UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 123 NUMBER 124 VOLUME XII HEALTH MEN'S SCHOOL OPENS ON APRIL 19 Kansas Physicians and Surgeons Will Attend Classes at University SESSION LASTS TWO WEEKS Sanitation and Preventative Measures Will be Featured Dean Crumbine to Have Charge The fifth annual summer session of Kansas health officers will be held at the University, April 19, and will continue in several here and at Rose City. The course is offered for the convenience of all physicians who wish to take advantage of it. Special stress will be placed on such matters as public sanitation and preventive measures; the need to be particularly use of县 county and city health officers over the state. In the five years that the short course has been given, the attendance has climbed rapidly, and it is expected that the enrollment this year will be larger than ever before. It gives the physicians of the state an opportunity to renew their touch with students in their training and to hear experts on various subjects who will come from the east to lecture. The first week of the course will be given at Lawrence and will consist of the post graduate work in medical science. The second week of the course will be given at the hospital at Rosedale; the third week consists at the hospital and the afternoons to lectures on the public health service. PURCHASE DISPENSARY SITE? Rosedale Votes on Bond Issue to Buy Location Today Three of the most noted sanitarians in the United States have been secured for giving the public health course: Dr. Mark J. White, surgeon of the Johns S. Fulton, secretary of the Maryland State board of health, and professor of preventative medicine at the Johns Hopkins University, and Dr. A. J. Chesley, epidemiologist for the Minnesota State board of health and assistant to the board of health in the School of Medicine of the University of Minnesota. "A fine opportunity is afforded licensed physicians of the state, to whom this course is given free of charge, to take a two weeks' post graduate course in health care methods in public health work," said Dr. S. J. Crumbine. "The summer school for health officers is a distinctively Kansas institution, but as other matters in which Kansas has led, others follow, and several other states expect to provide for a like course." It is the same old story, Kansas leads and the other states follow." Whether or not the Rosedale dispensary, authorized by the 1913 legislature, will be erected at Rosedale will be settled by the election held there today. The legislature appropriated money for the building but neglected to provide a fee to the people in the town are voting against the town as a proposition to issue bonds to the amount of $12,500 to provide a suitable location. In the event that the bonds carry, quick work will be necessary for the building must be erected by July 1st and the money for the purpose available. The chosen site for the dispensary is only one block from the Bell Mesa authorities hospital to leave the two buildings connected by a private tunnel. Prof. Barber Visits Here Prof. M. A. Barber, a former professor of bacteriology in the University, has arrived from Manila, to spend a few days visiting friends before he goes to the Malawi region where the bacteriology department at Rosedale after he left K. U. and then he was appointed to the United States Bureau of Science. After serving in Manila for several years he has been appointed to the International Health mission and his first work will be in Asia. Miners Hold Meeting Miners Hood Meeting The Mining Journal meets tomorrow afternoon at 4:30 o'clock in Haworth Hall. Clark E, Carpenter, senior Engineer, will give a talk on a mining subject. Studies Rocks for Vacation Prof. W. H. Twinhofer, of the department of geology, spent Eastern Tennessee studying the Comanche rocks. HIST! BURGLAR ENTERS THROUGH TRANSOM Thought Hackney Was Jobber UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 6, 1915. Edward Blair Hackney, business manager of the 1915 Jayhawker is also something of a contortionist. Tuesday evening he made a trip up the Hall, intending to work for a couple of hours in his office in Green Hall. Just as he was preparing to unlock the door, however, he discovered that he had left his keys at home. Now, Edward Blair is no quitter. So, placing one foot on the door knob, he leaped into the air and secured a half-nelson on the transom. By applying a little of the muscle he has developed in ironwork, he was able to force the transom open; after which he executed a lame dunk backwards and grapevined the inside of the door to his office and his desk. Now enters the villain! Charles Hase, night watchman, was on his hourly round of the buildings when he saw the light in the Jayhawker office. "Aah! Methinks I smell burglar's, be creed. Dashing into the basement of Green, he proceeded to investigate matters. In spite of Edward Blair's long protests the watchman insisted on bringing him hinder. Hackney tried to establish his identity; told the office that he belonged in the Jayhawke office—but all in vain. Then came the idea. Going into the home economics department, the Annual man secured a huge broad knife and shaved his mustache. The day was served, Recognition, forgiveness, and freedom followed, for Hase recognized Hackney as soon as the mustache disappeared. Edward Blair has since begin the cultivation of a new lp-adornment But even after this he will carry a razor with him. G. U. MEN GOING TO ROCKIES Ioffmann Expects to Take Twenty Five to Y, M. C. A. Conference "Prospects are good for a delegation of at least twenty-five K. U. men at the Rocky Mountain Student Conference in June," says Con Hoffmann, secretary of the University Y. M. C. A. "We had the hawks and expect to outdistance the other schools even further this year." The conference, to be held at Estes Park, Colorado, from June 11 to 20, will be composed of representatives from the colleges and universities of the state. New Mexico, south Dakota, Utah, Wyoming, Texas, and Oklahoma. John R. Mott, Dud Elliott, and H. L. Heinzmann, who were at the University for Mott-Robins campaign, will be among the leaders at the conference. Other speakers will be Arthur Rugh, a national student secretary of China, Jing Li, a Debtic credit date, and the Student Volunteer Movement, and Harry F. Ward, professor of social service in Boston University. Courses in Bible study, foreign mission problems, North American problems, and evangelism will be offered. There will be life-work institutes and opportunities for personal interviews. Spare time will be devoted to mountain climbing, baseball, fishing, and tennis. A special Indian student conference will be a feature of this year's conference. Haskell will send a delegation. H. L. Heinzman, of Chicago, and Harry White, of India, will be the speakers at an echo meeting of Y. M. C. A. tomorrow night at 7 o'clock in Myers Hall. The social committee will put on several stunts. HEIZNMAN AND WHITE TO SPEAK AT Y. M. C. A. Minneapolis Orchestra **Coming** The Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra will give the next number of the University concert on May 1. Original is the Russian Symphony Orchestra, which was scheduled to play but was compelled to cancel its engagement. The Minneapolis orchestra has been at the University several times and is said to have had favorable receptions. Plans for the work of the Y. M. next year and the advisability of enlarging the scope of the association will be discussed. Prof. F, C. Dockeray, of the department of philosophy, will address the Philosophy Club on "The Relations Between Fame and Power" at 6:30 o'clock tonight in Ad101. The meeting will be open to the public. Discusses Fatigue Minneapolis Orchestra Coming Prof. Mitchell in Chapel Prof. U. G. Mitchell, of the department of mathematics, speaks at morning prayers this week. His general subject is "Present Day Christianity." Prof. Mitchell in Chapel WOMEN START ARCHERY PRACTICE THIS WEEK Bow and Arrow Sport to be Reserved for Junior and Senior Sections Archery practice will begin imminently and will be under the direction of Dr. Alice L. Goetz, of the women's section of the Gymnasium. The work will be open to junior and senior women