalloped Oysters English Lamb Chops Saute of Chicken Giblets Potatoes Canned Sweet Potatoes String Asparagus Tips on Toast Lettuce Fruit, Combination Salads English Lamb Chops Saute of Chicken Giblets Dutchess Potatoes Candied Sweet Potatoes Stringless Beans Dutchess Potatoes Candied Sweet Potatoes Stringless Beans A basket, Tin or Tissue. Letters Shrimp, Lobster, German Potato, Celery, Tuna, Salmon, Fruit, Combination Solids Hot Tea Biscuits with Honey Bell Fritters with Fruit Sauce Baked Jonathan Apples with Whipped Cream Steaks of All Kinds Chops of All Kinds We guarantee to serve everything on this menu next Sunday. Ask about our prices. 1241 OREAD You'll meet all your Classmates AT THE SOPHOMORE BUM Monday, 8 p. m., Robinson gymnasium For all Sophs-Men and Women Tickets 25 cents Girls Free REPAIRING We like to do little jobs of repairing. Gustafson The College Jeweler Call for our catalogue of K. U. and fraternity novelties. We have the most complete line in Lawrence. REYNOLDS BROS. FOR ICE CREAM AND ICES Bell 645 Home 358 Motor Delivery 1031 Mass. STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. NUMBER 52. HIGH SCHOOL HEADS FAVOR TRACK MEETS Tournaments Promoted By University Get Support Over State MEETS ADVERTISE UNIVERSITY Prospective Students Get Sample o College Life in the Annual Competitions on Oread Principals of Kansas high schools are to a large extent opposed to the abolition of high school track meets promoted by the University, judging from their enrollment through its high school correspondents. At a recent meeting of the state high school athletic association, held at Topela in connection with the state teachers' convention, the question of whether members advocated the unconditional abolition of college-promoted meets. In replies received to inquiries made by the Daily Kansan, fewer than dozen doxon principal oppose University board's request. The great majority favor them. Offer Many Suggestions Many of the criticisms offered do not apply to University meets. Censure of the rules employed in conducting them does hold, since University meetings are regulated by A. A. Lewis and standard in animate, athletic circles. Many suggestions and criticisms of the present methods were offered, but the principals who expressed themselves as favoring the idea declare that an interest in track work and higher educational institutions is stimulated, and that the University furnishes a convenient place where high school athletes may mingle and compete. Three events are promoted by the University; the track meet, basket-ball, tennis tournament. The track meet has been held for the past twelve years, and last year 50 schools competed. The tennis tournament, in connection with this event, was started seven years ago. Basket-ball tournaments have been held for eight years. The University was the first to propose invitation meets in Kansas. Helps Students, He Says Among those heartily in favor of the University meet is Principal W. A. Bailey, of Leavenworth. "It stimulates interest during the winter, and keeps students working." he says. "An advantage in having it at the University is that it gives many their first view of college life, and induces them to enter the University." Principal M. C. Prunty, of Winfield, also favors the meets. He says: "They admit the greatest number of competitors with the least expense to each. The college track affords a convenient meeting place, and directs the attention of the competitors toward college." Mr. Prunty believes that meets should be held in centrally-located colleges. R. Y. Kennedy, of the Mankato high school, believes that the present University influence over high school athletics should be maintained. He believes it is healthful and stimulating to athletics in high schools. J. H. Sawtell, of Iola, is not in any way opposed to the meets as long as all high school keep up the scholarly questioning. Mr. Gilliland, principal of the Arkansas City high school, votes against discontinuance and district meets because he believes students are more interested in University events. Onnose Topeka Action G. F. Solter, of Kingman, is decidedly opposed to the measures suggested at the Topeka meeting. "The training received by the teams in the invitation meets more than offsets any doubt as to the championship," he says. "It would be difficult to provide a track meet in which all of the best men of the state represented." Principal H. T. Steeper, of Abilene, a district president, criticizes the University meets because some high schools attend them instead of district meets, causing confusion in regimenting students and because they are not elimination contests. Mr. Steeper, however, does not favor the abolition of the meets. Junction City's principal, Streeter Blair, criticizes the meets because of the number of them meeting at once. He advocates an elimination contest by districts, and a championship meet at only one college. L. H. Mosser, of Newton, thinks that college-promoted meets (Continued on page 3) PROFESSOR TO LEAD HARVARD EXPEDITION UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MONDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 24, 1913. W. H. Twenhofel Receives Commission From Eastern University WILL VISIT BALTIC REGION Purpose of Investigation Will be to Determine Relative Age of America and Eurone. Harvard University appointed today Prof. W. H. Twenhofel of the geology department to cooperate with Prof. P. E. Raymond of Harvard University for expedition for geological investigation in the Baltic region of Europe. The purpose of the expedition is to correlate the Ordovicium and Silurian Strata of the Baltic region with that of North America. The president and Fellows of Harvard University appropriated $2,500 from the Shaler Memorial Fund for this purpose. Professor Twenhofel and Professor Raymond will start their expedition from St. Petersburg June 1, 1914. Dr. Tlmacew of the geological survey of Russia will supply a guide for the work in Russia. The first part of the summer on the Russian and the latter part of the summer on the island of Gotten in the Baltic sea, and on the mainland of Sweden. All collections made are to be the property of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard. However, Professor Tuenhoefen will be permitted to retain duplicate sets of all specimens turned over to him for study. He will specialize in the rocks of the Silurian age. For many years geologists have attempted to make precise age determinations of rocks of Eastern North American and those of Western Europe, but great difficulty has been encountered since Americans are not acquainted with the geology of Western Europe and propose a possible explanation with the geography of Eastern North America. The present expedition is intended to make these determinations as far as possible for at least two periods. KNOWS WHAT HE IS, KNOWS WHERE SHE IS Seventeen hundred students now know who "she" is and where she comes from, or who "he" is and that he is a freshman instead of a senior. All this information has been derived from the student directories which Registrar George O. Foster has been handing out in large numbers between classes all of this week. The rush is still on but Mr. Foster has eight hundred left to supply the demand. Many students have changed their addresses since the directory went to press. The changes will be published in the Daily Kansan soon. CROWDED CHAPEL ENJOYS Y. M.-Y. W. WESPER SERVICE Eight hundred people enjoyed the Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. joint Thanksgiving vesper service in chapel yesterday afternoon. The program was carried out as was printed with music given by the Orchestra, the Men's Glee Club, the Y. M. C. A. quartet, vocal solos by Miss Edna Davis and Miss Cora Reynolds, violin solo by Miss Florence and an organ solo by Dean Skilton The President's Thanksgiving proclamation was read by Walry Spotts THE OREAD APPEARS IN NEW FALL DRESS Quill Club's Magazine Begins Year With Heroes And Hero-Worship Number The first number of the Oread Magazine, the official publication of the Quill club, appeared today, under the title, "Heroes and Hero Worship. It is the football number and officer. It is a tribute to the heroes of thegridiron. In the leading story, "Right Tackle Over," Guy Von Schlertz cleverly resolves an interesting situation arising out of a foot-ball-fraternity-heroe situation. Thomas Root, a graduate student, accuses him from the Quill Club for his story, "The Intaglio," presents another thrilling story of an inventor's sacrifice entitled "A Life For A Life." Other numbers of fiction are: "The Little Mother," a story of "Little Italy," by Caroline Grey Edge of Joy," by Pearl Hogrefe and Their Own Way," by Ray Eldridge. one of the most pleasing features of the magazine is the poems contributed by Ethelyn Miller. Other contributions are by Sam Ferguson, Joan Gorman and Edna Osborne. Olinger contributes a Thanksgiving Prayer. The cover design of the Oread was designed by Lucille Brown, a graduate students in the School of Fine Arts. Editorially, the first number of the Oread is a clever piece of work and the makers deserve much credit for their efforts. Appnounces Band Concert The K. U, band will give its first concert Wednesday, December 17. Both classical, and popular music of the day will be played. German Dramatic Club to Meet Der Deutsche Dramatische Verein will meet tonight at 8 o'clock in room 116 Fraser. A play has been decided upon and a date will be set for a tryout. super paper in accordance with the custom there will be no daily Kansan issued this week after tomorrow. Vacation begins Wednesday at noon. No Paper Wednesday OFFICERS ISSUE WARRANT FOR A HINSAW WITNESS A. warrant has been issued for the arrest of Mrs. Mildred Merritt, aunt of James D. Henderson, an alleged accomplice of Henderson and Justin Hinshaw in passing bogus checks in Lawrence last year. Mrs. Merritt was subpoenaed to appear as a witness in the Hinshaw trial but failed to be on hand when the case was heard. It is believed that it was Mrs. Merritt who warned Henderson in time for him to take his hat and elude the officers last spring at Kansas City. "YOU'LL BE SORRY IF YOU MISS IT"--CLARK Editor of Annual Urges Students To Take Advantage Of $2.50 Rate "Students who fail to buy their annual before the time limit on $2.50 rate is off, are going to be sorry for their, negligence," said Russell Bellamy. "And going out, "and from the way they are going things will move fast from now on." Calendar committees have all the real "live dope" up to date. A. L. Buzick, Margaret Roberts, P. K. Cabibison and Mairine Pairre have weathered the coming of the school until November 15. A committee of three, George Edwards, Helen Woolsey, and Jack Greenlees are making up the calendar from November 15 until Christmas and a date record of all important events. Splendid snap shorts of the campus and various scenes around the building have been obtained by staff photographers and are ready for the printers. The snap shots are to be a special feature of the annual this year and Editor Clark wishes all students who have good views of the campus, or of students, to present their work. "The active work being done on the annual board has been some-what hindered by the football spirit that hindered it," said Russell Clarke this morning, "but mittees are working among themselves and I believe we are getting a good start. In my opinion the book is looking fine and promises to be better than ever before. Much hard work will need to be done before things will hop after the holidays." SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS EXHIBITS OLD MASTERS Prof. W. A. Griffith has just received a collection of facsimile reproductions of paintings by the old masters which he is placing on exhibition on the third floor of the Administration building. These pictures are made by the new process of color photography and are known as the Medeci Prints. Part of these pictures are already on exhibition. The rest will be displayed as soon as they are framed. TIGERS WIN FIFTH GAME IN TWENTY-THREE YEARS GLIMPSES OF THE TRIP TO TIGERVILLE—BY MALOY Chuck Wilson's Lighter Men Outplay Kansas On Muddy Field And Take Game 3 To 0 K. U. MISSES FIELD GOALS "For there's be a hot time in the old town tonight." For the fifth time in twenty-three years its team, the eleven fostered by its school, had defeated the Jayhawkers across the line in the amphibian battle between the two schools, and it was an occasion for celebration. So sang the students of the University of Missouri all Saturday morning, in anticipation of their game with the Kansas Jayhawkers. So sang the residents and merchants of staid old Columbia in anticipation of the fat profits to ensue if the Tigers defeated the Jayhawkers at Rollin Field that afternoon. So sang even the birds which hover round the columns on Missouri's campus. They knew how many wars crumples would be the next day by the happy Tigers all the next day if Missouri could defeat its ancient enemy Kansas that afternoon on the football field. It was a wonderful game that was witnessed by the spectators on Rolls Field that afternoon. It was a contest between a heavy bunch of line-buckers, and a lighter bunch of shiftier men, and the shiftier men stood the whole distance toward the back outplayed Kansas. There is no doubt of that. The greater part of the game was staged on Kansas territory. Here's The Reason And there was a "hot time in the old town" Saturday night. Tiger students, clad negligently in nighthirts, with very short tails, paraded up and down Broadway street, the center of commerce in New York City. Restaurants, cafes, confectioneries, pool halls, dancing floors, every place was reaping its share of the rewards brought about by the valor of Chuck Wilson and his band of Jungle Beasts. The old town, the county seat of historic Orange County was happy, ousily happy, and it didn't care who knew it. 9 RETREAT THEME THE PARTY MOVIL IN HERE Time and again it seemed certain that the Tigers would finally once for all penetrate that clock-like Kansas defense, and go over the Jaya-hawker goal-line for a long-sought victory. The Tigers ased as if only the work of the Fates themselves could prevent the Tigers from piling up an additional three, Captain Weidlein Fails In Two Attempts--- The Only Chances Kansas Had RASHA MASHER WISH K.U MUSHINGS BY GOSH IMMEDIATELY AFTER TICKETS WERE DRIED THE SCREEN PENS DECLARE ALL FIRE WITH VIDEON'S. THIS MAN DRAW FROM UNDER A MAT RASS (3) OTHERS UNDER SAME. GRASHA MASHER WISH K.U. NUSHINGS BY GOSH GUIDELINES NOT ARE WE DOUBLE ABOUT? HELL, HELL, HELL IS THAT WARNER IF WE WOULD WORRY I SOME CITY GUMS BOARDED AT K.C. UPON ARRIVING WE FOUND CONT THE MISSOURIANS HELD A RALLY AROUND THE COLUMN BEFORE THE GAME. To Score PLEASE DO NOT ARREST ME DO NOT AID ME IMPREDIABLY after tickets were taken the players became alive with students. This was drawn from under a matrass (others under same. SOME CITY BUMS BOARDED AT K.C. WEARING ON COLORDS AND SEEMINGLY FULL OF "SPIRIT" UPON ARCHING WE FOUND CONTAIRY TO REPORT THAT COLUMBIA WAS A WET TOWN OH WELL IT ISN'T NEAR AS DAD AS I GOT IN 1896 ONE OF THE FLOATS IN THE GRAND FREED STREET PARADE BEFORE THE GAME THE WHITE ON THE POWER PLANT PLAYED MOOL WHEN THE GAME ENDED IN THE FIRST QUARTER THE BALL WAS PURLED IN ONE OF THE GREATEST LANDS ON THE FIELD THE PARADE OF OLD GRADS OF M.U. WAS VERY IMPRESSIVE OF COURSE MISSION STUDENTS HAD A PARADE THAT NIGHT WELL WELLL BEER IS THAT KKASSA WE WOULD WARRY! THE MUSQURIANS HELD A RALLY AROUND THE COLUMNS BEFORE THE GAME. The Kirksville men had of cheering. From the whistle to Weidlein's last a field goal late in the last these two sterling athletes hams and Moore played a game for the Missouri elephant Williams ran the team, only a clever field generals how. In addition he kicked goal from placement from yard line, the goal which buss. Moore's Run a Feat: Moore starred in the His wide end runs were a f the game. Time after time Kansas line had held for two and it seemed sure that would be forced to kick. Moor start on one of his long racing behind perfect int would advance the ball ten yards down the field before Lake, the Tigers' splendid man who scored two toughest. Ames, was kept game that this might take him now understand. Kansas had game the first outkickin' punts, hitti WEIDER NOT ARE WE DOING WELL? WELL, WELL, AND ID THAT NASDAQS WE WOULD WARRY THE MISSOURINGS HELD A RALLY AROUND THE COLUMNS BEFORE THE GAME. WELL, WELL, HERE IS THAT TERRAIN? WE SHOULD WORK IT ONE OF THE FLOATS IN THE GRAND FREE STREET