only. The sport of practicing for skill with the bow and arrow will be reserved for junior and senior women and Dr. Goetz will give instruction this week in the upper Gymnasium, and later at the archery court which is being held all day on the women's field back of the Gymnasium. An archery contest will be held as one feature of the May Festival, open to all junior and senior women. A hockey field lined off with concrete boundaries and goals is being made, and before many days the sophomore teams and freshman players have been going on steadily and some good plays worked up. MAN FROM HOME A MODEL Booth Tarkington and Harry Leon Wilson Write Dramatic Club Play If the work of the author counts for anything in producing a successful play—and the best magazines now generally use "Tom home" should one of the big successes in K. U, dramatic history. Booth Tarkoning, author of countless successful novels, and the creator of "Penrod," the already famous rival of Tom Sawyer and Mark Twain, wrote Wilson, the man who wrote "His Majesty, Bunker Bean" For The Saturday Evening Post, are the co-authors of the Dramatic Club play. They have given their talents in humorous writing full freedom, and play they have written it as a clever one. The ordinary play if it is funny at all, is funny either because of its situations. "The Man From Home" is no ordinary play, because it is funnelled into both the plot, countless little incidents occur which mark the authors as being keen observers of their characters as well as versatile workmen in creating them; and the result is that the play assumes a more artificial and that do not resort to burlesque or travesty for their effectiveness. SEVEN CHANCES FOR WOMEN Scholarships for Next Year are Announced by Women's Committee Seven scholarships are open to the women of the University for the year 1915-16 for which applications will be received until April 15,' by the committee, Professors Galloo, Hyde and Oliver. The Marcelella Howard and Memorial of $20 is open to women of the junior and senior classes in the College; Women's Student Government Association offers $100 to a woman of college age for a semester or sophomore year; the Eliza Matheson Innes Memorial, $100, is open to all women of the Graduate School and the College above the freshman year; Carrie Mumford Winston University offers $50 to graduate School and the College above the freshman year; the Kansas branch of the Association of Collegiate Alumnae offers $50 to women of the Graduate School and the College above the freshman year; the College above the freshman year; the College above the freshman year; the College gives a loan of $200 for two years without interest, open to women of the junior and senior classes of the College; Daughters of the American Revolution gives $100 without interest, open to women of the junior, to women of the senior class. Peter Frank Smith, junior College, who was reported as missing from the Hotel Baltimore in Kansas City since March 31, has been located in Chicago where he went Wednesday afternoon. FRANK SMITH LOCATED; WENT TO CHICAGO, ILL Smith was a student at the University of Chicago last year. His parents live at Santa Lucia, Orte, Cuba but have been visiting relatives in Kansas for several days. Smith entered the University this semester. Junior Fear Has New Leads Marin Slade will take the part of "Mrs. Roberts" instead of Beulah Davis, who was forced to give it up on account of overwork. Nellie Houston will appear as "Vella." Pi Kappa Alpha Pledges Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity announces the pledging of Lawrence Cole of Lawrence. GYMNASIUM TO BE LAND OF MIKADO FOR PROM Juniors to Glide Around Green Dragons and Rest in Bamboo Retreats Friday "Tis certainly not an easy task—and some people would deem it an impossible one—to transform prosaic Robinson Gymnasm into a fairyland of flowers; yet, that is the task Robinson Gymnasm has undertaken, and which it is succeeding in accomplishing. Members of the decorating committee spent the entire Easter vacation in Lawrence, preparing the materials for the decorations, but even after its work only a beginning has been effected. A group of twelve men, under the direction of Tony James, will spend the greater part of their time this week in finishing the work. When they are through, Robinson Gymnasium will be turned into a little bit of playground. The flowers, the decorations, and the architectural features of the land of the Mikado are to be the predominant notes in the Prof festival array. Fourteen bamboo pergola walls with cozy, vine sheltered, orientally lightened retreats for the dancers. Huge green dragons, fancely drawn upon a light background, will cover all the windows. Japanese lanterns and umbrellas of every conceivable size and shape will peep out from the roof. In winter, wishing the Gym for the special lights to be installed will be done tomorrow. "But we don't want people to think that the decorations are the only big features of the Prom Friday night," said Creatight this morning. The music and store displays, like Haley's ten piece orchestra from Kansas City is to play for the dance; and Wagtail will do the catering. The Junior Force cast has been working hard on weeks to get tickets will will credit to the rest of the events. We are planning some novel stunts in the way of surprise dances that it won't do to tell about. Suffice it **to** say that we guarantee a solid evening of entertainment unavailable in any previous Junior Prom." The farce will begin at 7 o'clock Friday night. According to a special dispensation of the faculty, dancing continue until 2 o'clock in the morning. PLAN JOINT SPRING PARTY Y. M, and Y. W. to Enrol Grinds in Model College Course The farewell party in the series of joint entertainments given by the Y, M. and Y, W. C. A. will be given the opportunity to speak on social society, their gray matter almost turned white by much stunt planning for their other parties, is making a grand spurt, and plan to share its efforts end in a burst of clovy. Don't be alarmed if the program of events sounds horrible like the schedule of your own daily grind on the Hill. Fear not, if you see before you soak up the 9:30 apprehension of poetry; 1030, convocation, and so on through the day. It is all in accord with the plan of the committee, who promise faithfully that things are not what they seem, and that this kind of a plan works. The committee frivolous. The committee says if doesn't want all its precious plans revealed ahead of time, so let these hints suffice. One addition might be made that the "Fine Arts" classes will provide music, and that to "Face" them will flow from the shape of eats than real faculty test offer. A four mile relay team will be sent to the Des Moines Relay Carnival, April 17, to represent the University of Kansas, according to Coach Hamilton. A two-mile team may also be entered. WILL SEND RELAY TEAM TO DES MOINES Upon their performance in the Des Moines meet will probably depend whether or not a K. U. relay team will be sent to the Penn games in Pennsylvania a week later. Capt. James Stater, the captain, Stateler, and C. Sproull will probably be the men from whom the four mile team will be chosen. Prof. Thorne to Speak Prof. Merie Thorpe, of the department of journalism, has received an invitation to speak at Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York, at the regular May convocation. Professor Thorpe has also accepted an invitation to address the Wisconsin Editorial Association which meets in a joint session with the state legislature May 27. I AM HERE AGAIN WITH SPRING And Join the Easter Procession I am small, much smaller than a Tipperary hat. I am insignificant and have no long visor as do others. I am of modest blue and have no brilliant colors to grace my owner. I bring forth smiles of decision and ridicule when I am seen in public. I do not shade him from the warm spring sun, nor from the showers, and I am easily carried away by a nuff of wind. I do not give dignity and grace to my wearsers as others do and I make my master to look small and insignificant. I save tender freshmen from the cruel hearty paddles, and I am the freshman. PAINTINGS ALMOST FINISHED Geological Mural Decorations in Haworth Hall Nearing Completion The mural paintings on the west side of the stairway in Haworth Hall, which men have been working on regularly since the beginning of the semester, are almost completed. The north side of the space is filled with a geological shap of North America, while above it, extending the entire length of space is a geological cross section of the United States running on a parallel through this shap of different elevations and formations. The various kinds of rocks are shown by the use of colors. The painting has been done by S. T. Dickinson, a graduate of the School of Fine Arts, while W. H. Foster and A. E. Culbertson, graduate students, have assisted with the work. The faculty of the department of geology has had the general supervision. Work will commence at once on the same kind of a painting of Kansas on the east wall. A block map of the state will be painted showing the location of the different clays and formations. WILL GIVE "POP" CONCERT Choral Union to Stage First of Series, April 28, in Gym The Lawrence Choral Union will give a "pop" concert Wednesday night, April 28, in the Gym. The music festival scheduled for that date has been postponed a week, and the committee took advantage of the fact to obtain the Gymnasium for that evening. Only four more rehearsals will take place between now and then, and full attendance is desired at every one. The Union now has 142 members, and could still use more alto and bass singers. Practice is held each Tuesday evening at 7:30 in the small Fraternal Ald Hall. If this concert is as successful as it promises to be, it will be the first of a series on the plan of the Popular Concert Association of Kansas City. The aim and purpose of the Choral Festival are the "best music for "Pop" association. "The best music for the most people at the lowest cost." LINDSEY WILL BE JUDGE Kansas Has Chosen Head of Denver Juvenile Court to Hear Debate Judge Benjamin Lindsey, of the juvenile court in Denver, will be one of the judges in the single tax debate between the universities of Kansas and Colorado to be held in Boulder on April 15. The judge will be the Kansas coach, Prof. H. T. Hill, from the list submitted by Colorado. The plan used in the triangular debates is for the home team to select two judges from the six to ten men that the visiting team submits. The team returns one out of a list of three to five which the home team submits. Prof. Shaad Lectures Prof. George C. Shaad, of the School of Engineering, was in Greenleaf Friday and Saturday where he lectured on the desirability of electric lights. Burkholder Quits Ed. Burkholder, of Marion, freshman College, has withdrawn. WANT TO PLAY BALL? The withdrawal of one of the Hash House League teams leaves a vacancy which the management wishes to have filled. Any team desiring to deputy as chief deputy directly the department of the Commission at the Daily Kansan office as soon as possible. Team managers who have not yet filed a list of players with the Commission should attend to the matter at once. HASH HOUSE SEASON WILL OPEN FRIDAY "86 Consumers" Will Cross Bats in First Series of Play OFFICIALS ADOPT SCHEDULE Time and Place of Games Arranged at Meeting of Team Representatives Wednesday The Hash House League season opens officially this week-end with the following games: Friday, at 4; Daniels vs. Y. M. C. A. house, on North 2 Bay; Friday, at 4; Hope vs. Midway, on North 1 Field; on Saturday, the following: Co-op vs. Ulrich, Hamilton west, at 3; Martin vs. Neal, Hamilton east, at 8:30; Hayes vs. Wills, North 1, at 4; Long vs. K. K., North 2, at 2; Dads' Club vs. Custer, Hamilton east, at 132; O's vs. Hamilton east, at 4; Franklin vs. Lee's, Hamilton west, at 2; College Campus vs. Dunnik Coop, North 2, at 1; Los Amigos vs. North College, North 2, at 8:30; Treck Training Table vs. Moody, Hamilton west, at 4. At the meeting of team representatives last week a schedule was adopted, which appears elsewhere in the paper. Abbreviations are "A" for April; "M" for May; "Hc" for the east diamond on Hcw; "W" for the west diamond on the same field; "N1" for the east diamond on the field north of McCook; and "N2" for the west diamond on the field just north of McCook. The corner of each square is the hour set for the game. The League adopted an official ball, securing reduced rates by ordering in large quantities. One ball will be available for each game, the winning team being allowed to keep The Commission is designate a plan of distribution to the balls, and will announce it tomorrow or Thursday. Minor alterations have been made in the rules, requiring any baseball K man, Varsity player, or professional to play an outfield position; and imposing a penalty of forfeiture if a ballplayer is thrown into the production in board to any ballplayer in order to induce him to play. The corrected rules are printed below. Following are the names of players on several of the teams. Managers are required to place a list in the hands of the chairman of the Commission, those who have not been so urged to attend to the matter at once. Track Training Table, 1333 Ky.: J. Niles, Fredrick, Fink, J. Dean, James, Bond, Lindsey, Hilton, Connell, Smith, Smith, Hillion, Crabbe, Thorpe, Bond Y. M. house, 941 Ind. : Blinceo, Thomann, Kingsborough, Ireland, Payne, Austen. Austin, Wilson, Sloan, Celson, Lyons, Zelowels, Palkouon, Soain, Lyons Hayes, 1237 Oread, phone 2181W Roll: Midway, 1042 O, 2235B, Weltmert, capt, German, Webster, Harlan, Burger, Bennett, Frisch, Paul, Wadell, Baldwin, Elswick (incomplete) Hope, 941 Ala. B. 2336; Bost, mgr, Tacker, Jones, Cook, Chandler, Harms, Weidlein, Hogapple, Weible, Gearthr Ruth. Co-op, 1245 Ky, 1116; J o. D. Berwick, capt, M. McLaughlin, Wyman, Culin, King, Raemer, Fairchild, McCulough, Dryden, Dryden, Wilfrie, Ferris, Subelkrup, Bowers, Pearson, Huntsman, Blair, Kitchen, Bayles. Martin, 912, 127 B: Irwin, mgr, Foltz, Sorensen, Swanson, Russell, Patterson, Farley, Bell, Gray, Thompson, Templin, Living, Kedol Custer: Washburn, capt., 1026B, Harden, mgr., 1232W B., Pierce, Harding, Deaver, Cook, Rogers, Cummins, Bursen, Nixon, Didge, Young, Williams, DeRoin, Kabler, Coover, Mittens, Shannon. Threve. Dunkin Co-op, 1034 Mass. Street, capt., Shelley, 2189W B. Dar- kens, 765 W 12th St. Dad's Club, 1313 Vk: Larrimore, MacGregor, Long, Hill, Peterson, Major, Fitzgerald, J, Fitzgerald, A, Eaton, Osborne, Crowley, Schnitter, Wilson, Stueve, Slade, Beil, Manning, Stortz, Mathers. 1328 O. 1641J B.: Graham, mgr, Glaso, Fritz, Naitze, Young, Bell, capt., Cooper, Robertson, Palmer, Frost, Campbell. Daniels, 2129 B; Arnold, mgr, Schoenfeldt, Buchanon, Madden, Mitchell, Brown, Cooper, Hutton, Ford, Hill, Bowersock. Lee's: Gear, Wyatt, Joliffe, O'Bryan, Clark, Smith, Fullen, Bowman, Huey, Young, McCorkle, Morgan, McCamon, Rogers, Champlin, Cox. (Continued on page 3) UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF John M. Henry ... Editor in Chief Matthew Hayson ... Executive Vice President Helen Hayton ... Associate Editor Mark A. Ferguson ... Publisher BUSINESS STAFF J. W. Dewey Manager S. Sturtune. Advertiser Mngr PORTCHEL Leon Harald Glilbert Clayton Jennifer Warner Charles Westerst Elmer Arndt Lucille Kudert Louis Puckett Glendon Alpine Johnny Kudert Subscription price $2.50 per year in advance; one term, $1.50. HALI STAFF John M. Gleason Hater M. Gleason Hater Darwin Carolyn McNutt McNutt Harry Morgan C. Bitter Fredger Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kanaas, from the press of the Department of Journalism. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone. Bell K. U. 25. The Daily Kanaan aims to picture the undergraduate life of our students further than merely printing the newn by stairing for the usual reasons and favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful to be charitable; to be courteous to all; to solve problems to wiser heads, in all, to seek the guidance of the University. Fair Play and Accuracy Bureau Prof. H. T. Hill...Faculty Member Don J. Heine...Student Member John M. Henry...Secretary If you find a mistake in statement or impression in any of the columns of the Dally Kanese, the Dally Kanese office. He will instruct you as to further procedure. TUESDAY, APRIL 6, 1915 WORSE THAN NONE the action of the Men's Student Council is presenting a proposition for a point system to the students is commendable. But the schedule of points as presented is out of balance. The presidency of the Y. M. C. A. does not demand more attention than the managing-editorship of the Kansas, which calls for eight hours a day. Nor does the circulation managership of the paper demand as much attention as the business managership. In fact the Kansan Board will vote on a constitutional amendment tomorrow night to turn over the circulation work to the business manager. Students can help the University by voting against the adoption of the present proposal. The editor of the Oread Magazine does not, and should not, give as much attention to his office as the members of the Kansan Board who must work at least four hours a week. We point to the Kansan only, because we are better acquainted there. The point system under a well balanced schedule, would be a valuable addition to student government at Kansas. Its adoption with the proposed schedule would be worse than none. STUDENT OPINION There have been published in the last few weeks some excellent articles in our Student Opinion column. The subject of student interests seems to have struck a responsive chord in the minds of a great many of our readers. Several articles dealing with the subject in its various phases have been contributed. It is out of the crucible of debate and discussion that truth is evolved. In a student body such as we are striving to build in the University each individual student should be well informed. The judgment of every student is a liability or an asset to the school. A newspaper should in some measure be a mirror which reflects not only the opinions of its publishers, but also in some degree at least the opinions of its readers. It should be an educator as well as a purveyor of news. We trust to have more contributions to the "Student Opinion" column in the future. A GOOD PROPOSITION The grouping of elections as outlined by the Men's Student Council presents an opportunity to the students to place school politics on their proper plane. All the strife, wire-pulling, and midnight caucuses can be exhausted in the two general elections, and the students may turn their attention to curriculum school work. The elections to the various offices are well placed, and the whole scheme will work for efficiency. STUDENT OPINION 24 To the Editor of the Daily Kansan: To the Editor of the Daily Kansas: Your leader in the editorial column today (Tuesday) asked me great questions. On what chronological basis did you determine that this "Reporter's account of a conversation" was "1915 years ago today?" Does A. D." stand for "After the Death of Christ"? I have always considered myself a baby, in which case the conversation took place 1882 years ago. H. I. Storical. Chasing the Glooms TO THE KANSAN There's a paper published at old K U That keeps a feller from getting blue. In the evening when its about five, And you hear that whistle, you make this. And hurry to undo that paper quick. And then you heave a big long sigh And thank the stars they've passed Or maybe 'twas something you wanted in 'Bout you 'an office or visitin' kin. Then you wonder 'why that you wonder' While they put in a telephone list. But after all's been said and done Readin' the Kansan's lots of fun. And after you've had a hearty laugh You feel that its a pretty good staff And a smile comes on your home sick face And you turn to your lessons with a better grace. THANKS! A new Chinese typewriter has 4,200 characters on it. The young lady who recently employed the assistance of an editor in finding her ancestors would thank her ancestors she was not brought up to be a Chinawoman. Henry James connects punctuation and the War; maybe you’re right, Hank. But we should have backed him to the suit if you had said, “pronunciation.” Waiter-What will it be, be; si Sauerkraut or pate de foies gras? Screaming headline in the N. Y Tribune—"War News From Berlin." In the East Bottoms, on Delaware street, a little two story house has been fixed up modestly but neatly. It is the "club-house" of one of Lawrence's largest and least exclusive social organizations, the Friendship '18-Ham and eggs. I'm neutral — Lampon. A "Club House" On the Hill it is so scarcely known since it has no publicity bureau and desires none, but down in the Bottoms it is a haven for hundreds of ragged little urchins and a place of refuge for some of our beloved homes are nothing more than a place to sleep and eat, and often not very much of the latter. This little club is doing good. There is room in the Bottoms for a dozen more just like it. Every large organization in the University could be cutting them with a work of house without cutting in on the work of others. From 4 to 9 o'clock every day its reading rooms are open to be packed by the kiddies, reading and being read_to. Some one is there constantly to keep them interested and orderly. Story telling hours have been held for me in local call to读. Lawrence visiting, taken up her headquarters there and is planning lectures for the mothers and little mothers of the East Side. It is yet, in its infancy, having been started but a month ago by a group of church people interested in the work of the physician financed the undertaking and the young people did the physical work of getting the place ready. University students, a marjorie moved in to take care of the place. Applied Poetry A Fine Art Course When a man says Merry Christmas, it makes me kind of glad; it makes me laugh. And the greeting Happy New Year Makes me just a trifle sad. ON MARCH 32ND. Or The Ozone's Getting Cool; But my fist get sort of nervous When some boob springs April Fool Speaking the Kansas Language "THE DAY" "He was a kindly faced little old man who limped into your office the other day and asked if there wasn't an eyebrow behind him. He was torn and wrinkled and thin and his shoes were shabby and broken at the toes. Long locks of whitening hair fell down over his forehead and trembled as he smoothed them back. "There it is, hidden away in every man's life, the remembrance of a day that was—one day of triumph and fame and glory. No fate can prevent him from seeing dim it. One day he was supreme; one day he was somebody's hero. "He told his story simply, the old, old story of adverse fortune; the story that is told in fragments, and from which one builds the structure that the world calls failure. The words came lamely, until he told you what he had been one day. Ah, that was a job of responsibility and the pay of the layman," and vigor crossed through his veins and when he walked shoulder to shoulder with strong men. His eyes brightened, and the shabby form on the second chair in the office seemed transformed under your eyes. "The day that was—a fleeting instant in eternity—compensates for all the wrecks of time."—Olathe Register. THE NEGRO AND HIGHER EDUCATION One of the significant events in the last month has been the award of the Professor Spingar medal, by the National Association for the Adjunct Educator. Mr. Ernst E. Just, the 51-year-old negro who is a teacher and natural scientist in the Howard University medical school. In this age of prize giving this memento to be awarded annually represents the greatest service to his or her race seems especially appropriate. This bestowal of honor upon a negro of higher education will undoubtedly be a subject of unfavorable comment, in which case he should have those who, for the negro, believe soely in the educational slogan "All arts stand by hammer and hand." It will also tend to fan into flame the slumbering base of many a man who, like the young Egyptian today, feels that there are certain rights in the realm of the higher mental training of which he is unjustly deprived simply because he is not white; also because of the preconception among many Britons, that a black man is incapable of adequately profiting by a higher liberal or technical education. We believe the basic idea of hand work, so graphically exemplified by that conspicuous leader of the African race in America, Dr. Booker T. Washington, at Tuskegee Institute, Washington, at Tuskegee Institute for negro hand workers, is still