PARADE BEFORE THE GAME OH WELL IT DIDN'T NEAR AS DAD AS I GOT IN 1896 ONE OF THE FLOATS IN THE GRAND FREE STREET PARADE BEFORE THE GAME THE BUSY ON THE POWER PLANT PLUED BOOK LAW WHEN THE GAME ENDED 1772 1842 1874 IN THE FIRST QUARTER THE BALL WAS FURBLED IN ONE OF THE GREATEST LANES ON THE FIELD THE PARADE OF OLD GRADS OF M.U. WAS VERY IMPRESSIVE OF COURSE, MINORITY STUDENTS HAD A PARADE THAT NIGHT JONLY COOLANT YES WE SABLLO WORRY 1712 1862 1874 THE PARADE OF OLD GRADS OF MU. WAS VERY IMPRESSIVE SACREDURB MISSOURI STUDENTS HAD A BARRONELLE CENTER FOR EDUCATION IN THE FIRST QUARTER THE BALL WAS TOULED IN ONE OF THE GROUNDS AT THE SEAT FIELD. JES WE HAWARD WORRY MALLOY or even six, points on the valiant Kansans. Saved by a Hair's Breadth But just when it seemed as if Missouri was bound to realize its long-desired ambition and carry out a challenge, Kansas would hold, the Jayhawker line would throw the Tiger runners back or tackle them in their tracks, a Kansas kicker would send the ball out of danger by a long spiral punt and the opposing team even would be forced to begin anew. Statistics, those cold hard facts beyond which the theist can never carry himself, show that Missouri was the better team and had the advantage in all but two departments made 34 yards, Missouri's 40. Kansas made 6 first downs, Missouri 13; Kansas was penalized 130 yards, Missouri 75. Missouri gained 238 yards by line plunging, Kansas 112. Kansas gained 65 yards on return of possession, Kansas 125 yards on fumbles, Missouri 85. Kansas gained 38 yards by use of the forward pass, Missouri none. It Was a Pretty Game It was a pretty Game. The game, despite the muddy field, and beaches on or to watch. Massed on the south side of the field, and in the south boxes, stood the Tiger rooters, 7,000 strong. A big yellow M stood on the bleachers, strikingly attractive in the light of the sun. Tiger rooters with their little yellow hats fashioned it. The boxes were riotous with banners and pennants of Orange and Black. Breaking out sharply at short intervals came the snappy "Missou-Rah" (Missou-Rah), Hurrah, Hurrah, Missou, Missou. In the field the field stood the mud bespattered warriors, struggling valiantly for their respective rooters. On the north side of the field, shivering in shaky bleachers, kicked Kansas, 600 strong. Guided by Morris and Luke, the cheer leaders, "Rock Chalk" would roll out at regular intervals with a deep resonant tone that surprised the Tigers across the field. Black And Gold Everywhere In the north boxes sat more Missouri rooters, the Gold and Black of their pennants contrasting with wilder whites and Blank of Kansas strikingly seen in the stands. Out on the sidelines, fastened to the two fire wences hung two large banners, fully three yards in length. Missouri was written across the face of each; in smaller letters at the bottom "McWilliams," and "Moore," a name on each banner. They were the insignia of the Kirkleiffe delegation, the delegation of the Blacks for "Hurrah for McWilliams and Moore" on the sides, and journeyed to Columbia to witness their favorite sons in action. The Kirksville men had their full of cheering. From the opening whistle to Weidlein's last attempt at field goal late in the last quarter, these two sterling athletes, McWilliams and Moore, played a wonderful game for the Missouri eleven. McWilliams met the team only a clever field general knows how. In addition he kicked a field goal from placement from the 20-yard line, the goal which beat Kansas. Moore starred in the backfield. His wide end runs were a feature of the game. Time after time when the Kansas line had held for two downs, and it seemed sure that Shepard forced Moore. Moore would start on his long raced racing behind perfect interference would advance the ball ten or twenty yards down the field before downed. Lake, the Tigers' splendid half, the man who scored two touchdowns against the ties was out of the park, that the Kirkwood might take his place, and Kansas now understands why. Kansas had all the better of the game the first quarter. With Wilson and Patterson pushing puns, and the Jayhawker backs hitting the Tiger line consistently (Continued on page 4) UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The official student paper of the University of Virginia EDITORIAL STAFF HERBERT FLINT - - - - Editor-in-Chief GLENSON ALYASNE - Associate Editor JOHN C. MADDEN Manager Editorial JOHN C. GLASSNER High School Editor GLENSON ALYASNE - High School Editor BUSINESS STAFF BAY ELDREHGE . . . Circulation Manager JOE BIBOHP . . . Advertising REPORTAL STAFF RANDOPHIE KENNESY BRI DERI Entered as secor-1-class mail matts September 17, 1916, at the postoffice at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance; one term, $1.50. Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of journalism. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate students further than merely printing the mueskky standing on their desk, play favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads; to be a ability of the students of the University. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24,1913 Editorial Assistants for today. Gilbert Claryton, Throck Davidson, Howard Morgan. News editor, Rylie Eldridge; assistants, Lucy Barger, Charles Gibbon, Jack Greenbiex. Exchange editor, John M. Henry Exchange editor, John M. Henry, Society reporter, Lucile Hildinger. There is property no history, only biography.—EMERSON. WORTH GOING TO SEE The Trusting Three Hundred who followed the Kansas team to Columbia and defeat Saturday will at least tell you this: it was worth it. teen you this. The game was a real battle and the score was about representative of the two teams as they played: Missouri won but she had to work to do so. The support given both teams was all that anyone could wish. Kansas rooters were few but hoarse and loyal; the Missouri stands constantly erupted loyalty and encouragement. In all there was a spirit of rivalry as friendly as possible between Kansas and Missouri, in harmony with good sportsmanship. Missouri welcomed her guests royally and Kansas certainly appreciated the treatment received. The game as a whole was a beautiful tribute to America's greatest college sport. Nothwithstanding the "On to Missouri" rally held here last week, the proceedings of Saturday seem to indicate that Missouri is "on to" Kansas. BOOST HOLIDAY REUNIONS BOOST HOLIDAY REUNIONS Thanksgiving vacation should afford all K. U. students a good opportunity to serve the University when they go home to eat turkey with the home folks. It's the one big opportunity to plan county banquets and reunions among students and alumni during Christmas holidays. The movement for K. U. County clubs at the University is just one end of the idea. The other is to talk it up at home next week instead of spending the four days of vacation in loafing and small talk. Search out the old grads and suggest a Christmas banquet; they have probably been thinking about it but want you to start it. Then come back to the University and organize your county club, club up a program, secure some speaker from the University the old grads know, and when Christmas holidays come along have a K. U. meeting in your county that will warm the hearts of the old grads and boost the University. Even if the first sophomorebum is scheduled for tonight,we have seen some before. ACCEPTING DEFEAT ACCEPTING One gratifying result of several decades of college athletics, says H. P. Wright, is the commendable spirit now generally shown in defeat. Today the defeated side is expected to accept the result without question, and to admit generously that the best team has won. This is not easy; but the public has little sympathy with those who make a practice of explanations just as the public generally has no sympathy whatever with the attempt to win by disconcerting the opposing team. Any close contest will be hard fought, but it must not arouse the spirit of anger or revenge. One of the claims for athletics is that it trains men to self control under strongest provocation. The Washburn Review editorially questions whether an honor system is quite the proper thing. Are we to infer that at Washburn they are all Honorable Studies? "Professor Dykatra of the University of Kansas says that we should pray less and work more. This is the first intimation the public has had that prayer is becoming a burden." Parsons Sun. And most likely this is the first intimation Professor Dykstra has had that he made any such broad statement as is attributed to him. "Prof. W. A. McKeever of the State University declares that the suppression of 'puppy love' is a mistake. This is the first intimation any one had that this never-failing, ever exuberant malady of the trundle-bed trash age had been squeled, and the chances are a hundred to none that the professor is mistaken. 'Puppy love' can no more be suppressed than you can keep the little brook from rippling on or the little bird from singing his roundel. It's as sure as measles and whooping cough and the mumps."—Chanute Tribune. NO GOLD IN THIS SILENCE Within the last thirty years Yale has become silent. The weight of cares and business has struck most undergraduates speechesless. Thus debating has been thrust aside; nad the Debating Association is but the ghost of what was once an active body. But the sport, though decadent, continues; and in recent years Yale has achieved a modest percentage of victories—almost twenty per cent. Defeats in debating brand us, not with so simple and bearable a thing as physical deficiency, but with dullness. All the men of might, to be are playing football; but not all the men of wit debate. And it is just because these men, serene and contented, do not stand forth and speak, that debating has fallen into such a miserable plight. To abandon it would be an admission of mental weakness. To be ignomiously and almost continually beaten in the one kind of contest where brains are required, is a reproach to Yale.-Yale News. DOFF HATS TO FACULTY? If the editor of The Illini will per mit, I should like to declare myself who is to be asked for his opinio unbidden, as one of three instructor concerning the doffing of hats to th faculty. If I understand the editor's position correctly, he assumes that it is an institution and a tradition in Southern and Eastern colleges and claims that the great Western universities "do not recognize the necessity of this etiquette" for a state federal university's information, the custom is not considered a necessity in the East either, and is only practiced by gentlemen. It is considered no acknowledgement of inferiority to touch one's hat to another, but merely a sign of respect, which faculty should be denied as an actant for faculty, because of that sort should be acknowledged in kind, of course, and really there is no physical pain connected with it. We do not care to have a student smirk at us and go out of his way to protest interest in our courses; we, are, however, sometimes amused, sometimes disgusted by the student who shouts "Hello Prof" from across the street, and who enters our office to talk business, with him but family planted there. We have a large chew of expressed mouth and a cheerfully expressed readiness to meet us on terms of "perfect equality" radiating from every feature. C. F. KELLEY, —In Daily Illini. Respect and courtesy are rather more closely allied than is often admitted. If you do not care for your instructor personally, you might consider him as the representative of the University at least, and then any expressions of respect of any sort may be construed as offered to the University rather than to him; thus may your dignity be preserved. I realize that it is a very hazard-performance to enter the columns or "lists" of The Daily Illini, and therefore beg leave to state in closing that you should not ask any students touch their hats to me or not, but that I like to see them do it to other instructors. If a student does not care to remove his hat he might pull it more firmly on his head whenever a man tries to demonstrate a "frank, friendly, democratic acquaintance." power, Thy purpose item is equal to the deed. —Young. THE POWER OF HIGH RESOLVE If nothing more than purpose is thy power. CAMPUS OPINION PEP VERSUS QUIZZES To the Editor of the Kansan: Only a work of explanation is needed to justify the apparent lack of "pep" and student enthusiasm on Thursday and Friday of last week. There are many faculty members who care nothing for athletics or the enthusiasm that goes with it, and they blocked all efforts of the students to rally by giving quizzes on Friday. At least one hundred of my classmates were unable to attend the rally in the gym on this account, and one had as many as three, quizzes. Please don't ask what was the matter with student enthusiasm. H. NOTED MEN DON'T SHINE There are some things in which you must content yourself to be last. There are some things in which you want to shine and ought not to want to shine. and it ifh it harm, the "second-story man" can beat Any "second-story man" can beat Any "second-story man" can beat President Wilson climbing a porch. Any gambler can beat Thomas A. Any gambler can beat Thomas A. Eidion glacking a deck. Any vicious man can swear with facility than can Henry Van Dykes DYKE. Any footpad can sneak up behind a man more quietly that can William J. Bryan. Rosevelt. Any ward heeler can invent more lies in five minutes than can Rudvard Kipling. Any fan can tell you more about mee- styles" than can Theodore love. Any forger can tell more ways of doctoring checks than can Dr. Hillis. Any torger doctoring checks than can Dr. Hillis, buite or hooligan can put up a better street corner fight than can Marconi. Any street corner bum can Fri- ght-room more than could Colonel Goethals. That is what I mean by saying that you can't compete out of your class, and the envy that the apparent strength of other classes stir in us to be weighed for what it is. I'll admit that in the earlier stages of roughness and evil there is an apparent virility which indicates goodness seems unnatural. But it is virility it drives unmatural and restlessly driven nervousness? However, wait and see the end of that socialized virility. When you are tempted to envy by what these lower orders seems to have, look for a moment on what they have not. The list above will indicate to you that those they have all—around view, you'll find foolish envy dying within you and sane appraisal taking its place—Detroit News. RISIBLE REMARKS FOR THE SOMBRE STUDENT A Highbrow A brightman translating, "Hace in Galia este important," made it "Hike into Gaul"; it's important." Chicago Tribune. The Test. Willel="Paw, when has a man hare, scream?" noise *sent*? Paw—When he can sa 'Nay' my **"noy"** —Cincinnati Enquirer. 1010—I've eaten nothing but snowballs for three days." Lady—"You poor man? What, would you have done, had it been your fault?" Lucky Two young bootblacks who have stands close together on Tremont Street quarried her into that guy yet," vowed the smaller boy of the two. "Naw! When he gets troo polishin' a gent 'I'm going to say ter that gent soon's he stes off the chair; 'Shine, sir, shine!" -New Orleans Times-Democrat. "Goin' to fight him, are yer, Jimmy?" he was asked. No Likeness Boston Transcript "Geeze are supposed to be symbolic of all that is foolish." Subtle Revenge "But you never see an old gander hoard up a million kernels of corn and then go around trying to mate with a gosling." Town Topics. Easy Young Widow—"Did you have any trouble getting Jack to propose?" Girl Friend-"No dear; I told him you were after him." —Boston Transcript. Time and tide wait for no man, except for the married man, and he is certainly tied—N. Y. Times. 一 TOMMY SMITH Otis Harlan in Henry W. Savage's Latest Success "Little Boy Blue" Bowersock Theatre, Wednesday, November 26. Parquet, $2.00 and $1.50; Balcony, $1.00 and 75c; Second Balcony, 50c. BOWERSOCK THEATRE Monday and Tuesday Nights, Nov. 24-25 The GENUINE EDISON TALKING PICTURES TRADE MARK Thomas O. Edison THRAD MARK Thomas A. Edison Presented on the Edison Kinetophone by Edison Kinetophone Company Exhibited July 10,1913 before the King and Queen of England "Their Majesties expressed great delight."—London Daily Chronicle Parquet, 50c 1st3 rows Balcony, 50c Next rows balcony, 35c All 2nd Balcony, 25c Prices SEATS ON SALE AT WOODWARD & CO. One performance nightly beginning 8:15 p. m. CALENDAR Week of Nov. 24-29,1913 Monday 3:4 Chancellor's open hour to students. 4:30 Deutscher Verein, musical program, (313 Fraser.) 