sound for the great mass of colored men in the United States, as well as for the larger proportion of the young Egyptians so recently emerging from sevent-century Koranic obscurantum to the appreciation of practical training; still we must heed the fact that the negro of America is already beginning to prove the justice of his education, even in exceptional colored men at least, every door of educational opportunity should be flung wide open. Already negroes have done much to loosen the yoke of racial prejudice for the existence of which the black and the white both are in part responsible. We have learned to readjust them, but now we have allowed contemporary negro education would not delear President John Hope of Atlanta Baptist, College, a Brown University graduate and a college founder of more than ordinary caliber, from the ranks of the highly learned. Then we recognize that few composers rank higher in our recent catalogs of music than those standing close to the front of his art in the portrayal of Bible scenes is a negro painter. These are, to be sure extraordinary negroes, "exceptional men," no doubt, but they with Professor Just and Dr. Washington are what Carley might have called her. The race she lodged in this race. Its occasional shining forth affords both a hint and a hope; a hint that, as the general education board has pointed out, high or education of the kind adapted to their needs must be afforded if we are to have good instructors and professionals, as well as adequate stimul for the awakening of slumbering genius; and a hope that, as these colored men of light and leading appear in the frontier of American activ ties, they may become the heralds of a broader, sander tolerance to each of the races, hastening the day of a higher educational and a higher national justice, evoked partly, at leaue. They are not universally disdainous negro race. C. S. Monitor. owa Undergrads to Operate Own Es tablishment and Sell at Cost STUDENTS RUN BOOK STORE Plans for a co-operative book store at Iowa, practically assuring the institution for the university by next fall, at least, are now being drawn up and prepared to be sent to the preparation to the submission of the plans to the students for a vote. The two plans which have worked more successfully in other colleges 1- That of selling stock among the students, and declaring dividends on the stock at the end of each school year. 2-That of selling participating tickets, which will give the students the privilege of buying books at the co-operative store at cost. The second plan has seemed the better to the committee in the light of its success in other colleges. In Princeton a co-operative ticket may be issued a 1 year for $2, for 2 years for $3, for 3 years for $4, and for life for $5. Articles of incorporation for the store are now being drawn up by the committee. According to these articles, the directors of the store will consist of one faculty member and one student from each college. The manager of the store will be an aumun of lowes and the clerks will be an aumun of lowes. Ladies' Tailoring Mrs. Morgan up to date dressmaking and ladies' tailoring. Also party dresses. Prices very reasonable 1321 Tennessee. Phone 1161 W. All loyal K. U. students will see The Booth Tarkington's famous 4-act comedy Man Presented by K. U. Dramatic Club From At the Bowersock Theatre Home APRIL 14 Prices 25c, 50c, 75c THE BEST BCOKS TO READ THE BEST BOOKS TO READ No one will dispute with Dr. Andrew Lilly, the author of *The Best Book* and Virgil, Shakespeare and Milton to figure in any. Ist of the best literature. Everybody who undertakes to catalog the hundred best books or to select a pigskin library or to keep in the narrow bounds of a five-book collection is careful to recognize the claims of the old worsteds. Their place is fixed. It is the absence of books by living writers or dealing with live topics of the day that is especially noticeable in Dr. White's long list of books on contemporary literature. If the records are to our large city libraries are to be accepted as a guide, there is an immense demand for the literature of this very modern class. People perversely persist in being interested in the things they read and write; their own times, in current topics, at the risk of not being thoroughly versed in the classics. The war in Europe has stimulated reading on a wide scale by persons entirely proof against the charms of the Iliad and the Aeneid. For the time being they are much more attracted by what the Greeks do, and the Germans are doing thin by the deeds of the ancient Greeks and Romans. If our scholars and literary authorities feel inspired now and then to draw up lists of approved books for inexperienced readers, why not designate them as a special guest to compiling brief catalogues of works of immediate appeal to the average reader of intelligence? It requires no particular discrimination to know that Shakespeare is worth an audience. To be a casual reader to know what author will give him the best review of the growth of the German Empire, of the Balkan question, of the history of modern Mexico, or a score of other topics suggested by the daily news? The German school seems important than the reiteration of names familiar to high school boys and girls. — N. Y. World. M. W. Dancing Dresses For the J. Prom A Special Sale and Showing Wednesday & Thursday We Will Be Pleased to Show YOU Priced $12to$25 Also Silk Hosiery, Gloves, Pearl Beads, Ribbons, Hair Ornaments, Lingerie Onks. Bulline V Hackman Do You Remember That Impulse You Did Not Obey? You Intended to take the University Daily Kansan But—You Delayed You can now read the Kansan's stories of Track, Baseball and other spring activities for SPECIAL OFFER UNTIL JUNE 6th $1.00 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THEATRE VARSITY TODAY Shubert presents a quartet of Cabiria stars in Gustave Flaubert's novel in six reels. Salambo Tomorrow: Hallie Ermeine Rives in "Satan Sanderson" featuring Orrin Johnson. HASH HOUSE SEASON WILL OPEN FRIDAY (Continued from page 1) Weible, Frost, McVey, Nixon, Degem, mgr. Stevenson: Messick, Kubic, Sperry Jones, Mather, Teasley, Scalpine Terry, Pickering, Reed, Jeter, Robinson, Murphy. Hash House Rules Number and Eligibility of Players Number and Englibility or players A baseball player, an athlete, or a coach should, shall be required to play an outfield position. The University interpretation of "professional" shall hold. Any team that plays on the field will perform the game or games to its opponent. 3. A team must at all times play 2. Any club which has fewer than 13 able-bodied men as qualified players shall be allowed to draught outside players until 13 have been secured. A boarder shall be considered as not "table-bodied" when he is physically or otherwise incapacitated from playing. at least five men from the boarding house it represents. 4. the manager of a team, when handing in the names of players, shall be required to designate which players, and which belongs to the team. 5. When any new members come to a club they shall be allowed to play after their names have been handed into and approved by the commission. 6. The commission shall have power to decide on the eligibility of players, both club men and outside players. 7. Any team playing other than qualified players shall forfeit the game or games to its opponent, unless the captains or managers have agreed beforehand that an ineligible man may play. Grounds 8. Any club making a reduction in board to any ballplayer in order to induce him to join the club shall all games in which such man plays. Time of Playing 1. The grounds upon which the games are to be played shall be designated on the official schedule. If for any reason the field is not available at that time it shall be the duty of the team to notify the managers of each team at least 12 hours before the time scheduled for the frame. the time for playing 1. The team that team may jointly change the time for playing a 2. Any team which fails to appear within 15 minutes of the scheduled time of the game, or fails to communicate with the team during the "play ball" shall forfeit the game. Umpire 1. The ampire shall be selected by joint agreement of the managers of the office. 2. The umpire shall have power to bench any player for any good cause, and if the player refuses to leave the game, the umpire shall have power to forfeit the game. Protested Games 1. The commission shall have power to decide all protested games, each team to be represented at the meeting of the commission when the case comes up for consideration. 2. The five members constitute the mission, providing a quorum, the chairman to have no vote except in case of a tie. List of Players 1. The manager of each team shall prepare a list of players, and place it in the hands of the commission, who shall keep it on record. No addition shall be made to this list without the consent of the commission. 1. Each team shall provide a ball for each game that will pass the inspection of the opposing pitcher. 1. The managers or captains shall agree before the game the number of IRISH FIRST TROUBADOURS? Professor Says Early Wandering Singers Were Cells From the New York Post. In a lecture on Rennes, Brittany in a lecture on the Celtic influence, in literature at the University of Cincinnati, recently distinguished between two classes of Celtic populations, those Celtic in origin, but with an intermingling of Celtic blood, and those more surely Celtic. Ireland, which M. Le Braz chose as his starting-point, possessed, at the time of the Scandinavian invasion, an old civilization that had been little influenced by Rome or Germany. Christianity, however, left a profound imprint upon the Gaelic soul. It is in the religious domain that Ireland first influenced the European world. Her saints evangelized barbarian Europe; her art produced awakening that she produced her artists and philosophers. The influence of her epic poetry was no less felt than that of her evangelization. Through poetry and music the legs end of Arthur were kept ever fresh in the Celtic mind. Music and song were an essential part of their education, but it was a decided character among them, from the sixth century through the twelfth. Gradually, as the Celts and Saxons united, the latter learned to appreciate the Celtic poetry, and the Celtic literary themes passed into Saxon possession. But, as the new social state evolved, formed of this alliance, the art of the bards ceased to be an essential part of life; compelled to find a means of support. They became wandering singers, going to assemblies, feasts, and abebes. "It should not be surprised," remarked M. le Braz, "if it should some day be discovered that the institution of the French language, so popular in Europe during the Middle Ages, had its first originators in the country of Wales." Through him the language was imminently sung in the poetry was imminent, sung in the Roman languages—Celtic, Saxon, Roman. LOCAL OPTION AT HARVARD Movement to Have Each Class Decide Beer Question for Iself Apparently the question of serving beer at Harvard class gatherings is not to be allowed to drop with the disbandment of the class this week. Petitions have now been circulated in the sophomore class asking that the question, as to that class, be put to a test vote. The propriety of the question has to be determined. Student Council executive committee when it meets next Tuesday; the petition bears the names of more than fifteen students. and F. T. Smith, '15, will appear at the executive committee meeting to urge the adoption of a plan of direct student action, each class for which they would need to matter to go to a vote, a second request will then be made for the call ing of a special election in the sophomore class, for in the regular course of events none would be held until the annual choice of officers next fall. She-Of course, he bored me awfully, but I don't think I showed it. Every time I yawned I just hid it with my hand." He (trying to be gallant)—Really I don't see how a hand so small could —er-hide--that is—beastly weather we're having, isn't it? innings to be played. In case of disagreement or neglect to specify 7 innings shall be considered an official game. 1. The manager of the winning team shall report the result of the game to the Daily Kansan before noon of the following day; games played on Friday or Saturday to be reported before Monday noon. This report shall also contain a list of participants. Report of Games 3. In case any team withdraws from the league before it has played (the league was not played or unplayed by that team shall be declared forfeited to its opponent. 1. Division championships shall be decided on a percentage basis. In case of tie a game will be played, the winner will have an adverse to decide the championship. 2. The league championship shall be between the division champions. Championship' PROTSCH "The Tailor" SPRING SUITING Autographic Kodaks $11 to $60 Complete Special Attachments $2.50 to $3.50 Evans Drug Co. Successors to Raymonds USE EURIPIDES AS PREACHER Greek Dramatist Brought Forth by Women to Aid Peace Choice of Euripides "Trojan Women" as the play to be used for propaganda purposes by the women's peace party as a Chicago company of players tours the country, is interested for several reasons. The theater is thereby recognized as an important venue. The Press, pulpit and audience are have a rival. But this is not all. In search of a play which, if well rendered and obedient to its writer's intentions, would show the consequences of war to women and children, the persons promoting this endeavor, the Carnegie Peace Foundation, found nothing in the modern drama of any people equal to the Greek playwright's depiction of the Peloponnesian war. They wisely decided to render the classic masterpiece instead of a possible but no unchallengeable modern war-play, with purposes and inferior in fidelity and cander to the Attic author's work. From the Chicago Herald. It is the aim of the women's peace party to put an end to war, and this primarily is the explanation of its call on ancient Euripides to succor them by furnishing an anti-militarist weapon burned in the workshop of a Greek who was a tinker and stylist as well as a playmaker. Tactically the move is shrewd, for it will subject to the moral lessons of the play many young Greeks will be to add to their critical resources notes and observations on the technique of the early Greek's artistry. Some persons will subscribe for and go to the play for what they hope will be its cultural influence. The management of the enterance to the production of the play will not only please playgoers but stir them into active work for peace. Cruiser "What sort of a boat is it, the inquisitive man." "A boy asked the smart lad. "And where is she going?" "A cruise, sir." "What makes it go?" "Its screws, sir." "Who are on board?" "It's crew, sir." "It looks pretty smart." "We have to keep it clean, or rubbish and dusus两ould accrue, sir." "Oh, you are too smart. Where do you come from?" "What sort of a boat is this?" ask the captain, eyes wide. Pañ-Hellenic Baseball Schedule DIVISION I. "From Crewe, sir." | | Acacia | Σ A E | AT Ω | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Acacia | | | | | Σ A E | April 13 | | | | AT Ω | April 8 | April 27 | | | Σ N | April 29 | May 3 | April 20 | DIVISION II. | | $k \Sigma$ | $\Delta T \Delta$ | $\Phi J \theta$ | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | $k \Sigma$ | | | | | $\Delta T \Delta$ | April 14 | | | | $\Phi J \theta$ | April 30 | April 9 | | | $B \Theta H$ | April 7 | May 5 | April 26 | DIVISION III. | | $ \sum X $ | $ \phi I A $ | $ \phi K W $ | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | $ \sum X $ | | | | | $ \phi I A $ | April 19 | | | | $ U K A $ | April 10 | May 6 | | | $ \phi K W $ | April 28 | May 4 | April 23 | LADIES AND GENTS IMPERIAL SHINING PARLOR AND HAT WORKS BELL BROS. MUSIC CO. R. D. KRUM, Manager. All Kinds of Hats Cleaned and Reblocked 737 Mass, ladies, and Gents' Panamas Especially All Shines 5c THE $15.00 to $200. Terms for You THE LARGEST ASSORTMENT of BASE BALL and TENNIS Goods ever seen in Lawrence and all standard makes. All bright new merchandise, no carried over stock in this store. Buy your gloves, balls, bats and rackets at a real athletic goods store. Just a little further up the street but better values Just a little further up the street but better values PHONE 608 