7:30 Orchestra practice, (Fra.) 7:30 University Debating Society, (110 Fraser). 8:12 Sophomore Bum, (Gym.) Tuesday 11:00 Chapel. 2:30 Entomologist Club, (Mu.) 3-4 Chamillor's open hour to faculty. 3:30 Economics Seminar, (Lib.) 7:30 Glee Club practice, (Fra.) 7:30 Philosophy Club, (408 West Pinckney.) Wednesday Thanksgiving recess begins at noon. Thursday 2-5 W. S. G. A. Thanksgiving party for students and faculty in Robinson Gym. Eats, old fashioned dances, and "games." You are invited to come and help the W. S. G. A. keep Thanksgiving. Future Events Dec. 2 "Athens, Rome and Washington as Types of the City Beautiful." Dr. Mitchell Carrol, Sec. A. Inst Archaeology, (Snow.) Archivalogy. Dec. 4 Song recital, Esther Plumb, (Fraser). (Fraser): Dec. 5 Junior class dance, 8-12 Dec. 12 College dance, (Gym.) Dec. 17 Band concert, (Fra.) COMING ATTRACTIONS List of attractions coming to the Bowercook theater. There may be more added from time to time. Dec. 3—That Printer of Udell's. Dec. 19—Mutt & Jeff in Panama. Dec. 27—Olive Vail in "The Girl from Mum's". Dec. 29—McIntyre & Heath in "The Ham Tree. Jan. 1—The Virginian. Jan. 5—Quo Vadis Pictures. Jan. 6—Quo Vadis Pictures. Jan. 7—Quo Vadis Pictures. Jan. 9—"Stop Thief." Jan. 10—"Are You a Mormon." Jan. 17—"Firefly." Jan. 27—Lyman Howe's Pictures. Jan. 31—Pink Lady. Jan. 41—Little Women. Jan. 7—Sins of the Father. Feb. 14—Harry Lauder "Matinee" Feb. 16—The Awakening of Helens Richie. Feb. 21—Red Rose. Send the Daily Kansan home Students The New York evening high school for men offers a course in Spanish shorthand as the result of the increased demand caused by the growth of trade with the South-American nations. Notice O. P. Leonard's Pantatorium is on the job again this year. Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 601, Home 180 We Give Club Rates 841 Mass. St. Upstairs. A. SPALDING TRADE SPALDING MARK 2 D 1932 A "Square Deal" for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantee each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding Trade-Mark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. A. G. SPALDING & BROS. 1120 Grand Ave. Kansas City, Me. Send for our catalogue. Senior laws-I have a number of Willistons Case on Bankruptcy to be used next quarter. J. D. R. Miler, 1041 Vt. Phone, 3611 B1- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Velvet THE SMOOTHEST TOBACCO FEW sophomores but have a smoking knowledge of Velvet—the greatest of tobacco leaf—the olden days method of curing by aging—2 years of hanging in the warehouse under perfect conditions—a perfect seasoning—a mellowting that dispels every vestige of leaf harshness—a sweet, smooth flavor of tobacco that challenges the best smoke you ever experienced. Can't burn hot—can't bite! Smoke it as often as you will it is always the same delightful pipeful-Velvet—smooth. Today or any time you say—at all dealers. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. 10c Full Two Ounce Tins Velvet TOBACCO C 13 Velvet TOBACCO PHONE 100 FOR TAXICABS LESS GARAGE, Phone 100. FOR TAXICABS PEERLESS GARAGE, Phone 100. The FLOWER SHOP CUT FLOWERS FLORAL ARRANGEMENTS, ETC. 825% Mass. Phones 621 ANNOUNCEMENTS All "time" subscriptions for the University Daily Kansan taken at the time of the school year are E NO W N Day Eldridge, Circulation Manager. Debating team tryouts Wednesday, December 3 and December 17. All candidates must appear in the first try-out except those who have been on intercollegiate teams for K. U. The German Dramatic club will meet Monday evening in room 116, Fraser at 8:00 o'clock. A play for the year has been recived upon and a date for a tryout will be set. Other important matters will be brought up and it is urgent that all members be present. All announcements or items for the University calendar either for the coming week or for future events should be given to Mr. Cronemeyer, at the department of journalism office, by 4:30 p.m. Friday. It is desired to make the calendar a complete schedule of University events and the co-operation of those interested is requested. Leather goods in coin purses, card cases, letter and bill books, ladies' hand bags, collar bags, manicure, toilet, and writing sets. See them in north window—Wolf's Book Store. —Adv. 50-2 When you want good fresh oysters for Thanksgiving see Dunnites. Phones 58—Adv. 51-4 Did you know we had books, pictures, mottos, calendars, novelties, hand-painted china ware and souvenir plates? Come and see them Wolf's Book Store—Adv. 50-2 Juniors laws—A number of second hand Mechems Outlines and cases on Agency. You will need them next quarter. J. D. R. Miller 1041 Vt., Phone 2511 Bell—Adv 45-5 Middle laws—See my list of Quasi- Contact Books to be used the next quarter. J D. R. Miller, 1041 VL Phone 2511 B—Adam. 45-5 LOST-2 Achoth pins, names on back. E. Cross and G. Gilbert. Return, 1140 Miss. c-3t Send the Daily Kansan home. K. U. ALUMN WRITES TO ONUMER M. U. F ONE-ARMED M. U. PLAYER Kansas Graduate in Letter to Hanki capstone presentation. Congrats. dmitted Him on Pluccus. Columbia, Mo., Nov. 19—Victor R. Carpenter, the 200-pound freshman who is fighting for a place on the first-year team with the handicap of a missing arm, has just received a letter from an alumnus of the University of Kansas. The letter came from Paola, Kan. The writer says that while a student at the University of Kansas he roomed in the same house with a fellow who had a misfortune like that of Mr. Carpenter. His friend had taken part in high school athletics but could not get up courage to try-out in college. "I congratulate you upon you courage and grit," writes Mr. Carpenter's new found friend, "and am sure you will be amply rewarded for laying aside your feeling and pride and entering into sports." Iports I shall watch your football career with much interest and may I hope the pleasure next year of seeing you play in the Missouri-Kansas game." SOPHS READY FOR THEIR FIRST "BUM" WILL MAKE REPORT ON HONOR SYSTEM FINDINGS The committee appointed from the various University organizations will report on the results obtained from its investigation of the honor system at a mass meeting November 7, to be held in conjunction with the regular afternoon session of the Y. M. C. A. This committee is composed of John C. Madden from Carlson from the Student Council, John Colbeck and H. W. Warren from the M. C. A. Helen Keith and Marie Sealy and Florence Whitcher from the W. S. G. A., and Marie Sealy and Florence Whitcher from the W. Y. C. A. A general discussion of working for grades, cheating in the classroom and of unfair grading will be made at this meeting and some conclusion will be reached regarding an honor system in the University. Second-Year Students Will Revel In Mix-Fest Tonight At Gymnasium Ripe tomatoes, cucumbers, head lettuce, cauliflower, and in fact all the fresh vegetables on the table at Dummies. Phones 58- Adv. 51-4 The first sophomore bum will be held tonight in Robinson gymnasium at 8 o'clock. The W. S. G. A. removed the mid-week rule as tonight was the only available date before Christmas for the bum. The bum will be an informal entertainment without dancing or smoking but with the program of a smoker. The program will consist of a mandolin quartet, a male quartet, a violin solo by Florence Cook, a talk by Prof. Merle Thorpe and readings by Helen Woolsey. An imported reader will also give several selections. The presentation of the class numerals will last year by the food and tract stations and Chase Johnson will present plans for a class memorial. Ladies, you will meet with courted treatment at the lunch room in Fraser.—Adv. 50-3. "SHORTY" OGDEN RETURNS TO LIVE IN KANSAS STATE C. R. (Shorty) Ogden, '09, of Pleasant Beach, Cal., has returned to Lawrence and will probably go into business here. "California is hard to beat but it is certainly fine to get back to good old Kaiser," he said, with the friends of my college days," said "Shorty" this morning. "Shorty" was a loyal son of Kansas for six years, taking his A. B., in 1909, and his L. LB. in 1911. He won fame on the diamond in 1911, and was rewarded with the official K. He will be remembered by upper classmen and baseball fans as the "Midret Backstop." After begin graduated from the law school in 1911 Shorty went to Washington in company with Mr. Curtiss, one of his classmates. They were both successful in passing the bar examination of that state and soon after set up an office in Spokane. Ill health compelled Mr. Orden to seek a milder climate. From Spokane he went to California and joined his folks who were spending the winter at Pleasant Beach. After a nine months' retreat she returned with health and strength and has been convinced that there is no place like Kansas. LAW SCRIM SIMPLE Managers Plan to Omit Cabs, Flowers, and Vapilites Even the aristocratic laws will lead the plain and simple life. The 1913 law scrim will be featured this year by the absence of the usual flowers and cabs and even the laws, who have always had them. This year, think of the high cost of living and have only the necessities. The scrim, which has been one of the big social events of the school year, will be held in F. A. A. hall Dec. 5. The football coaches with the law faculty will be invited guests. "We are canvassing the entire city for all jobs where students are employed to get each name and then later we expect to interview each of these students to learn just how much he is earning," said Con Hoffman, secretary of the Y. M. C. A. "Then we will advertise in the Daily Kansan for other students that we may have missed." The University Y. M. C. A. will issue in January a report in pamphlet form of the total amount of money earned by students for this A large shipment of physics and physiology laboratory supplies costing $200 was received by the Oread high school yesterday consisting of microscopes, dissecting instruments, and a large variety of test tubes. Y. M. C. A. WILL REPONE HOW MANY STUDENTS EARN Y. M. C. A. WILL REPORT The faculty of the Oread high school consists of twenty-nine seniors. The first term of nine-weeks work will end tomorrow at which time a change will be made in the faculty. WISCONSIN UNIVERSITY SERVES THE PEOPLE OREAD HIGH SCHOOL GETS $200 WORTH OF SUPPLIES Eat that Thanksgiving dinner at the Oread. Watch for the menu.— Adv. Pies at the lunch room in Fraser. —Adv. 50-3 "The spirit of the University of Wisconsin is democracy; its endeavor is to serve the people; its method is practical efficiency." C. H. Talbot of Extension Division Calls Badger School Democratic In these words Mr. C. H. Talbot of the extension division this morning summed up the "Wisconsin idea" in higher education. Mr. Talbot, himself an alumnus of the Badger State University, had just returned from a week's stay at Madison, during which time he studied the methods and results of the University of Wisconsin extension division. He also attended the conference of the heads of Municipal Reference Burseats at the National Municipal League Convention at Toronto. Eat that Thanksgiving dinner at the Oread. Watch for the menu.—Adv. Thanksgiving postcards 5c per dozen at Hoadleys 17 W. Warren.— Adv. "The growth and development of the movement to carry the university to the people as exemplified at Wisconsin is wonderful and splendid," said Mr. Talbot. "Here is an illustration," he continued. The total number of students in residence at Madison registered this semester is about the number of persons in Wisconsin and other states now actively carrying on correspondence-study work with the University is 5,008. "The growth in public favor of the University extension idea in Wisconsin is shown by the increase in department. In 1907 the extension division received from the state (in addition to correspondence-study registration fees) $20,000; in 1908, $20,000; in 1909, $50,000; in 1910, $75,000; in 1911, $100,000; in 1912, $125,000; in 1913, $185,000 (including fees), and in 1914, $195,000 (including fees)." "The growth in the number of correspondence-study students is phenomenal. In October 1906, there were 2 registered in correspondence study during January 1908, 1907; in January 1909, 1,592; in January 1910, 3,628. "The total appropriation for the extension division at K. U. for this year is less than three-fourth of that given the Wisconsin extension division the year of its organization. In addition, the Wisconsin extension division receives the fees paid by the correspondence study students, which fees in Kansas are credited to the general fund of the University." HIGH SCHOOL HEADS FAVOR TRACK MEETS (Continued from page 1). should be passed up in favor of state association meets. R. L. Parker, of Marysville, thinks there is room for all college meets, and the results are beneficial. L. R. Light, of Newton, is not much in favor of the meets as conducted at present. O. B. Seyster, of Concordia, advocates uniformity of rules. Summer county and Syllan Grove approve University meets as do J. W. Charles, of Eldorado, J. J. Haney, of Mankoa, Mr. Marple, of Dodge City, and Mr. Tritt, of Laredo. Mr. St. John, of the Marion faculty, puts district meets first, but does not advocateate either E.M. Barthlow, Edwardville, Mr. Caldwell, Edwardville, and Allen Platt, Hartford, indorse the University plan. J. D. Rathun, of Edwardsville, wants co-operation. Mr. Thompson, of Bonner Springs, thinks track sports would be largely eliminated if the invitation meets were discontinued. Marquette's principal thinks the same way. C. M. Haworth, Linwood, Cawley, but continuance, and do Mr. Heilman, Bur- r. R. E. Gowan, Ottawa, Superintendent Mickey, Monolon, W. J. Frankes, Ashland, and O. J. Lane, Baldwin. IF LOST, FIND IT AT THE REGISTRA'S OFFICE Through the little post-office window in the registrar's office other articles than commonplace stamps and envelopes are dispensed. It was only yesterday afternoon that a young lady wanted a fountain pen; she went to the little postoffice window and was delighted to get it. "O, it's here, is it? I didn't think I would ever find it," she explained to the man in the little office. She had lost the pen only a few days ago; it had been used and the box of articles are returned. This little box is kept close to the stamps and envelopes in the post-office. University view post cards, 5e per dozen at Hoadley's, 17 W. Warren Adv. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. Brunswick Bowling Alley Four Regulation Allies with loop-the-loop return. SAM S. SHUBERT 714 Mass. Broadway Jones PROTSCH The College Tailor Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 Vermont Phones 189 ROYAL ROCHESTER Chafing dishes, casseroles, coffee mines and percolators. The finest line of metal and wood serving trays in the city. KENNEDY & ERNST 828 MASZ. ST. PHONES 342 Lawrence, Kansas. LAWRENCE Business College Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. W. H. Quakenbush, Pres.; E. S. Weatherby, Supt. FeaturingMilk Chocolates "SWEDE" THE Phones 540 Topeka Capital Delivered Daily from 6 to 7:30 a. m. 10 CENTS PER WEEK JAS. G. ALLEN, Agent Phone 243B 931 MAINE See the New Parker Self-Filling Fountain Pen Office Supplies, Typewriters F. I. CARTER 1025 Mass. Bell phone 1061 Come on Down Come on Down to JIM'S Tonight 1101 Mass. St. Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Lawrence Pantatorium Z.W. Warren Both Phone 506 Rexall Shaving Lotion Best to use after Shaving 25c Bottles at McCOLLOCH'S Drug Store. Social Notes Miss Kate Riggs and Mrs. A. W. Wilcox entertained Miss Riggs' University Sunday School class of the Congregational church at supper last Friday night at the home of Dr. A. M. Wilcox. After supper the class held a business meeting electing the following officers: president, Madeline Carter; vice-president, Genevieve Walker; secretary, Florence Hale; treasurer, Mina Upton; corresponding secretary, Marie Madden; sergeant-atarms, Pearl Carpenter. The Kansas City members of the active chapter of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity will give a dance during the Thanksgiving holidays. Phi Delta Theta gave a victrola party at the chapter house last night. The Beta Theta Pi fraternity will give its Turkey Pull December 19, at the chapter house. Coffee at the lunch rom in Fraser. Adv. 50-8 PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M'CONNELL Physician and surgeon. Office, 819 Mass. St. Bell 399, Home 9342. Residence, 1346 Tenn. St. Bell 1023. Home 936. F. BROCK, Optometrists and Specialist J. F. CROOK, Optometric Writing Office 862 Mass. M., Bell phone 900-745-1340 BARRY REDING M. D. Eye, eye, nose HANSEN TREVOR M. D. Eye, eye, nose A. Blige. Boots 511, Heil 511, A. Blige. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BRYON, Dentist, Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires' Studio. Both phones. DR, Hg. T JONES, Room 13 F A2 DR, Hg. L CHAMPS, Room 13 F A2 DR, Hg. L CHAMPS, Omeo over DR, Hg. L CHAMPS, Omeo over J. R. SCHETEL, M. D., D. O. B33 Mass- sachusetts Street. Both phones, office and bank. G. W. JONES, A. M., M. D., Disease of the stomach, surgery, and gynecology Suite 1, F. A. B. Aldg. Residence 1251 Ohio St. Both phones, 35. CLASSIFIED Barbers E. J. Blair, Physician and Surgeon, OFoose Blaire, PA, 1932, m. 1918; b. 1907, m. 1900; b. 1906, m. 1904, b. 1900, m. 1895, b. 1892, m. 1890, m. 1887, m. 1885, m. 1883, m. 1882, m. 1881, m. 1879, m. 1878, m. 1877, m. 1876, m. 1875, m. 1874, m. 1873, m. 1872, m. 1871, m. 1870, m. 1869, m. 1868, m. 1867, m. 1866, m. 1865, m. 1864, m. 1863, m. 1862, m. 1861, m. 1860, m. 1859, m. 1858, m. 1857, m. 1856, m. 1855, m. 1854, m. 1853, m. 1852, m. 1851, m. 1850, m. 1849, m. 1848, m. 1847, m. 1846, m. 1845, m. 1844, m. 1843, m. 1842, m. 1841, m. 1840, m. 1839, m. 1838, m. 1837, m. 1836, m. 1835, m. 1834, m. 1833, m. 1832, m. 1831, m. 1830, m. 1829, m. 1828, m. 1827, m. 1826, m. 1825, m. 1824, m. 1823, m. 1822, m. 1821, m. 1820, m. 1819, m. 1818, m. 1817, m. 1816, m. 1815, m. 1814, m. 1813, m. 1812, m. 1811, m. 1810, m. 1809, m. 1808, m. 1807, m. 1806, m. 1805, m. 1804, m. 1803, m. 1802, m. 1801, m. 1800, m. 1799, m. 1798, m. 1797, m. 1796, m. 1795, m. 1794, m. 1793, m. 1792, m. 1791, m. 1790, m. 1789, m. 1788, m. 1787, m. 1786, m. 1785, m. 1784, m. 1783, m. 1782, m. 1781, m. 1780, m. 1779, m. 1778, m. 1777, m. 1776, m. 1775, m. 1774, m. 1773, m. 1772, m. 1771, m. 1770, m. 1769, m. 1768, m. 1767, m. 1766, m. 1765, m. 1764, m. 1763, m. 1762, m. 1761, m. 1760, m. 1759, m. 1758, m. 1757, m. 1756, m. 1755, m. 1754, m. 1753, m. 1752, m. 1751, m. 1750, m. 1749, m. 1748, m. 1747, m. 1746, m. 1745, m. 1744, m. 1743, m. 1742, m. 1741, m. 1740, m. 1739, m. 1738, m. 1737, m. 1736, m. 1735, m. 1734, m. 1733, m. 1732, m. 1731, m. 1730, m. 1729, m. 1728, m. 1727, m. 1726, m. 1725, m. 1724, m. 1723, m. 1722, m. 1721, m. 1720, m. 1719, m. 1718, m. 1717, m. 1716, m. 1715, m. 1714, m. 1713, m. 1712, m. 1711, m. 1710, m. 1709, m. 1708, m. 1707, m. 1706, m. 1705, m. 1704, m. 1703, m. 1702, m. 1701, m. 1700, m. 1699, m. 1698, m. 1697, m. 1696, m. 1695, m. 1694, m. 1693, m. 1692, m. 1691, m. 1690, m. 1689, m. 1688, m. 1687, m. 1686, m. 1685, m. 1684, m. 1683, m. 1682, m. 1681, m. 1680, m. 1679, m. 1678, m. 1677, m. 1676, m. 1675, m. 1674, m. 1673, m. 1672, m. 1671, m. 1670, m. 1669, m. 1668, m. 1667, m. 1666, m. 1665, m. 1664, m. 1663, m. 1662, m. 1661, m. 1660, m. 1659, m. 1658, m. 1657, m. 1656, m. 1655, m. 1654, m. 1653, m. 1652, m. 1651, m. 1650, m. 1649, m. 1648, m. 1647, m. 1646, m. 1645, m. 1644, m. 1643, m. 1642, m. 1641, m. 1640, m. 1639, m. 1638, m. 1637, m. 1636, m. 1635, m. 1634, m. 1633, m. 1632, m. 1631, m. 1630, m. 1629, m. 1628, m. 1627, m. 1626, m. 1625, m. 1624, m. 1623, m. 1622, m. 1621, m. 1620, m. 1619, m. 1618, m. 1617, m. 1616, m. 1615, m. 1614, m. 1613, m. 1612, m. 1611, m. 1610, m. 1609, m. 1608, m. 1607, m. 1606, m. 1605, m. 1604, m. 1603, m. 1602, m. 1601, m. 1600, m. 1599, m. 1598, m. 1597, m. 1596, m. 1595, m. 1594, m. 1593, m. 1592, m. 1591, m. 1590, m. 1589, m. 1588, m. 1587, m. 1586, m. 1585, m. 1584, m. 1583, m. 1582, m. 1581, m. 1580, m. 1579, m. 1578, m. 1577, m. 1576, m. 1575, m. 1574, m. 1573, m. 1572, m. 1571, m. 1570, m. 1569, m. 1568, m. 1567, m. 1566, m. 1565, m. 1564, m. 1563, m. 1562, m. 1561, m. 1560, m. 1559, m. 1558, m. 1557, m. 1556, m. 1555, m. 1554, m. 1553, m. 1552, m. 1551, m. 1550, m. 1549, m. 1548, m. 1547, m. 1546, m. 1545, m. 1544, m. 1543, m. 1542, m. 1541, m. 1540, m. 1539, m. 1538, m. 1537, m. 1536, m. 1535, m. 1534, m. 1533, m. 1532, m. 1531, m. 1530, m. 1529, m. 1528, m. 1527, m. 1526, m. 1525, m. 1524, m. 1523, m. 1522, m. 1521, m. 1520, m. 1519, m. 1518, m. 1517, m. 1516, m. 1515, m. 1514, m. 1513, m. 1512, m. 1511, m. 1510, m. 1509, m. 1508, m. 1507, m. 1506, m. 1505, m. 1504, m. 1503, m. 1502, m. 1501, m. 1500, m. 1499, m. 1498, m. 1497, m. 1496, m. 1495, m. 1494, m. 1493, m. 1492, m. 1491, m. 1490, m. 1489, m. 1488, m. 1487, m. 1486, m. 1485, m. 1484, m. 1483, m. 1482, m. 1481, m. 1480, m. 1479, m. 1478, m. 1477, m. 1476, m. 1475, m. 1474, m. 1473, m. 1472, m. 1471, m. 1470, m. 1469, m. 1468, m. 1467, m. 1466, m. 1465, m. 1464, m. 1463, m. 1462, m. 1461, m. 1460, m. 1459, m. 1458, m. 1457, m. 1456, m. 1455, m. 1454, m. 1453, m. 1452, m. 1451, m. 1450, m. 1449, m. 1448, m. 1447, m. 1446, m. 1445, m. 1444, m. 1443, m. 1442, m. 1441, m. 1440, m. 1439, m. 1438, m. 1437, m. 1436, m. 1435, m. 1434, m. 1433, m. 1432, m. 1431, m. 1430, m. 1429, m. 1428, m. 1427, m. 1426, m. 1425, m. 1424, m. 1423, m. 1422, m. 1421, m. 1420, m. 1419, m. 1418, m. 1417, m. 1416, m. 1415, m. 1414, m. 1413, m. 1412, m. 1411, m. 1410, m. 1409, m. 1408, m. 1407, m. 1406, m. 1405, m. 1404, m. 1403, m. 1402, m. 1401, m. 1400, m. 1399, m. 1398, m. 1397, m. 1396, m. 1395, m. 1394, m. 1393, m. 1392, m. 1391, m. 1390, m. 1389, m. 1388, m. 1387, m. 1386, m. 1385, m. 1384, m. 1383, m. 1382, m. 1381, m. 1380, m. 1379, m. 1378, m. 1377, m. 1376, m. 1375, m. 1374, m. 1373, m. 1372, m. 1371, m. 1370, m. 1369, m. 1368, m. 1367, m. 1366, m. 1365, m. 1364, m. 1363, m. 1362, m. 1361, m. 1360, m. 1359, m. 1358, m. 1357, m. 1356, m. 1355, m. 1354, m. 1353, m. 1352, m. 1351, m. 1350, m. 1349, m. 1348, m. 1347, m. 1346, m. 1345, m. 1344, m. 1343, m. 1342, m. 1341, m. 1340, m. 1339, m. 1338, m. 1337, m. 1336, m. 1335, m. 1334, m. 1333, m. 1332, m. 1331, m. 1330, m. 1329, m. 1328, m. 1327, m. 1326, m. 1325, m. 1324, m. 1323, m. 1322, m. 1321, m. 1320, m. 1319, m. 1318, m. 1317, m. 1316, m. 1315, m. 1314, m. 1313, m. 1312, m. 1311, m. 1310, m. 1309, m. 1308, m. 1307, m. 1306, m. 1305, m. 1304, m. 1303, m. 1302, m. 1301, m. 1300, m. 1299, m. 1298, m. 1297, m. 1296, m. 1295, m. 1294, m. 1293, m. 1292, m. 1291, m. 1290, m. 1289, m. 1288, m. 1287, m. 1286, m. 1285, m. 1284, m. 1283, m. 1282, m. 1281, m. 1280, m. 1279, m. 1278, m. 1277, m. 1276, m. 1275, m. 1274, m. 1273, m. 1272, m. 1271, m. 1270, m. 1269, m. 1268, m. 1267, m. 1266, m. 1265, m. 1264, m. 1263, m. 1262, m. 1261, m. 1260, m. 1259, m. 1258, m. 1257, m. 1256, m. 1255, m. 1254, m. 1253, m. 1252, m. 1251, m. 1250, m. 1249, m. 1248, m. 1247, m. 1246, m. 1245, m. 1244, m. 1243, m. 1242, m. 1241, m. 1240, m. 1239, m. 1238, m. 1237, m. 1236, m. 1235, m. 1234, m. 1233, m. 1232, m. 1231, m. 1230, m. 1229, m. 1228, m. 1227, m. 1226, m. 1225, m. 1224, m. 1223, m. 1222, m. 1221, m. 1220, m. 1219, m. 1218, m. 1217, m. 1216, m. 1215, m. 1214, m. 1213, m. 1212, m. 1211, m. 1210, m. 1209, m. 1208, m. 1207, m. 1206, m. 1205, m. 1204, m. 1203, m. 1202, m. 1201, m. 1200, m. 1199, m. 1198, m. 1197, m. 1196, m. 1195, m. 1194, m. 1193, m. 1192, m. 1191, m. 1190, m. 1189, m. 1188, m. 1187, m. 1186, m. 1185, m. 1184, m. 1183, m. 1182, m. 1181, m. 1180, m. 1179, m. 1178, m. 1177, m. 1176, m. 1175, m. 1174, m. 1173, m. 1172, m. 1171, m. 1170, m. 1169, m. 1168, m. 1167, m. 1166, m. 1165, m. 1164, m. 1163, m. 1162, m. 1161, m. 1160, m. 1159, m. 1158, m. 1157, m. 1156, m. 1155, m. 1154, m. 1153, m. 1152, m. 1151, m. 1150, m. 1149, m. 1148, m. 1147, m. 1146, m. 1145, m. 1144, m. 1143, m. 1142, m. 1141, m. 1140, m. 1139, m. 1138, m. 1137, m. 1136, m. 1135, m. 1134, m. 1133, m. 1132, m. 1131, m. 1130, m. 1129, m. 1128, m. 1127, m. 1126, m. 1125, m. 1124, m. 1123, m. 1122, m. 1121, m. 1120, m. 1119, m. 1118, m. 1117, m. 1116, m. 1115, m. 1114, m. 1113, m. 1112, m. 1111, m. 1110, m. 1109, m. 1108, m. 1107, m. 1106, m. 1105, m. 1104, m. 1103, m. 1102, m. 1101, m. 1100, m. 1099, m. 1098, m. 1097, m. 1096, m. 1095, m. 1094, m. 1093, m. 1092, m. 1091, m. 1090, m. 1089, m. 1088, m. 1087, m. 1086, m. 1085, m. 1084, m. 1083, m. 1082, m. 1081, m. 1080, m. 1079, m. 1078, m. 1077, m. 1076, m. 1075, m. 1074, m. 1073, m. 1072, m. 1071, m. 1070, m. 1069, m. 1068, m. 1067, m. 1066, m. 1065, m. 1064, m. 1063, m. 1062, m. 1061, m. 1060, m. 1059, m. 1058, m. 1057, m. 1056, m. 1055, m. 1054, m. 1053, m. 1052, m. 1051, m. 1050, m. 1049, m. 1048, m. 1047, m. 1046, m. 1045, m. 1044, m. 1043, m. 1042, m. 1041, m. 1040, m. 1039, m. 1038, m. 1037, m. 1036, m. 1035, m. 1034, m. 1033, m. 1032, m. 1031, m. 1030, m. 1029, m. 1028, m. 1027, m. 1026, m. 1025, m. 1024, m. 1023, m. 1022, m. 1021, m. 1020, m. 1019, m. 1018, m. 1017, m. 1016, m. 1015, m. 1014, m. 1013, m. 1012, m. 1011, m. 1010, m. 1009, m. 1008, m. 1007, m. 1006, m. 1005, m. 1004, m. 1003, m. 1002, m. 1001, m. 100 S. T. Gillippe, M. D. office, corner Vermont St., Gillippe, Residence, 728 Indian St. Phone: 506 Phone Benzad, Plumbling CO. for, gas Maxda Mazda lampe. 1937. Mass. phones 858. Plumbers Frank liff's Barber Shop. 1025 Mass. Two good barbers. Satisfaction assured. J. C. Houk's Barber Shop. 912 Mass. Three barbers in chairs; chairs; never have to wait. Razors honored. Price reasonable, work the best. Let us name them: **Haley**, **Osborn** & **Ocman**, 816 Mass. **S** 425 **Osborn** & **Ocman**. Ladies Tailors Mrs. Ellison Dressmaking and -Ladies Miss Williams. Phones 2411, over Johnson & Moll. Ladies Tailoring and Dressmaking. Gowns for all occasions. All work guaranteed. B. R. Daily, 914 Mass. Sanitary cleaning establishment in connection. Phone 421 Bell. Lawency Sewing School. Leslie's tailoring class was based on the school's Phonics 506. Powers Misses; Powers M. C. McClairn Hair Dressers Queens City College. System and sewing. Queens, NY. M.R.J. Coat Factory, School, Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 Kyll, Bellwood. Miscellaneous Sporting Goods Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-fit goodness, hair-styling appointments, appointments call Bell 1372, Home : 51. The Select Hair Dressing Shop, 927 Mass St. D & M sporting goods and athletic supplies. D & M by Ernst. 262 Mass. S. Phones: 341-750-8150. Hiwatha Cafe for regular meals, lunch and dinner when down town. Open after the show. Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver Watchmaker and Gardener, and Jewelry. Bell Phone 712-371-7178. Masson Street 717 Mason One oral means no risk, small investment. The goods, package, smoke W.T.W. W. T. Wilmer homemade bacon cured I have a nice line of plain china for painting at the Estelle North studio 783 Mass. St. up- ward from the building. Student's Co-op Club $2.50 to $3.00 per night. WANTED. Brood, and room. WNANX "board" and "room" MX "campus. Address X Y" Daily Kansan. LOST—On Lee between Myers hall and 1237 Louisiana, a lily bud candle holder belonging to a brass candle stick. Finder please return to 1237 Oread. LOST-Coral bar pin. Return to Kappa Alpha Theta house. LOST- Conklin's fountain pen, Tuesday morning on Adams street, between Tennessee street and Chemistry building. Finder call Bell 1378. Bowersock Theatre Wednesday, Nov. 26 Highest Standard Attractions, Henry W. Savage offers The Newest Musical Success "Little Boy Blue" With the following cast headed by OTIS HARLAN Vivian Weissell, Elizabeth Goodall, Pearl Palmer, Thos. Burton, Fredre- rick Lyon, Rollin Grimes, and Chas. Fletcher. The prettiest and best singing chorus ever sent on tour and Mr. Savage's complete Grand Opera Orchestra. Prices $2.00, 1.50, 1.00, .75 and .50 Curtain, 8:15 as usual. LOST—Pair of ladies' brown dog- sk gloves, with initials I. R. on inside. Phone Bell 1241. Eat that Thanksgiving dinner at the Oread. Watch for the menu.— Adv. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WILLIAM B. MURRAY SCENE FROM "LITTLE BOY BLUE" Bowersock Theatre, Wednesday, November 26 MISSOURI WINS FIFTH GAME FROM KANSAS (Continued from page 1) for short gains, it seemed sure that the Jayhawkers would score before the game had lived long. But the Tigers strengthened and the score failed to materialize. Missouri kicked off, recovered her own kick, and after a brief attempt at gaining through the Kansas line, set back by penalties, was forced toick. Shepard booted the warrior to yard standings on Kane's 20 yard line. Sweeped in yards through center. With "third and seven to" against the Jayhawkers, Bunny tucked the pigskin under his arm, and departed for a pretty 20 yard run into Tiger territory. Wilson Makes Great Punt Here the Tigers held. Kansas was forced to kick. After making one first down, Shearp returned the punt, and Wilson hit left his own foot through his fingers, his only fumble of the game. He recovered for a 10 yard loss. Kansas hit left tackle but was thrown back for three yards. Wilson dropped back almost to his goal line, and shot out the prettiest punt of the first half, a long spiral that dropped into Shearp's arms on his own 40-yard line, 50 yards down the field. Shep kicked back, Kansas received her own 35 yard drive. Successive plunger hits, Tudor and Mar-Venue, Kansas her first down. So it went, till finally on a last exchange of punts Kansas was left in possession of the ball, just over the line in Missouri territory. The Tigers came back strong in the second quarter, the period which has been the most disastrous to Jayhawker hopes all year. A lucky kick by Shepard started the work. Dropping back and hitting the pigskin down to the Jayhawkers 20-yard line where it struck just in front of Wilson, eluded his grasp and bounded over the goal line for a Kansas touchback. The Beginning of the Bayhawkers put the ball in play from the field 20-yard by this fluke 65-yard kick of the Tiger halfback had turned the tide of the game strongly in Missouri's favor. After gaining 15 yards on a Missouri penalty, Kansas was not able to gain through the Tiger line, and was forced to kick. Strothers sent the ball over to Missouri's 40 yard line, and here the great Tiger rush started. Shepard made 5 around he left the next play, and came pucky half seize, nankin and carried is over the Kansas line for a first down. Moore made 1, but Kansas was penalized 15 yards on the play, and the ball was Missouri's, 25 yards from the Bayhawk goal. McWilliams made 5, Moore b. The Tigers had the ball on their opponents' 15-yard line. Moore failed to gain a yard. Shepard burrowed into the line with the same result. A third try at the same spot was made by Captain Wilson, but Kansas was invulnerable. There was but one thing to do, kick, and McWilliams was chosen by the Tiger coaches to perform the duty. Dropping back to his 20-yard line, he slowly scraped his shoes. The Jayhawker stands fidgeted in impatience. Moore stretched himself flat on the ground, buried his face in a half inch of water, and placed the ball on the Three quarter side, so slowly, McWilliams met the ball squarely on the point of his toe, and sailed it between the Orange and Black crossbars for the only score of the rame. The rest of the quarter was uneventful. Kansas got possession of the ball on a lucky fumble by Shepard in the middle of the field, and started to attack the Tiger goal. But the Jayhawkers were penalized 15 yards for holding. Strothers was forced to kick out of danger. Tigers Came Back Clean Missouri appeared in clean suits at the beginning of the third quarter, and played as though they were just starting to punt left Kansas in possession of the ball on her 10 yard line, the Jayawkers losing 10 yards on a penalty. Wilson kicked to Shepard on Kansas 40-yard line, and on the first play, Moore raced 25 yards around left end, advancing the ball to within 15 yards of the Kansas goal. "We got the Tiger rooters went crazy, a touchdown seemed sure. Moore was given the ball, and gained three yards through the Kansas defense. Shepard hit the center of the line, but failed to gain. McWilliams carried the ball out to the center of the field, directly in front of the goal posts. But the little quarter outgrew them all. Dunckel was summoned from the game to take Wilson's place. McWilliams dropped back as if for a place kick. Dunckel walked back to hold the ball. And then the unexpected happened. Gallagher flipped the ball, the pigskin sailing back in a long pretty arc. Dunkel took it, but instead of pinning it to the ground, tucked it under his arms, and ran back two yards. Three Tiger men stood over the Kansas goal line with hands upraised, signalling for the ball. Dunkel appeared waiting to make a perfect chance. Two Jayhawker linemen charged him. Not hurrying the least, with the big Kansans in front of him, the cool Tiger athlete sent the ball in a pretty executed fling, straight into the arms of Speelman, the Tiger end, Missouri went crazy, simply crazy. The stands trembled under the weight of the a "loftive" mungled with a "Fair