709 MASS. ST CARROLL'S For Real Music The "Victrola" Leads All And the Price Suits Everybody's Purse Today Bowersock Theatre Today THE PALATIAL HOME OF PARAMOUNT PICTURES The Paramount Film Co. Presents Alice Dovey in a famous military drama Matinee Daily 2:45 All Seats 10 Cents The Commanding Officer Coming: Fritzi Scheff in "Pretty Mrs. Smith" FLOWERS FOR THE PROM Orders should be placed early. Don't wait until the last day. Give the Florist a chance to get them out on time. 8251 $ Mass. THE FLOWER SHOP Phones 621 12 W. Ninth Lawrence Pantatorium Football Players Advised to Row Strong in the belief that rowing is a good way to build up football material, Lieutenant Ingram, head coach of the navy squad, has advised alluded to this spring that the fall to take up rowing this spring. Coach Dickinson of Pennsylvania urges that they play la croce. Ladies and Gents Imperial Shining Parlor and Hat Works Professional Cards Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE 12 W. North Lawrence Pantatorium BARRY RKDING M. D. Eye, ear, nose CARRIS KAYLEY M. D. Eye, ear, nose "Big," Phones, Bell 113, House 102 J. E. BROCK, Optometrist, and Speech Medicine Misc. St. Bell i955-8601 Misc. St. Bell i955-8601 You Will Want Some to Take Home With You 825 Mass. Street Phone 621 J. R BICHTEL, M. D, D. O. $32 BICHTEL. Both phones, home and residence. We clean and reblock all kinds of hats, Ladies and Gents Panamas Especially, 737 Mass. St. All SHINES, 5c. Plumbers Jewelers A Nice Line of Plants and Cut Flowers at THE FLOWER SHOP Classified G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D., Disease of A. W. JONES at Bloedel Residence 180 F. Bling, F. Bling, Residence 180 A. J. ANDERSON, M. D., Office 715 Vt. St. Phones 124. DR. N. HAYES, 029 Mass. St. General Practice. Also treats the eye and faucet. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, ear and nose surgery. Guaranteed. Dick Bldg. Barber Shops ED. W. PAISONS, Engraver, Watch- er, Jewelry. Boll Ehona 714. Mt. Mass. PHONE KENNEDY PLUMBING CO₂ phone.geegee@gmail.com Phone 653 Mashua lamps. Phone 653 Mashua lamps. Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK 913 Mass. FRIANK E. BANKS, Ins., and abstracts of Title. Room 2, F. A. U Building FIRE INSURANCE, LOANS, and ab- bundling. Building 154; Fire House 2302. Building 156; Fire House 2302. FOR RENT—A large south room in modern home for one or two men. Cheaper if taken soon. 1312 Ohio. 100¢. Want Ads LOST-A Mascin pin in the form of a keypad to lock office phone 2126J. kisco office phone 2126J. FOR RENT-A seven room modern house furnished or unfurnished, centrally located. Phone Bell 817 before six in the evening. LOST—On campus or at the Santa Fe depot, plain gold locket with reach chain. Finder please return to Miss Kansas. Turner, Blue Rapka, Kansas. LOST—Rose coral center pln with diamond center, between 1234 Mississippi and Bowersock, by way of 12th. Return to Kansean office. 122-3 FOR SALE—Harley Davidson Motor Cycle in perfect running order. Will sacrifice for $50.00. Call 2314 Bell. 122.3* McColloch's DrugStore Box Stationery All Grades—All Prices SNA PPY SPRING SUITINGS Schulz 913 MASS. ST. BURT WADHAM'S "College Inn Barber Shop" Murphy's The only store in Lawrence to sell no article over 10c 915 Mass. G LAWRENCE BUSINESS COLLEGE Lawrence, Kansas. Largest and best equipped business college | Kansas. School occupies 2 floors Law- rary. | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | TYPE or shortened by machine. Write for sample of Stenotype noteband a catalog WATKINS' NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depository. FRANK KOCH THE TAILOR Full Line of Spring Suitage STUDENT_HEADQUARTERS STUDENTS' SHOE SHOP R. O. BURGERT, Prop. 1107 Mass. St. Satisfaction Guaranteed THESIS BINDING Engraved and Printed Cards. Sheaffer's Self-filling Fountain Pens. 744 Mass. Street. A. G. ALRICH 744 Mass. Street. The University of Chicago HOME in addition to resident work, offers also instruction by correspondence. STUDY For "2ndary information addressee." 22nd Year U. of C., Div, H, Chicago, Ill. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Pearl Piping Rock Gray PHOENIX SILK HOSE Palm Beach Pink Sky Rocky Mountai Blue Navy Fawn Tuxedo Tan Black White Their sheer good looks and guaranteed wearing qualities make them "favorites" among all well dressed men and women. The luster will not wash out. Colors to match your costume for the Junior Prom. Ladies' 75¢ and $1 Men's 50¢ Correct Evening Clothes for the Prom Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUT-FITTERS You can see them in our Window Hash House League Schedule DIVISION I. | | Co-op | Ulrich | Martin | Neal | Hayes | Willis | Long | K K | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Co-op | | Sat A 10 Hw-2 | Sat A 17 N1-4 | Sat A 24 N-1 10:30 | Sat M 1 He-10:30 | Sat M 8 Hw-2 | Sat M 15 N2-8:30 | Sat M 22 N1-10:30 | | Ulrich | Sat A 10 Hw-2 | | Sat A 24 He-4 | Aat A 17 N2-4 | Sat M 8 N2-10:30 | Sat M 1 N2-8:30 | Sat M 22 Hw-10:30 | Sat M 15 Hw-2 | | Martin | Sat A 17 N1-4 | Sat A 24 He-4 | | Sat A 10 He-8:30 | Sat M 22 N2-2 | Sat M 15 Hw-2 | Sat M 8 Hw-10:30 | Sat M 1 N2-4 | | Neal | Sat A 24 N1-10:30 | Sat A 17 N2-4 | Sat A 10 He-8:30 | | Sat M 15 He-4 | Sat M 22 He-2 | Sat M 1 N1-4 | Sat M 8 N1-2 | | Hayes | Sat M 1 He-10:30 | Sat M 8 N2-10:30 | Sat M 22 N2-2 | Sat M 15 He-4 | | Sat A 10 N1-4 | Sat A 17 Hw-2 | Sat A 24 Hw-10:30 | | Willis | Sat M 8 Hw-2 | Sat M 1 N2-8:30 | Sat M 15 Hw-2 | Sat M 22 He-2 | Sat A 10 N1-4 | | Sat A 24 Hw-2 | Sat A 17 Hw-1030 | | Long | Sat M 15 N2-8:30 | Sat M 22 He-10:30 | Sat M 1 He-10:30 | Sat M 1 N1-4 | Sat A 17 Hw-2 | Sat A 24 Hw-2 | | Sat A 10 N2-2 | | K K | Sat M 22 N1-10:30 | Sat M 15 He-2 | Sat M 1 N2-4 | Sat M 8 N1-2 | Sat A 24 Hw-10:30 | Sat A 17 Hw-10:30 | Sat A 6 N2-2 | | DIVISION II. | | Daniels | Y. M. | Dad's | Custer | 1328 O. | Stevenson | Franklin | Lee's | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Daniels | | Fri A 9 N2-4 | Sat A 17 He-10:30 | Sat A 24 He-2 | Sat M 1 Hw-8:30 | Sat M 8 Hw-4:30 | Sat M 15 He-10:30 | Sat M 22 He-4 | | Y. M. | Fri A 9 N2-4 | | Sat A 24 N2-8:30 | Sat A 17 He-10:30 | Sat M 8 N2-4 | Sat M 1 N1-2 | Sat M 22 Hw-10:30 | Sat M 15 N1-10:30 | | Dad's | Sat A 17 He-10:30 | Sat A 24 N2-8:30 | | Sat A 10 He-2 | Sat M 22 Hw-4 | Sat M 15 N2-10:30 | Sat M 8 Hw-8:30 | Sat M 1 N2-2 | | Custer | Sat A 24 He-2 | Sat A 17 He-10:30 | Sat A 10 He-2 | | Sat M 15 N1-8:30 | Sat M 22 N1-4 | Sat M 1 N2-10:30 | Sat M 8 Hw-10:30 | | 1328 O. | Sat M 1 Hw-8:30 | Sat M 8 N2-4 | Sat M 22 Hw-4 | Sat M 15 N1-8:30 | | Sat A 10 He-4 | Sat A 17 Hw-4 | Sat A 24 N2-10:30 | | Stevenson | Sat M 8 Hw-4 | Sat M 1 N1-2 | Sat M 15 N2-10:30 | Sat M 22 N1-4 | Sat A 10 He-4 | | Sat A 24 Hw-2 | Sat A 17 N2-20 | | Franklin | Sat M 15 He-10:30 | Sat M 22 Hw-10:30 | Sat M 8 Hw-8:30 | Sat M 1 N2-10:30 | Sat A 17 Hw-4 | Sat A 24 Hw-2 | | Sat A 10 Hw-2 | | Lee's | Sat M 22 He-4 | Sat M 15 N1-10:30 | Sat M 1 N2-1 | Sat M 8 Hw-10:30 | Sat A 24 N2-10:30 | Sat A 17 N2-2 | Sat A 10 Hw-2 | | DIVISION II. | | Hope | Midway | College Campus | D. Co-op | Los Amigos | North College | Track Training | Moody | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Hope | | Fri A 9 N 1-4 | Sat A 17 He-8:30 | Sat A 24 N2-2 | Sat M 1 Hw-4 | Sat M 8 N1-10:30 | Sat M 15 Hw-8:30 | Fri M 21 N1-2 | | Midway | Fri A 9 N1-4 | | Sat A 24 He-8:30 | Sat A 17 He-2 | Sat M 8 He-4 | Sat M 1 Hw-2 | Sat M 22 He-2 | Sat M 15 Hw-10:30 | | College Campus | Sat A 17 He-8:30 | Sat A 24 He-8:30 | | Sat A 10 N1-2 | Sat M 22 N2-10:30 | Sat M 15 Hw-4 | Sat M 8 N2-2 | Sat M 1 He-2 | | D. Co-op | Sat A 24 N2-2 | Sat A 17 He-2 | Sat A 10 N1-2 | | Sat M 15 Hw-8:30 | Fri M 21 N1-4 | Sat M 1 Hw-10:30 | Sat M 8 Hw-8:30 | | Los Amigos | Sat M 1 Hw-4 | Sat M 8 He-4 | Sat M 22 N2-10:30 | Sat M 15 Hw-8:30 | | Sat A 10 N2-8:30 | Sat A 17 N1-2 | Sat A 24 N1-2 | | North College | Sat M 8 N1-10:30 | Sat M 1 Hw-2 | Sat M 15 Hw-4 | Fri M 22 N1-4 | Sat A 10 N2-8:30 | | Sat A 24 He-10:30 | Sat A 17 Hw-4 | | Track Training | Sat M 15 Hw-8:30 | Sat M 22 He-2 | Sat M 8 N2-2 | Sat M 1 Hw-10:30 | Sat A 17 N1-2 | Sat A 24 He-10:30 | | Sat A 10 Hw-4 | | Moody | Fri M 21 N2-4 | Sat M 15 Hw-10:30 | Sat M 1 He-2 | Sat M 8 Hw-8:30 | Sat A 24 N1-2 | Sat A 17 Hw-4 | Sat A 