Missouri" swept across the field; and from every house-top in the vicinity came yells of triumph. But suddenly the crowd caught its breath. The referee, instead of directing the ball to be kicked out from touchdown, stopped and went 20 yard line. There he gave it to Kansas and ordered them to attack the Missouri goal. Speel- isan had been more than 10 yards behind the Kansas line when he caught a pass. The pass was to Missouri's touchdown had been declared illegal. Wieldin' the Kick Fails. The Jayhawkers started the ball down the field, and before the Tigers had recovered from their hard luck, they found it on their own 30-yard line, Kansas having advanced it there by many minutes of recovered punts and Missouri penalties. But the Jayhawkers were able to gain no longer through the Tiger line. With third down and eight to go, Wieldin dropped back to the 40-yard line, and shot a pretty place kick at the Tiger goal. It looked as if it went over, and the Jayhawker roots correspondingly enthushed, but the kick was declared "no goal" by the officials. It passed 2 feet under the Tiger crossbar. The fourth quarter was a hard one, a heart-breaking one. One minute Kansas would be in possession of the ball, the next, Missouri. One second Kansas would be well in Tiger territory attacking Missouri's goal, the next, Wilson's men would have the ball, carring it towards the Jayhawk goal. With Missouri in possession of the ball on their opponents' 45-yard line, at the beginning of the final session, the Tigers rapidly carried it toward the Jayhawk crossbars. They Prayed for K Shepard and Wiggins hit the line for two 5-yard shots, and a first down. Dunkel grab a forward pass but Kansas scored it and took over the ball. Strothers kissed to Missouri's 45-yard line. On the first down after the kick, Reber pouced on the ball after a Tiger fumble. A forward pass, Wilson gained 20 yards. On the next down Kansas was penalized 15 yards. Moore intercepted a forward pass, and the Tigers took the ball. And once again the Jayhawker rooters prayed. For on the second down after the pass had been intercepted, Moore slid 40 yards around the left side of the line. He was finally tackled by Wilson in the Kansas 35-yard in quick succession, and Moore allowed with another 10 yard advance. Missouri had the ball, 15 yards from Kansas goal. Thatch the Tiger forward pass, was summoned into service. But he was off form. One attempt went wild, the second time he was caught with the ball in his arms and the Jayhawker roters were relieved. For it was fourth down. WEDNESDAY Kansas won an exchange of kicks, worked the ball into Tiger ground. Jayhawker punts were recovered by Jayhawker athletes, Missouri fumbled once at a critical instant, and with two minutes to play Kansas stood with the ball on the Tiger's 25-yard line. One run was attempted, and it was disastrous. A lineman held on the play, and the Jayhawkers were carried back to Missouri's 40-yard line. Weidlein left back for a kick. He meant either a tie or a cap. The Jayhawker captain took his time. It was the last play of the game. He sent the ball straight at the Tiger goal posts. The kick fell 5 yards short. Kansas was defeated. Various reasons have been assigned as the cause of the Kansas defeat. The Tigers were the better mudders; they had the better team. But no one who knew them will know the worth of the Kansas team. How they fought, when a Tiger score seemed sure, is history. How the rooters stood by the team in the face of defeat is history. How Mose and Frank took the loss of this, the big game of season, by passing the teams beverger in the Missouri Valley than Kansas—but there are gamer fighters. Rober L. E. Up Weidlein, L. T. Speelman James L. G. Kemper Keeling C. Zimmerman Mulloy R. G. Clay Burton R. T. Groves Strothers Q. Herbertson Tulson Q. McWilliams Tupper L. H. Shepard Bishop R. H. Moore Stueve F. Wilson, c. The Line.1n The Summary Substitutions. Kansas: Hammond for Mulloy, Tudor for Hammond, Parker for Sommers, Sommers for Tudor, Russell for Sommers, Detwiler for Russell, Martin for Bishop, Greenlees for Martin.. Missouri; Galleger for Zimmerman, and Gallegear for Gallegear for Shepard, For Moore, Lake for Thatcher, Shepard for Lake, Dunkel for Wilson, Thatcher for Dunkel. Goal from placement, McWilliams. Referee, J. C. Grover, Washington U. Umpire, W. C. Gordon, Harvard. Head linesman, Dr. James Reilly. T And Now for Home-Coming Week Sure you'll want to look your best. Of course you always do but more especially at this time. There're no people on earth who like to see you well dressed better than the folks at home. "Tog Up" a bit and give them a pleasant surprise. Right now's the time to get that new suit and overcoat anyway. There's always lots doin' in the month of December where you need to be well dressed. Come tomorrow and buy them so you'll have the use of a new suit and overcoat during that time. We are especially featuring this week "Styleplus" suits and overcoats at $17, and "Hirsh Wickwire & Co." high grade garments at $25. Stop in tomorrow and try some on. We're always glad to show 'em. Don't forget we have the finest and most complete assortment of all leather suit cases and bags in town. Prices from $3.50 to $25.00. See Windows Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUTFITTERS See Windows THE OREAD Cafeteria and Tea Room We are serving the largest variety of properly cooked foods in town. Buy your next meal ticket with us and we guarantee to feed you cheaper than any club or lunch room in town. Candy Soda Fountain ASK ABOUT US 1241 OREAD Cigars ORCHESTRA TO GIVE PROGRAM AT CHAPEL The program committee has arranged another musical chapel to A sextet from the orchestra will open the program with "Sarabande" by Bach. Prof. C. E. Hubach will sing a special selection. The string quartet from the orchestra will play a "Serenade" by Haydn and "The Mill" by Raff. Eat that Thanksgiving dinner at the Oread. Watch for the menu.— Adv. Novelty decorations at Hoadley's, 17 W. Warren..Adv. SENIORS RETURN AFTER LONG INSPECTION TRIP The senior engineers returned yesterday from their inspection tour. In St. Louis the crowd first visited the factories of the St. Louis Car Works, the largest plant for the building of electric street cars in the United States. The party next inspected the Baden Street Plant of St. Louis City Water Works. He partied the divided and the civil engineers stayed on the full inspection of the creating plant, while the electricals and mechanics went over the plant of the Union Electric Co., which supplies a greater part of St. Louis with electricity for all purposes. The afternoon was spent by the civils in inspecting the bridges and by the mechanicals and electricals in going through the factories of the American Car and Foundery Co. The electricals also spent some time in the in the plant of the American Carbon and Battery Co., which is one of the largest of its kind in this country. The latter half of the afternoon was spent in the inspection by the whole party of the Anhauser-Busch Brewing Co. Saturday the entire party saw the Tiger game at Columbia. All members of the sophomore annual committee are requested to turn in their receipt books and money at the check stand in Fraser hall Tuesday morning before chapel. Ruthert, chairman of the financial department, at the class president will be at the stand to receive the books and money. Read your own KANSAN. SQUIRES FOR PHOTOGRAPHS KODAK FINISHING AND SUPPLIES. ALSO FRAMING STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. EACH STUDENT YEARNS FOR CLASS FOOTBALL UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 25, 1913 NUMBER 53. Old Pigskins Make Their Bow In Every Street and Alley VARSITY MEN WILL COACH Coach Mosse Appoints "K" Men to Teach Unknown How to Fall on The Ball. Every year, immediately after the Missouri game, the students yearn to do something, the less husky athletes long to get out on some open field and show their more fortunate brethren just what they would have done had they been in that tight position in the Tiger game, or the battle with the Cormhusers. Old signs of student activity, are never seen on the streets until after the Varsity has completed its schedule, and either rejoiced or dismayed the students. And so yesterday was but a foreruner of the days to come. In the middle of Adams street Bert Wadhams, Burny Dunham, and several other of Lee's cohorts gathered in two groups, and displayed their prowess in booting an old ragged pigskin. Out in the center of Ohio street between the 1300 and 1400 blocks the Agney Club, an eating buns of hefty athletes, were passing the hallway of Kentucky and Vermont street, Oread avenue, East Lee, Alabama, each saw its song of frolicking athletes forward passing the oval or running signals. "Class football, let's have class football," was the cry of the multitude, and Leonard St. Leger Mosse and Leonard Frank, heartening to the voice of the wind, appointed K men to coach the various teams prepared plan for inter-class games, to be contested in a couple of weeks. Introducing Coach B. Tudor Buster Tudor, the big lineman on the 1913 eleven will train the seniors, and tutor them in the best methods for discovering and attacking the weaknesses of Leon McCarty and Jay Bond, the probable referees. Dutch Detwiler, charley-horse and all, will assist Buster in his fell design. Trio to Train Sophs. Willard Burton, the big tackle from Mound City, will direct the progress of the juniors, those junior who last year swore to scalp the seniors if they ever again met on the field. Billy Greenlee will assist him, James probably taking the line and Greeneelees working the backfield. Nuts Hurst and Left Sproull have already signified thirst intention of coming out and playing the two cues for this class in their figures on hurdling the line, *and Sproull on forward passing.* Bony Reber, John Hammond, and Herb Sommers will direct the destinies of the sophomores, those wise and hefty sophs who last year tied the seniors for the class championship, even though they were only freshmen at the time. They had lots of presumption. Jay Plank, the body and soul of the upper-class team, will testify to that. Shorty Strothers, Thomas Mulloy, and Web Martin will run the freshies. Mosse and Frank have not yet decided whether they will permit the freshman eleven that has been working with the Varsity all year to represent its class in the B league, which is incremented last year, and it is doubtful if the Jayhawker mentors will break the former stringent rule in order to let this bunch of huskies take their revenge for many long-suffered paddlings out on the upperclassmen. New men only will be played probably. That certainly offers a chance for the Budding Strothers to buck the regulars all fall to come out now and show up their less talented elders. First Come, First Served The class team candidates can check out suits and shoes at Manager Hamilton's office in the Gym, as long as said suits and shoes are new. The first year-marriage turn back in their equipment, first come will certainly have to be first served. No practice will be held until the Monday after the Thanksgiving holiday when the candidates are interview report to their conches on McCook field. Postpone Council Meeting The Men's Student Council will not hold its regular meeting tonight. BARBER CASHES IN AND DEPARTS HENCE Hundreds of Students Grieve When Jack Fullerton Sells Establishment PANTATORIUM IS NOW QUIET And The Trouwers of Student Ticket Holders Bag at the Patellas; It's an Annual Affair. And in the meantime, several hundred students are buying new pantatorium tickets or pressing their trousers "a la mattress." Some of them roar, some swear, maybe, some protest, and some keep the fact that they have been beaten as quiet as they can. For the sudden demise of the K. U. Pantatorium, which occurred recently when one Jack Fullerton sold out, leaves many students in the position of the much-touted snipie hunter. In other words, they are a more or less periodic occurrence at the University. A scenario writer would probably bake a "coup" somewhat after this fashion. Scene 1. Jack Fullerton, a barber, has an inspiration. He rents a room and has a pantatorium sign painted. Scene 2. Fullerton obtains the services of five of six live solicitors. They go out and sell tickets to the students at $2.25 a throw. The students are keen to recognize a bargain, and the cash comes rolling in. Scene 3. Fullerton sells out, and depends. Scene 4. The pantatorium falls to reopen. Scene 5. Trouvers of student-tick et holders begin to bag at the knees FIRST SOPH BUM IS GET-ACQUAINTED PARTY Sophomores And Sophomorettes Attend and Consume Cider and Doughnuts Two hundred sophomores gathered in the gym last night for rthe first Sophomore Bum. Everybody got acquainted with everybody else, and learned who "he" was or "she" was, making for the Thanksgiving dinner by consuming a vast quantity of doughnuts and oceans of cider. The program consisted of tries by C. L. Dietrich, C. H. Gleason, and F. E. Royce, a farce by C. S. DeRoin and C. H. Gleason, a talk by Prof. Merle Thorpe, a violin solo by Florence Cook, readings by E. R. Moody and Ruth Lillis, and several selections by Claire Dietrich. Steps were taken toward a memorial by levying an assessment of 25 cents per semester or 50 cents for the schol year. Class numerals were presented to the following: Burton, James, Strothers, Mulloy, Russell, Hammond, Kane, Reber, Trueblood, Henderson Creighton, Elswick, Gaitskill, Court, McKay McMeel, Johnson, and Fiske. Prof. Merle Thore, of the journalism department will leave for Madison, Wis., Wednesday to attend the American Conference of Journalism, to be held there Friday and Saturday, November 28 and 29. PROF. THORPE TO ADDRESS JOURNALISTS AT MADISON This is the second annual meeting of the conference. At the first, in Chicago a year ago, fourteen college and universities were represented. The chapel exercises this morning ed a vocal selection by Prof. C. E. Webb, associate musical and include solo selections and a vocal selection by the orchestra quartet and sextet. On Friday Professor Thorpe will address the conference on "The Value of Printing Laboratory to Journalism. Company, Journalism its Cost, Size, and Use." UNIVERSITY MUSICIANS GIVE CHAPEL PROGRAM The members of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity who will remain in Lawrence for the Thanksgiving holidays are planning an informal dance to be given at the chapter house Friday evening. THE SPIRIT OF THANKSGIVING HURRY UP THE HALLOWEEN OVEN IS HOT WE AS IT USED TO BE FAULTY FLUNKS AND LONGS ME MADDY AS IT IS TODAY AS IT IS TODAY DEAN SAYS BEAT IT IT'S VACATION TIME WHEN WHISTLE TOOTS FOR DEAN TEMPL Students Have Right to Leave Classes When Hour Ends, He Declares Complaints continue regarding the habit of some instructors keeping their classes over the hour and making it impossible for students to reach their next classes on time. To prevent this the Council last year extended the period of intermission from five to ten minutes. When the matter was taken to Dean Templin today he said that the trouble probably grew out of the failure of instructors to hear the whistle. He said that students had a perfect right to leave the class room upon the expiration of the class period and that he hoped they would take advantage of their privilege of doing so. DROPS MANHOLE COVER— AND LOSES TWO TOES "You see," he added, "instructors are very much interested in the class work and cannot hear the signal as readily as students." Because man-hole lids are heavy and have sharp corners, Harlan King, a senior engineer, is now short part of two toes. Some of the sami- ticians in the sewer system peka sewer system Friday for a "tech report." King was one of them. The engineers were covering up a manhole which they had investigated when the accident occurred, now getting about on crutches. Professor Wilcox to Topeka Prof. A. M. Wilcox, head of the department of history was in Topeka yesterday and spoke before the Kansas University of the American Institute of Archaeology of which he is president. The lectures given by this society are all illustrated and are calculated to interest even those not well posted on the subject as the scholar. The Philosophy club will meet at the home of Prof. Arthur Mitchell, 408 West Pinkney街 this evening at 7:30. The program is: "Under the Cruise." "Review of Current Periodic Literature," Miss Marie Collins. Professor Wilcox to Toneka Philosophy Club to Meet Man Who Works in Summer Will Rest in South Until January Dean Olin Templin, of the College, will leave tomorrow en his annual vacation as it is his custom to stay at the University during the summer while other members of the faculty are absent. I wish to extend to the stu dents of the University through the Kansas Thanksgiving greetings. The University is enjoying a prosperous year and there are many reasons for satisfaction and encouragement. All this calls for increased efforts for unity in the University and for a great enlargement in its facilities for service. Let the students when they join their families at Thanksgiving time make known the real spirit and life of the institution. He will be out of his office during the three week between the Thanksgiving day. Chancellor Extends Holiday Greetings He will go to Charlottesville, Va., where he will spend some time visiting the University of Virginia. After visiting Washington and other points in the east he will go to Tampa, Florida, to spend the Christmas holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Herbert W. Rankin, class of '07. A plot for the senior play which is to be produced in March will be chosen at the meeting of the senior play committee next Monday. Several plots have been submitted which offer a great variety of choice. Immediately upon the chosing of the plays, work for its construction will begin. Miss Etta Smith, chairman of the committee, says an effort will be made to give it originality and an interesting college background. He will be accompanied by Mrs. Templin. THEY WILL SELECT PLOT FOR SENIOR PLAY TODAY "Die Sonntagsjager" is the name of a play which will be put on by the members of Der Deutsche Drache Verein sometime in January. DEUTSCHCHE VEREIN TO GIVE CLEVER ONE ACT PLAY The play is a clever one-act comedy written by the popular author, Benedict. The speeches are short to grip the audience action drag. This comedy was given at the University of Oklahoma last year and made a decided hit. Even Editors Play Today" Kannan is the last will be答题 while you play The tryout for a part in the cast at 4 o'clock in room 116 Fraser. at 7 o'clock in room 116 Fraser. Even Editors Play ALL MISSOURI VALLEY SELECTION BY MOSSE FRANK STRONG. Chancellor. Kansas Mentor Picks Two Teams From Players In Valley Conference NEBRASKA PLACES MOST MEN First Eleven Contains Six Nebras ka, Three Kansas and Two Missouri Athletes Each year immediately after the close of the football season there is but one question in the minds of the college students, the close followers of valley football. What will be the selection of the different coaches and football authorities for the All-Valley Championship team? And verily that is one of the hardest propositions which the different coaches and athletic managers have to face. They always have the opportunity to see the different Conference teams in action, time and again they look over the stars of the different teams earnestly and carefully, first as possible enemies then as objects. Interfer with others not give many places on their own school, not many athletes of their own eleven can be given a place on the mythical team. That would look like favorism. Coach Mosse, together with several followers of Missouri valley football picked the following two teams last night, after much discussion. The choice was resulting only in a decision that it gives an insight into the coach's viewpoint. The first eleven, representing the class of the Valley contains 6 Nebraska men, 3 Kansas, and 2 Missouri athletes. Following is the line: L. E., Mastin, Nebraska; L. T., Burton, Kansas; L. G., Galleger, Missouri; C. Keeling, Kansas; R. G., James, Kansas; R. T. Halligan, Nebraska; R. E., Speelman, Missouri; Q. Towle, Nebraska; L. H., Rutherford, Nebraska; R. H., Purdy, Nebraska; F. Howard, Nebraska. The Cornhuskers are entitled to six places on the first Valley team. They are easily the class of the Conference this year, that has been proven time and again in the league at the hands of the Tigers Saturday, seem to be inferior on the whole to Brewer's eleven, but the undoubted strength of Keeling, Burton, and James in the line has never been doubted. Drain, Washington, the Kansas Aces, have received no place on the first eleven. WOULD-BE MOURNERS TRY TO PIN CRAPE ON GYM Two students from Missouri who are in the University here tried to show their appreciation of their Mater Saturday night. They purchased a bit of crape and proceeded to the Gym. A ladder could not be found so they tried to pin the crape over the front door by means of acrobatic ability. Just then Mr. Crockett reinvented the ground appeared. He decided that the black was not necessary. HAMILTON DOESN'T KNOW HOW MUCH KANSAS MADE Just how much Kansas will receive from the receipts of the Kansas-Missouri game, will not be known until manager W. O. Hamilton receives a detailed statement from Columbia. Manager Hamilton says it is impossible to estimate accurately the crowd at Columbia, probably between people and eight thousand people saw the big game. Kansas will receive one half of the receipts, which probably were between $15,000 and $20,000. A deal expected next week from Missouri is expected next week. WILL ENTERTAIN FRESHMEN AND JUNIOR CLASSES W.S.G.A. TO DISPENSE CHEER ON THURSDAY Pi Upsilon hold the annual Thanksgiving dinner at the chapter house last night. The date of the reception given by the ladies of the faculty to the men and women of the freshman and junior classes has been set for December 11th. The date was originally set for the fourth but was postponed so as not to interfere with the meeting with Helen M. Bennett, who will speak here December 4 on "Vocational Opportunities for Women." The Cercle Francais wil hot meet this week owing to the vacation. Free for All Party in Gym Will Make Homeless Happy INVITE ALL THE UNIVERSITY "If You Can't go Home, Come Here —It's Second Best"—Virginia Reel Will Amuse Cheer up, if you are one of those for whom the fattied cat has a long-distance call only. For all who would have a little good cheer and are unable to go home can get it at the second Thanksgiving party to be given by the W. S. G. A. in the gymnasium Thursday afternoon. This party promises to be a real old-fashioned gloom dispeller. There won't be anything fussy or formal about it. Pumpkin pie, cider, apples, sandwiches, and all the other things which go to make up a good old country party will be there n abundance. The "real" Virginia Reel will be a feature of the afternoon, and games and get-together stunts will make everybody happy. A College sing will keep the school life from being forgotten. This party is for every student and faculty member who will be in Lawrence Thursday. It will be given from 2 to 5 o'clock, and those in charge say that there will be enough good time to go around. The members of the W. S. G. A. who are managing the party are: Helen Keith, Vena Spotts, Agnes Engle, and Ruth Buchanan. MEN'S GLEE CLUB WILL SING IN FIRST CONCERT DEC. 11 The University Glee club will give its first concert this year in the chapel on Thursday night, December 11. The club is bigger and better this year than ever before having twenty-one members. The club consists of a quartet, and an instrumental piece of the best soloists the club has ever had, two readers and pianists. The club during the holidays will visit fourteen of the largest towns in southern Kansas and northern Oklahoma. "The prospects are good for a trip to California the second semester," said Clarence R. Sowers, manager of the club this morning. SCHOOL OF MUSIC GIVES FRESHMAN SCHOLARSHIP Miss Grace Bell won the University freshman scholarship in music by passing most successfully a competitive examination in which several applicants were entered. The scholarship entitled Miss Bell to free tuition in all her work for the rest of the year. The School of Music gives a scholarship in each of the four classes in the school. The upper classes are given their competitive examinations at the beginning of the term and the lower classes whose scholarship institution is postponed until later in the year so as to give each contestant an equal chance. CERCLE FRANCAIS WILL HEAR PARISIAN PROFESSOR Prof. Andre Bellerfe, a professor in the Lye-Louise-le-Grand in Paris, will lecture here some time next semester. Professor Bellerfe is to make a tour of this country, giving at Yale, Harvard, and other large universities in the United States and Canada. The local Cerule Francee received a letter from the Federation de 'Aliance, the national organization of French clubs, to which it belongs, and to have Professor Bellerle speak here. The offer was accepted. W. S. G. A. Adopts Pins Silver S. hats have been adopted and will be worn by members of the Women's Student Government Club. With the exception of the one worn by the president the letters are enlarged and engraved with the letters "K. U." at the top, "14" in the center followed by the letters "W. S. G. A." Chancellor Strong a Judge Chancellor Strong a Judge Chancellor Frank Strong has been chosen among the judges of delivery by the representatives of the Kansas College Oratorical Association which met at Emporia yesterday. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The official student paper of the University EDITORIAL STAFF HERBERT FLINT - - - - - Editor-in-Chief GLENDON ALLYNE - - - - Associate Editor JOHN C. MADDEN - - - - Management JOHN C. MADDEN - - - - Sport Editor GLENNBERG - - - - High School Editor BUSINESS STAFF BAY EARTHDRIVER Circulation Manager JOK BIBOP Advertising REPORTIAL STAFF REPORTIAL STAFF RANDOLPH KENNEDY CARL DUNNE Entered as second-1-clas mail matter with the second-class letter. Larvence, Kanaas, under the act of March RANDOLPH KENNEDY SAM DEGEN Subscription price $2.50 per year, if advance; one term, $1.50. Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of journalism. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, Lawrence, Kansas. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate students further than merely printing the news by standing up for their rights; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be patient; to be helpful; to have more serious problems to uread heads; to ability at the students of the University. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1913. Editorial Assistants for today, Ray El dridge, Leon Howe, John Henry. News editor, Leon Howe; assistants, Jack Greenlees, Frank O'Sullivan Exchange editor, John M. Henry. Society reporter, Lucile Hildinger. The borrower runs in his own debt. —EMERSON. THAT K. U. RALLY When you go home tomorrow to spend Thanksgiving with the home folks, don't forget to boost that reunion of K. U. alumni and students that you are going to hold in your county during the Christmas holidays. days. Mother's mince pie and the big gobbleb Dad has been fattening for your special benefit will taste lots better if you get that country club banquet started before you return. Remember you can have a rally without having a football game or a University at hand. Let's all boost for K. U. rallies at home Christmas time. It would be well for next year's team to develop more kickers. We have enough knockers. A SUCCESSFUL SEASON What is a successful football season? No matter if we didn't have an all-victorious team, and even if we didn't beat Missouri, still Kansas has just colsed a football season that no one need be ashamed of. Battles fought to the last minute, loyal support to the team, winning or losing, good sportsmanship on the bleachers as well as on the field—surely some of these must be part of a successful season. THAT HIGH SCHOOL PIN Now, according to the governing powers, the dear old high school pin will have to be discarded along with the picture of "our senior class" and our "H. S." pennant. No more can the loyal high school graduate wear his hard earned letters upon Mount Oread. He will have to keep them to gaze upon when in a reminiscent mood in the seclusion of his own little room. Such rules can hardly be understood by the freshman, but latter he may come to realize that he is merely being assisted in "forgetting those things which are behind," etc., in order that he may seize the better things that are ahead. AT LEAST THEYE HAPPY We do not feel nearly so badly about the game Saturday as Missouri feels elated. When so much joy can be given to several thousand souls as Saturday's game gave to Missouri, Kansas is willing for the good of humanity, to take the short end of the score now and then. BAD ENOUGH ANYWHERE "Palmount college students captured a spur on the Wichita stree car system last week and gave thei co-eds a joy ride that had all the thrills of the motor car froyle, yet did not cost anything. Three-minute service over the mile track was provided although the company only furnished a car every half hour on the regular schedule. schedule. "The idle car was what the students used. Their anties continued many hours, their shouts and laugh- act bringing the people from their houses. The company turned off the power and notified President Thayer of the college that the students must desist. The motorman took his controller with him on the downtown trips. However, the motormen ed the house where the monkey wrenched it night had just as many joy rides by trolley and just as much fun as they did the night before." If this had happened at the University wouldn't the newspaper boys have held up their hands in holy terror, and wouldn't the ministers of the state have preached sermons about the wicked state university, and wouldn't the next legislature have chapped a quarter million dollars or so from the appropriation bill? Tango, Tangiere, Turki, Trotum; Latin Student: would J. Caesar have used it that way? TEACHING 'EM TO SEW Two pretty co-eds of the University of North Dakota recently were forced to quit their classes to go to their rooms and sew up their lovely new slit skirts and were ordered never again to appear in classes with the hems of their skirts notched even the tiniest bit.. News Item. Looks' as though the slit skirt is almost as unpopular in our colleges as the split infinitive. GET YOUR TICKETS EARLY GET YOUR TICKETS EARLY The Weir City Journal announces that the boys' basket-ball team will open the season by playing the girls' team Friday night. A Pittsburgh educator would teach he tango and turkey trot as an aid to mathematics. Couldn't do that here or we would all be engineers. "The collegian's standard of purity in his sports should be the highest." -Walter Camp. In the editorial column of the Tattler of the Meade high school the question is asked, "Why cannot the high school editors of the state of Kansas have an organization similar to the state association for college editors?" This is a mighty good scheme and if the Meade Tattler keeps the idea before the other high schools, there is no reason why such an organization can not be started. GRATITUDE Thanksgiving day has its special significance and association. It forces a glance at the pages of history; it reminds one of hunger and peril daultessly endured; it celebrates the harvest and the generous earth of the present. But more important than this is implied in Thanksgiving. That should hints of gratitude that should be felt for all the greatest and deepest things of life: for the joys of children; for youth and love; for the joys of parenthood; for the privilege of rearing healthy boys and girls to be noble men and women; for the serene influence of home life; for the warm friendships of years; for the rich retrospects of age and the confluence of a race well run. Nor may the clear vision of gratitude overlook all those elemental things which make life so completely worth while; the aspirations of individuals; the nation's ideals which no surface politics and corruption permanently blunt; the great utilities bestowed by the natural world; the refreshing forests which reflect the spirit; the silent hills which kindle the soul to new great deeds; the blessing of life itself—Colliers. OUR DAILY QUIZ Use honor system and grade yourself and for what purpose? It was built in the middle ages, by the state of Kansas, to house the State University. It contains the conservatory of music, a landmark by navigators on the Kaw. North College is a picturequeen but chilly ruined situated as far as possible from the rest of the University. When Mr. Owen was it erected, and for what purpose? NORTH COLLEGE What are its most striking features? Its ornate style of architecture and its remarkable state of preservation, considering its age. Its walls are not sound proof. It cannot be heated. Violin and vocal lessons are given there. 1- What and where is North College? North College is a pictureque but There is only one—its isolation. -7-How has it managed to stand so long? 4- What are the most striking features? of architecture and its 8. What would best remedy its defects? Dynamite. 6-What are its good points? There is only one—its isolation It will blow into the Kaw some dark night. 6—will impass the catfish carp about it. Not unless the catfish carp about it. 10—Will anybody care? Dynamite. 9. What is its probable fate? CAMPUS OPINION To the Editor of the Daily Kansan: As No. 16 went through Friday night the students, gathered at the depot sang lustily one of those songs in which the most conscientious do not join. "EFFECTS OF THE YELL" To the Editor of the Daily Kansas A number of the passengers probably had never visited K. U. They do not know the school as it is. Their conception of K. U. is a place where throngs of mad enthusiasts call "Hallejah"; they live in various parts of the state; they give their idea to K. U. to their neighbors. This does not add to the popularity of the school. It is only logical that we find strong opposition to any increased appropriation for the University and maintain the support of the people it behooves us to clean up our songs and yells, and make ourselves worthy of the support of everyone. RISIBLE REMARKS FOR THE SOMBRE STUDENT S. "Privates in the army eat more than the officers." Rational Untangle It Yourself “This article says oleomargarine is safe.” “Yes, and the person who eats lots of it will be fat.” “Well, if beef fat makes a person be fat that is nothing to beef at.” "Yes. There are more of them." The Stanford Chaparral. "Vy don't yer speak ter yer swell friend at der oder end of der car?" "Shush! She ain't paid her fare yet."-Cornell Widow. He Was Short Annotated "This poem was written by a prominent lawyer of this city. Has it any value?" Amateur Work "About as much value," said the editor, "as a legal opinion written by a poet." -Washington Herald. Hur-1 can't find "aeroplane" in this dictionary. Hym—Have you looked on the fly leaf? Ohio State Sun Dial. One Great Reason "Opportunity really knocks at a door." "Then why don't more of us succeed better?" "The trouble is that Opportunity to go to work."—Pittsburgh Post. BOSTON KINDERGARTEN "MOTHER GOOSE" (In words of three syllables.) An antiliquid matronly dames A woman of low stature. Mrs. Hubbard, by appellation, Proceeded erstwhile to examine her Intending to give her ossivorous canine a nutritive appetizer: But when she approached the deposit for victuals in close contiguity, The cupboard astonished the dame by revealing a perfect vacity, And so the impoverished canine remained an unsatisfied gorman. A gentleman indigenous to our nu- nicipality. Distinguished by extraordinary wis- dom, and cognition. And thus annihilated both his eyes by harsh attrition. Propelled into a bramble-bush his whole corporality, Again into a briar-filled corpse he shrewdly superseded, Perviewing the calamity by which he'd been assaulted. He exerted all his potency and vigor of decision; And repeated conflication quite restored his ruined vision. Pray pardon our apparent curiosity, Miss Mary, mary, (For perversity's acknowledged your conspicuous vagary.) If we interrogate you on your garden's evolution, Embellished with arxentic bells huge and variegated heraceous. With corrugated cockle-shells, pelagic and testaceous. And with captivating maidens all in linear distribution. A frugal vetegarian, denominated Bater. A trugal vegetarian, denominated Peter, had habitually classified himself a pumpkin-ester. But his matrimonial consort had a wayward disposition And perplexed him to discover how to make her live discreeter. At last he tried confining his recal- kin-eater. But his matrimonial consort had a wayward disposition. And perplexed him to discover how to make her live discreeter. An artist tried confining his recalcitrant young wife. In the hollow of a pumpkin excavated by his knife, And imprisoned in this tegument, a cussious position, He succeeded in preventing indiscrections all her life. -Gorham W. Harris in Life. COPYRIGHT BY BLAKE PINNARD Two-Button D, B. Sack No. 854 The Well Dressed College Man Is A Contented Individual In the classroom, on the campus or at the social function his self confidence is supreme if his clothes are tailored-to-order by Ed. V. Price & Co. We are filling the requirements of college men who demand tailored-toorder clothes of unmistakable distinction at a reasonable price. See our handsome woolens and leave your measure----TODAY. S. G. CLARKE 707 Mass. St. Eldridge Hotel Building Exclusive Local Dealers for Ed. V. Price & Co., Chicago What Yields Taller? COPYRIGHT BY EAR Y PRICE & CO. BOWERSOCK THEATRE Monday and Tuesday Nights, Nov. 24-25 The GENUINE EDISON TALKING PICTURES TRADS MARK THOMAS A EDISON Presented on the Edison Kinetophone by Edison Kinetophone Company Exhibited July 10, 1913 before the King and Queen of England "Their Majesties expressed great delight."—London Daily Chronicle Prices Parquet, 50c 1st 3 rows Balcony, 50c Next rows balcony, 35c All 2nd Balcony, 25c SEATS ON SALE AT WOODWARD & CO. One performance nightly beginning 8:15 p. m. CALENDAR Week of Nov. 24-29,1913 Tuesday 11:00 Chapel. 2:30 Entomological Club, (Mu.) 3-4 Chancellor's open hour to faculty. 3:30 Economics Seminar, (Lib.) 3:30 Glee Club practice, (Fra.) 7:30 Philolacy Club , (408 West Pinkney.) **Wednesday** Thanksgiving recess begins at noon. Thursday Dec. 4 Song recital, Esther Plumb (Frank) 2-5 W. S. G. A. Thanksgiving party for students and facto in Robinson Gym. Eats, old fashioned dances, and "kid games." You are invited to come and help the W. S. G. A. keep Thanksgiving. Dec. 5 Junior class dance, 8-12 Future Events Dec. 2 "Athens, Rome and Washington as Types of the City Beautiful." Dr. Mitchell Carrel, Sec. A. Inst. Archaeology, (Snow.) Dec. 12 College dance, (Gym.) Dec. 17 Band concert, (Fra.) COMING ATTRACTIONS List of attractions coming to the Bowersock theater. There may be more added from time to time. Dec. 3—That Printer of Udell's. Dec. 19—Mutt & Jeff in Panama. Dec. 27—Olive Vail in "The Girl from Mum's" Dec. 29—McIntyre & Heath in "The Ham Tree." Jan. 1—The Virginian. Jan. 5—Quo Vadis Pictures. Jan. 6—Quo Vadis Pictures. Jan. 8—Quo Vadis Pictures. Jan. 9—"Stop Thief" Jan. 10—"Are You a Mormon." Jan. 17—"Firefly." Jan. 27—Lyman Howe's Pictures. Jan. 31—Pink Lady. Feb. 6—Little Women. Feb. 7—Sins of the Father. Feb. 14-Harry Lauder "Matinee" Feb. 16—The Awakening of Helena Richle. Feb. 21—Red Rose. Students Eat that Thanksgiving dinner at the Oread. Watch for the menu—Adv. O. P. Leonard's Pentatiorum is on the job again this year. Notice Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 501, Home 180 We Give Club Rates 841 Mass, St. Uptairs. A. R. BALDING CO. TRAD. SPALDING MARK A.D. 1892 A "Square Deal" for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantee each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding Trade-Mark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of services. A. G. SPALDING & BROS. 1120 Grand Ave. Kansas City, Mo. A. G. SPALDING & BROS. 1120 Grand Ave. Kansas City, Me. "Send for our Catalogue." UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Velvet THE SMOOTHEST TOBACCO FE.W sophomores but have a smoking knowledge of Velvet—the greatest of tobacco leaf—the olden best of tobacco leaf—the most days method of curing by aging—2 years of hanging in the warehouse under perfect conditions—a perfect seasoning—a mellowing that dispels every vestige of leaf harshness—a sweet, smooth flavor of tobacco that challenges the best smoke you ever experienced. Can't burn hot—can't bite! Smoke it as often as you will it is always the same delightful pipeful-Velvet—smooth. Today or any time you say—at all dealers. under perfect conditions—a perfect seasoning a mellowing that dispels every vestige of leaf harshness—a sweet, smooth flavor of tobacco that challenges the best smoke you ever experienced. Can't burn hot—can't bite! Smoke it as often as you will it is always the same delightful pipeful-Velvet—smooth. Today or any time you say—at all dealers. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. 10c Full Two Ounce Tins Velvet TOBACCO 10c Full Two Ounce Tins Velvet TOBACCO 10c Full Two Ounce Tins Velvet TOBACCO THE MADMAN CLEVER dressers are all wearing the smartest collar style of the season—'SHADOW'—the LION collar with all the LION comfort features. Look for it in your dealer's window — the style with "Pliable-Points." 6 for 75c — or as usual 2 for 25c. UNITED SHIRT & COLLAR CO., Makers, TROY, N. Y. Lion Collars Oldest Brand in America PHONE 100 FOR TAXICABS PEERLESS GARAGE, Phone 100. We have some good values in Pennants Pictures & Posters to close out J. A. Keeler 939 MASS. FOR TAXI PHONES 12 When calling for a good brand of 5c CIGARS SMOKE Robert Hudson, Pierson's Hand Made At all first class dealers W. A. Guenther Phones 226 721 Liesn Give Us aJTrial Eat that Thanksgiving dinner at the Oread. Watch for the menu.— Adv. ANNOUNCEMENTS All "time" subscriptions for the University Daily Kansan taken at the beginning of the school year are DUE NOW. Ray Eldridge, Circulation Manager. Debating team tryouts Wednesday, December 3 and December 17. All candidates must appear in the first try-out except those who have been on intercollegiate teams for K. U. All announcements or items for the University calendar either for the coming week or for future events should be given to Mr. Cronemeyer, at the department of journalism office, by 4:30 p.m. Friday. It is desired to make the calendar a complete schedule of University events and the co-operation of those interested is requested. SENIORS DO REAL TEACHING IN OREAD When you want good fresh oysters for Thanksgiving see Dunnires. Phones 58.-Adv. 51-4 Seniors in the School of Education have the privilege of doing some real teaching while they are getting ready to go out into the cold world. Oread high school is managed by the School of Education and the teaching force is supplied from the senior class of that school. The term is for nine weeks, the first term having just been finished. Those Taking Education in Class of '13 Practice on High School Students at Myers Hall Ripe tomatoes, cucumbers, head lettuce, cauliflower, and in fact all the fresh vegetables on the menu are at Dummies. Phone 514 88--Adv. The following seniors had classes the past term: Irene Garnet, Lilla Wanda Grace Gielen, Jean Lightner, Nelle C. Terrill, Helen Ransom, L.R. Thompson, Minnie Dingee, Ester Wilhelm, Pearl Milton, Marjory Kennedy, Irma Spangler, Florence Shade, Media Lucas, Ruth Harger, Minnie Moser, Edmund Bechtold, Rose Dye, Estelle Butcher, A. W. Dustin, Florence Wingert, Otilla Ducker, Vivia Strahm, Irene Howatt, Annabelle Crawford, E. C. Mood, Alexander Johnson. MoBo From today on, the following will be the force: Elesie Linden, John Lincheid, Lilla Watson, Jessie Willett, Nellie C. Tillery, Lillian Pilkington, Martha Hunter, L. R. Thompson, Minnie Dingee, Marjorie Kennedy, Velma Shelly, Ana Krels, Florence Shade, Ruth Harger, Mary Maris, Minnie Moser, Ada Preshaw, Edmund C. Becchold, Ruth Lambe, Estelle Butcher, Juliet Snider, Otilia Dueker, A. W. Dustin, Annabelle Crawford, E. C. Moore, Elizabeth Munn, Ed. Van der Vries Send the Daily Kansan home. KANSAS CITY HIGHS FAVORS K. U. TRACK MEET (By Paul Brindel) Kansas City, Kan., Nov. 24—" can see no reason why the two interscholastic state track meets held under the auspices of the University of Kansas each spring should be abolished," declared Principal E. A. White of the Kansas City high school when asked if he favored the abolition of high school track meets colleges, as advocated at a recent meeting of the Kansas High School Athletic Association at Topeka. The principal of the largest high school in the state believes those who desire to have the two "prep" school meets held each May at Lawrence, abolished are principals of schools' whose teams have never been able to win at Lawrence and whose interest is in athletics at the lower schools. The same persons tried with a ruling made limiting the teams at the K. U. meet to five men each, so the weaker schools would have a chance. ENGLISH STUDENTS GIVE OTTAWA HIGH PUBLICITY Bv Ellen O. Tepefer) Ottawa. Nov. 24 - The English classes of Ottawa high school have combined in an effort to obtain all news possible of the students and what concerns them. They have cured a column on the subject, which is published each Wednesday and Saturday nights. Kincaid, Nov. 24—The experimental farm at Kincaid which is run principally by the high school student has been platted and the soil tested by soil experts of Manitoba that supplies the seeds for the plants is selected. KINCAIR STUDENTS TRY FARMING EXPERIMENTS The use of the ground has been granted by a citizen near Kincard, free of charge, and the proceeds will be used to equip the school, while the students will gain knowledge in agriculture. Ottawa, Nov. 24—Professor Gowan's civic class has been organized as a house of representatives. Two bills have been introduced. One of these passed by a large majority. The first, reported from the democratic committee on ways and means failed to pass among the major republicans. The second, reported by the democratic committee on foreign affairs, was voted to be passed on the unanimous consent calendar. The bill will be sent to an imaginary senate and president for their approval. Civic Class a Legislature (Bv Ellen Tepfer) (By Arthur Beeding) E. H. S. Student to Navy (By H. Woodbury) Emporia, E. nov. 14—John Lindsay, a senior in E. H. S., brought honor upon the school recently by receiving the appointment for mid-shipman in the United States Naval Academy from Congressman Doolett, Mr. Lindsay will undergo a physical exa- amination in Kansas City at once, and an academic examination will be given in Emporia April 25. ANDERSON COUNTY CLUB WILL FEAST Members Invite Many Natives to Garnett Banquet, on the 29th of December The Anderson county club will give a banquet at Garnett on December 29, during the holidays. All the seniors and instructors in the high schools and Anderson county alumni of the University will be invited. The program commences Wednesday. Wendell LaMier and Meissner will set one of the University professors as speaker for the occasion. --- The following committees have charge of the banquet; Finance, Earl Furgason, John Barnes and Everett Wren; social, Luella Pilkington, John McCaslin and Will Collins; publicity, Lawrence Meissner, Esther Smith and Lawrence Patten, Esther Elvst Silva, Charles Nelson, and Will Ayers and arrangements, George W. Marsh, Carl Oman and Russell Steele. ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION ORGANIZED AT IOLA The club will meet again Tuesday, December 3, in Myers hall. (By Chas. W. Houghton) Iola, Nov. 24—The high school Athletic Association met recently and organized, eleaving the following officers: Sawyer, presi- dier Earl McKinney, vice-president; Miss Light and Russell Brown, secretary and treasurer; Clyde Burnside, sergeant-at-arms. Professor Harris will act as coach and manager, as in the past. A number of the boys met at the school recently and organized a glee club, electing Chaunee Sawyer president; Beatty Ray, vice-president; Orval Smith, secretary; Earl Eastwood, manager and treasurer. LeRoy 20; Iola 6 Bu. Clarence Russett LeRoy, Nov. 23—The LeRoy high school football team won its sixth successive victory Thursday by defeating the Iola high school at Iola LeRoy has the championship of southeastern Kansas cinched and is willing to meet any team that claims the state championship. (Pratt claims state championship —H. S. Editor). Lebanon 26; Smith Center 0 (Bv Walter E. York) Lebanon, Nov. 22—The return game between the Smith Center and Lebanon football teams came off at 4:00 p.m., with griddiron, Lebanon winning, 26 to 0. Pleasanton Wins Twice (By Juhan Nov. 22. The Pleasanton high school girls' basketball team, last night in a close exciting game by the score of 22 to 17. The Pleasanton high school boys' team romped with the Mound City boys to the tune of 88 to 24.) Oberlin, Nov. 21 —The Decatur county high school of Oberlin defeated the Norton county high school on the Oberlin dirionron last Friday by a score of 8-0. This gives D. C. H. S. the championship of Northwest Kansas. A rain the night before made the field heavy, and end runs were almost impossible. Decatur's score came the first quarter as the result of a safety and a touchdown. Oberlin 8; Norton 0 (By Harry Anderson) Sylvan Grove, Nov. 24—The Sylvan high school basket-ball boys defeated Lincoln high school Friday night at Lincoln by a score of twenty-eight to twelve. St. John, Nov. 20—The St. John football team defeated the Kinsley football team at Kinsley when by a score of 42-0. Sylvan Five Tosses More Baskets By. Bryan, R. Yost) AMUSEMENTS St. Johns 42; Kinsley 0. (By Clarence Ward) To the theater patrons of Lawrence it will be the very best possible news to know that Hugo B. Koch is again coming back. It is not often that a man star has the strong hold on the hearts of the people that Mr. Koch seems to have on his audiences wherever he has appeared. Hugo B. Koch may well be called everybody's favorite actor for everyone in Lawrence likes him both as an artist and also for his warm and charming personality. That this is true is shown in the success of every season he has played in the Middle West. This season Mr. Koch has selected as a vehicle for his ability "That Printer of Udell's" dramatized from Harold Bell Wright's famous book of that name and put into playing form by Mr. Wright and Elsber W. WINONA An ARROW Notch COLLAP A. Graceful High Band Notch Collar. A Graceful High Band Noton Conviv 2 for 25 cents Charles Bohde & Co. Inc. Maker Notch COLLAR Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc. Maker A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. Brunswick Bowling Alley Four Regulation Allies with loop-the-loop return. 714 Mass. SAM S. SHUBERT Matinees Wednesday and Saturday Broadway Jones PROTSCH The College Tailor Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 Vermont Phone 189 ROYAL ROCHESTER Chaiting dishes, casseries, coffee machines and percolators. The finest line of metal and wood serving trays in the city. KENNEDY & ERNST 326 MASS. ST. PHONES 341 Lawrence, Kansas. LAWRENCE BUSINESS COLLEGE Largest and best equipped business college in Kansas. W. H. Quakenbush, Pres.; E. S. Weatherby, Supt. THE Phones 540 Topeka Capital Delivered Daily from 6 to 7:30 a. m. 10 CENTS PER WEEK JAS, G. ALLEN, Agent Phone 2433B 931 MAINE See the New Parker Self-Filling Fountain Pen Office Supplies, Typewriters F. I. CARTER N. Moe Boll phone 16 1025 Mass. Bell phone 1051 Come on Down to JIM'S Tonight 101 Mass. St. Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Lawrence Pantatorium C W Warren Bath Planner 500 Good Hot Water Bottles The Guaranteed Kind McCOLLOCH'S Drug Store. Reynolds. Messrs. Gaskill and MacVitty, who have given us "The Shepherd of the Hills" another of Harold Bell Wright's books, are the producers and their name alone is a guarantee that the engagement of Hugo B. Koch in "That Printer of Udell'" will be given every possible attention in regard to excellence of cast and beauty of production. Mr. Koch will be seen at the Bowersock theater on Dec. 3rd—Adv. Ladies, you will meet with court-ous treatment at the lunch room in Fraser.—Adv. 50-3. PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. 'M' COONELNE, Physician and 668 Home Hospitals, 1940-1964. 1306 Tenn. St. Hospital, 1940. J. F. BROCK, Opinionist and Specialist Washington Post, Office 602 Mass. Bell phone 695-371-8444. HARRY REDING. M. D Eve, ear, horse A B ASE, phone 513, head 514, Phone, 513, head 514. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. E. car, ear, and satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Building. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. DR. BURT R. WHITE Osteopath. Phones, Bell 938, Home 257, Office 745 Mass. St. J. R. BRIGITEL, M.D., D. O. 833 Mass Abbeys Street. Both phones, office and phone numbers. J. W. OBRYON, Danist, Over Wilson* Drew 9028, Ball Phone 807. DR. H, L. C. CHAMHERS. Office over Squires' Studio. Both phoebe. DB. H. T. JONES, Room 13, F. A. Bldg. Diane. B. D. O'Brien. CHAMPS. G, W. JONES, A. M., M. D., Diseases of the stomach, surgery, and, gynecology Suite 1, F, A. B. Aldg. Residence, 1201 Olhe St. Both phones, 35. S. T. Gillippe, M. D. Eaton, corner Vermont 583, Residence, 728 Indiana St. Phones 5006 Barbers CLASSIFIED E. J. Blank, Physician and Surgeon. Office and residence 915 Mass. St. Office hours: 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. 12:00 to 4:00 p.m. and 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. Phones 45, House 600. Plumbers Frank liff's Barber Shop, 1025 Mass. two good barkers. Satisfaction assured. J. C Houk's Barber Shop, 913 Mass. never have to wait. Razors honed. Phone Kennedy. Plumbing Co. for gas Kennedy. Mazda lamps. 1974. Mass. phones 805. Pricos reasonable, work the best. Let us use their numbers: $428.0 For O'Brien & Co., 816 Mass. & St. John's, 429 Mrs. Ellison Dressmaking and Ladies Johnson & Owl. Phones 2411, over Johnson & Owl. Ladies Tailors Lawrence Swearing School, Lelton* tailoring Phones 506, M. Powers; M. C. McAnamar, Phones 506. Ladies Taloring and Dressmaking. Gowns for all occupations. All work guaranteed. Mrs. B. Daily, 1914 Mase. Sanitary establishment in connection. Phone 121 Bell. Queen City College. System and sewing school. Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 Kell. Baili- ness school, Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 Kell. Hair Dressers Sporting Goods D & M sporting goods and athletic supplies. D · Emst. 262 Mass. S. Phone: 514-793-8700 Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-grooming. For appointments call Bell 1372. Home f Miscellaneous Hiwatha Cafe for regular meals, lunch and dinner when down town. Open after the show. Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler, Belt Phone 717-717. M75. One facial means no risk, small in nesttum, fine hair, homeomised. Smoke. Willem J. homeomised is fine. Have a nice line of plain china for painting; also some already decorated. Orders taken. Estelle Northrup, studio 733 Mass. St., upstairs. Bell Phone 1524. Student's Co-Op Club. $2.50 to $3.00 per 1340 KY. Geo. H.I. Vansell Steward. LOST—On Lee between Myers half and 1237 Louisiana, a brass candle blender. Binding it with a brass candle stick. Finder please return to 1237 Oread. LOST-Coral bar pin. Return to Kappa Alpha Theta house. LOST—Conklin's fountain pen, Tuesday morning on Adams street, between Tennessee's street, ornate building. Finder call Bell 1378. LOST—Pair of ladies' brown dogskin gloves, with initials I. R. on inside. Phone Bell 1241. LOST-2 Achoth pins, names on back. E. Cross and G. Gilbert. Return, 1140 Miss. c-3t Bowersock Theatre Wednesday, Nov. 26 Highest Standard Attractions, Henry W. Savage offers The Newest Musical Success "Little Boy Blue" With the following cast headed by OTIS HARLAN Vivian Weissell, Elizabeth Goodall, Pearl Palmer, Thos. Burton, Fredrick crick Lyon, Rollin Grimes, and Chas. Fletcher. The prettiest and best singing chorus ever sent on tour and Mr. Savage's complete Grand Opera Orchestra. Prices $2.00, 1.50, 1.00, .75 and .50 Curtain, 8:15 as usual. Eat that Thanksgiving dinner at the Oread. Watch for the menu.— Adv. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY A A Sale of Suits Wednesday at $18.50 That are unusual in Style, Cloth and Shade range. They are selected from the newest and most wanted models in the department and are regularly priced at $25.00, $27.50 and $30.00. Sizes mostly for small women—14, 16, 18 and 36. Colors: Navy, Brown, Kings blue, Gray, Mahogany, Black and Hunters green. Cloths: Eponges, Plaid Combinations, Serges, Diagonals, Needle Cords and Broadcloths. One price, $18.50 Sale Opens Wednesday Oriens, Bulline & Hackman All want ads must be accompanied with cash. The price is reasonable. Results Sure. KO-OP CLUB Open during holidays. Come and eat with us. Lewis B. Smith, Matt Guffoyle, Stewards 1345 Kentucky St. FISCHER'S SHOES ARE GOOD SHOES Shoes for Thanksgiving Quite as important as the festive bird that goes ON the table next Thursday, are the properly fashioned shoes that will go UNDER the table. An I men who want shoes that will surely satisfy for the winter needs will be THANKFUL for the "Fischer's Special" Shoes we are offering for $4.50 Made in the new Mahogany Brown or Black leather on the English last, and with all the new wrinkles so pleasing to the young man. FISCHER'S Order your Thanksgiving flowers early to insure prompt delivery. Mums. All sizes and prices The FLOWER SHOP 825% Mass. 825 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Pies at the lunch room in Fraser. —Adv. 50-3 eys. Order them from Wiedemann's —Adv. Your Thanksgiving dinner will not be complete without ice cream turk TIGERS TIE NEBRASKA FOR VALLEY HONORS We are open after the show, Rey nolds' Bros.—Adv, Missouri Equals Records of Cornhuskers in Conference but Loses to Illinois Well, it's all over. The 1913 football season for the Missouri Valley Conference teams has passed by, and there only remains for the football enthusiasts to pick out. The Missouri Valley-Conference team, Aside from class football, which is raising quite a stir here and at Missouri, there is nothing to occupy the minds of the listless students from now to Christmas but how much allowance they can squeeze out of a Turkey Day present. And so let's consider the claims of the rival schools for the Championship eleven. Let's once for all sum up the merits and demerits of each Valley team, pick in your mind the best team and let it go at that. The choosing of an All-Conference team we will pass over to much more competent hands. There are but two candidates for the Missouri Valley Conference Championship, now that all the games have been played and decided. And each claimant strives to outdo the other in voicing his opposition to Missouri and Nebraska promises to have a merry old fight over the palm. And summing up all the evidence which may be presented by each school, looking over the teams individually and collectively, much as we like that the coach is hand to hand the big prize over to Stiehl and his bunch of Cornhuskers. Nebraska has an ever-victorious season, the Tigers met defeat at the hands of Illinois. Lincoln's athletes triumphed over Minnesota and earned a perfect record of unbroken victories in the Missouri Valley circle. Nebraska at Top. In the Western Conference, the Big Nine of Which Iowa, Illinois, and Minnesota are members, Iowa and Minnesota are records owners, Urbanian athletes. The Hawkeyes and the Gophers each won 5 games and lost 2, Illinois captured but 4, lost 2, and tied 2. Iowa and Minnesota look by far the better of the three teams. But Nebraska decisively defeated these same Hawkeyes and Gophers, and Missouri lost to the Illini. And to make out proof all the more sure, Minnesota napped down to only Satney its annual battle with the Urbana athletes 19 to 9. Yet Nebraska beat the Gophers 12 to 0, and the Illini romped on the Tigers 24 to 7. Surely Stiehm's men are entitled to the high hand. AMUSEMENTS The Edison Talking Pictures Thomas A. Edison, whose inventions have for more than a century held the "tales of the Arabian night" seem common place by comparison, has surpassed his own wonder record of electric light, phonograph, kinetoscope and countless other marvels by his latest magical invention—the kinetophone. Youngest of all the wonderful brain, but requiring the most of mechanical ingenuity, the most of long sustained and determined effort, it seems destined most of all to preserve for him his life in the dark.' The kinetophone or Edison Talking Pictures, will have their first local presentation at the Bowersock Monday and Tuesday, Nov. 24 and 25—Adv. A large variety of properly cooked Thanksgiving victuals at the Oread.—Adv. Eight different varieties of ice cream for Thanksgiving at Reynolds' Bros.-Adv. If you are in town on Thanksgiving day come up to the Oread for dinner.—Adv. Women's Athletic Association Plans Series of Interclass Games to be Played This Winter GIRLS TO COMPETE IN BASKET BALL Students remaining in town try the Oread lunch room for that Thanksgiving dinner.-Adv. Full line of Douglas chocolates at Reynolds' Bros.-Adv. Coffee at the lunch rom in Fraser. - Adv. 50-3 "These games cannot be played for some time," said Dr. Margaret S. Johnson, "for the girls must first have their examinations and do some regular gymnasmus work in order to get in shape for the athletic games. This training consists of about a month's swimming and then a few weeks with the apparatus. However in assigning them we are careful that the girls only are able to do. Then when they can stand the more strenuous athletics, we will arrange games between the various gymnasmus classes and an interclass series if the girls want one. The Women's Athletic, Association will schedule a series of interclass basket-ball games some time this winter. When down town stop at Wiedemann's for a cup of hot chocolate.— Adv. Novelty decorations at Hoadley's 17 W. Warren · Adv. "In the spring the classes will play tennis as we will have the use of the new courts which are to be built south of the gymnasium." "Little Boy Blue" glorifies the romance of old Scotland as well as reflecting mad Parisian gayety. It is in two acts and three scenes. The score is by Henri Bereny and the text by Rudolph Schanzer and Carl Lindau. As is customary with K. Savage, the music is prepared by A. E. Thomas and Edward Paulton, both prominently successful playwrights. See our special Thanksgiving menu in this book. Oread - Adv. Special maple nut ice cream at Wiedemann's.-Adv. Gainsborough, the famous artist, a contemporary of the most romantic period of England and Scotland, brought from his brush among other materpieces, one called "Boy Blue," and it is the romance surrounding this painting that furnished the story of the play. An exact copy, the portrait of the king, was in the sec. fourth and the "Little Boy Blue" of the story follows it in dress and general appearance. The appealing story of the little wandering prince of the Scots has never been more attractively told—Adv. AMUSEMENTS Read your own KANSAN. UNIVERSITY TO SEE FORTY PRIZE PICTURES National Arts Club Loans Its Paintings to Several Western Schools The School of Fine Arts announced today another prize art exhibit in February. Prof. W. A. Griffith learned sometime ago that the National Art Club of Washington, D. C., had loaned its exhibit of forty prize picture collections; the museums were very valuable and that a display of the collection would be an opportunity for those in Lawrence who appreciate art to see an exceptional exhibit, *Professor Edwin* exhibited if he the university could borrow the collection. He received an answer that the club would loan the collection free, but the freight on it from New York would be very high. To cut down expenses Professor Griffith made arrangements with other colleges so that the collection will make a circuit from Des Moines to Lawrence, then to Emporia, and later to Columbia, Mo. Each college pays part of the freight. University students may see the exhibit free but outsiders will be charged 25 cents admission. FOR RENT—Rooms for young women. Suitable for light housekeeping. Sleeping porch. 1310 Jenn. Phone 1112 Bell. WANTED—An experienced soda fountain man at the Oread. Apply to Webb Holloway. FOUND—An Achoth pin at the Oread. For your Thanksgiving dinner order your cranberry ice from Wiedemann's. Either phone 182.—Adv. University view post cards, 5e pen dozen at Hoadley's, 17 W. Warren. Adv. Our cherry pie al-a-mode can't be beat. Reynolds' Bros--Adv. Young Man —be sure you have the necessary Regalia for "Turkey Day." Hats Ties Caps Shirts, etc. —we're ready to serve you with the season's newest offerings. Johnson & Carl Sterilized The Acreated distilled water that McNish sells is put up in sterilized bottles. Phones 198.—Adv. Special 50c dinner at the Oread for Thanksgiving.—Adv. Eat that Thanksgiving dinner at the Oread. Watch for the menu.— Adv. Individual turkey moulds for Thanksgiving at Reymolds' Bros.—Adv. Our special Thanksgiving dinner for fifty cents has never been equaled in this city. The Oread—Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home THE OREAD CAFETERIA AND LUNCH ROOM Thanksgiving Menu Oyster Soup Clam Chowder Fried Halibut Steak Baked Spanish Salmon with Maitre de Hotel Sauce Blue Points on Half Shell Roast Young Turkey with Chestnut Dressing and Cranberry Sauce Roast Vermont Chicken Saute of Gosling Prime Ribs of Beef Roast Leg of Lamb with Mint Sauce Mince Pie and Pumpkin Pie. Many other desserts Special Thanksgiving Dinner For 50 cents Blue Points on Half Shell Baked Halibut With Saratoga Chips Roast Young Turkey with Dressing and Cranberry Sauce Mashed Potatoes Asparagus Tips on Toast Mince and Pumpkin Pie Ice Cream Ter, Coffee or Milk 50 cents RESERVE YOUR TABLES EARLY 1241 OREAD