10 Hw-4 | | EASTER SEES VARSITY LINING UP FOR GAMES Vacation Gives Baseball Men no Rest in Season Practice THE FIRST WEEK A HARD ONE Opening of Season Will be Trying for McCarthy's Squad—Weak First Week Hard at Battery With the opening of the Crimson and Blue baseball season less than one week off the local followers of the national game are pondering over the 1915 Jayhawker prospects. On account of the fifty-seven varieties of spring the squad has not been able to get its usual outdoor practice this season. In order to make use of every available "opportunity Coach" training program, they rifle their Easter vacation, giving them three extra practices which count for much in the few days remaining before the first contest. The first week of the season will be a hard one for DeLongy's men although no Conference games will be played. The Topeka Western League team comes for the first game on Monday after which the Varsity Titans (headed to the return game). Thursday and Friday the Chinese come to McCook for two games on their annual American trip. Although the vacancy on the mound left by Bishop and Smee of the 1914 champs, has not been filled, the rapid improvement in the prospective pitcher's gives hope to the local diamond. Sproul, first baseman on last year's team, and Craig seem to be the likely hurriers for the initial games. Lefty has developed speed and control in his southpaw and no doubt can puzzle many batters. Craig has had some experience at pitching and with his defense of use to him. Fisher and Stiller are the other moundmen who are showing up well in practice. The receiving end of the battery is also in doubt. Captain Delongy wants to keep his position at second but is willing to catch if he is needed. He will be in practice and will probably be given a tryout behind the bat in the early games of the season. In case Delongy goes behind the bat, Bowers will be used at second. The remain-ing third and fourth players will be cinched by three football men, Lindesey, Wood and Russell. Lindsey is working well on the initial sack and has the place cinched if Lefty works on the mound. "Woody" looks good on the backhand and the sell and King are fighting it out for the third base job. the outer gardens will be well taken care of with Wandel and Chinnery, two of last year's regulars, back in center and left field and Wieble, Morrow and Helvern working for the remaining position. Captain DeLongoy yesterday gave out a toast of his thoughts with joy. “If we can only find a good battery we will be going fine,” said DeLongy, after practice. “Sprooll and Craig will probably pitch in the first two games and if necessary I'll go behind the bat. The battery is our weak spot but the first few games will surely fix that all right.” The Lineup Th elinque for the games Monday as Tuesday will probably be as follows Lindsey-first base. DeLongy(Capt.)-second base. Wood-short stop. Russell-third base. Whimbrel-left field. Wilde-center field. Wieble-right field. Herron-catcher. Sproull or Craig-pitcher. How It's Done DID NOT SAY LIQUOR WAS DISPENSED FREELY "Senator you promised me a job." "But there are no jobs." "I need a job, Senator." "Well, I'll ask for a commission to investigate as to why there are no jobs and you can get a job on that."—Louisville Courier-Journal. In a prohibition and local option fight in Michigan, Prof. E, S. Dickinson, who recently came to the University of Kansas to teach in the School of Engineering, has been freely quoted by the liquor supporters as saying that Fraternity and sorority are plentifully supplied with alcoholic drinks. Professor Dickinson denies that he made such a statement. "It is possible," he says, "that man language in the letter was so loosely constructed that the people might construe it to mean that I have said that liquor was in common usage among the students and university clubs. But this was certainly not my intention. I would certainly not wish University that black exp in this matter for I do not have the confirmation that a drop of liquor has been consumed by the students of the University and certainly not that it is in common usage at the University clubs." Hartman Leaves University Hartman Leaves University Edgar A. Hartman, freshman College, from Claflin, has withdrawn from the University. Dames Meet The K. U. Dames meet tomorrow afternoon, 3 o'clock, at the home of Mrs. J. P. Corcoran, 1333 Connecticut street. John Thomson, senior College, went home to Irving during the Easter holidays. Send the Daily Kansan home. STUDENT CRISIS AT UTAH Dismissal of Faculty Members May Cause Depopulation of School As a protest against the action of the board of regents, who recently held an extraordinary session to dismiss the dismissal of four professors and the demotion of the head of the English department, sixteen members of the University of Utah faculty have been accused of insurrection. The student body has shown its disapproval of the regents' action by circulating a petition which binds the signers to leave the institution unless the faculty members are reinstated. All but thirty-four students have placed their names on this petition. The list of resignations includes deans of arts and law and many other educators of prominence. Feeling is strong in the Mormon state and it is possible that citizens may take some action in regard to the matter. George Washington a Yale Alumnus On Alumni Day at Yale an exhibition was shown of correspondence between President Stiles and George Washington, showing that Yale had conferred on Washington in 1781 the honor of being the Deacon of Lawry for that Washington had been so honored by Yale. it was pointed out, while a matter of record, was not generally known. Simplified Spelling Gains in Favor Sixty-seven universities in the United States are using simplified spelling, according to the report of the simplified spelling board. Several state universities have adopted this method. Missouri leads with nine such institutions. $5000 TO LOAN We have $5000.00 worth of Victrolas to sell you and loan you the money to pay for them on the installment plan. Victrolas $15.00 to $200.00 BELL BROS. MUSIC CO. R. D. KRUM, Manager. What do you Require in Shoes? Style? Fit? Comfort? Wear? You will find all of your requirements satisfied in the Queen Quality shoes we are now showing for Spring. For example, here is a neat, dainty little Colonial Pattern that fits all over and has comfort in every line. Made of the best Patent Kid, with hand-turned soles, high Cuban heels. It is sure to wear satisfactory. See them in our north window. $3.75 Queen Quality $3. \underline{75}$ OTTO FISCHER Inter-fraternity Baseball League Schedule
Phi BetaSigma PhiPi UAlpha ChiP A. D.
Phi BetaR E A DTHEApril 7April 26April 17May 8April 24May 15April 10May 1
Sigma PhiApril 7April 26DAILYKANSANApril 13May 4April 20May 11April 23May 14
Pi U.April 17May 8April 13May 4FORTHEApril 8April 29April 21May 12
Alpha Chi SigmaApril 24May 15April 20May 11April 8April 29LATESTOFApril 15May 6
Phi Alpha DeltaApril 10May 1April 23May 14April 15May 6April 15May 6SPORTDOPE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, TUESDAY AFTERNOON. APRIL 6, 1915 UNCLE JIMMY DAY GIVES LAWS VACATION FRIDAY NUMBER 124. No School for Students in Green Hall in Honor of Dean BANQUET THURSDAY NIGHT dean, sickets for the banquet are being bys a committee of four men: Bill Morrow, W. R. Banker, Bill Beal, and Jack Bond. The price is The banquet will be held at the Eldridge House at 8 o'clock. Swede Wilson's three-piece banjo club will play in honor of Uncle Jimmy. The different classes in the School of Law will be represented by speakers. Uncle Jimmy has been dean of the School of Law since 1897. This is the tenth annual banquet where students have given in honor of their "The sale has been exceedingly good," said President William Morrow this morning. "We expect the largest crowd the event will see, a birthday, and the entertainment we have provided seems to warrant that we will get it." Annual Meeting to be Held at University of Michigan At Big Feed at Eldridge House Out of Town Speakers Will Pay Tribute to Venerable K. U, Man Uncle Jimmy Green's seventy-third birthday will be celebrated by the students in the School of Law at a banquet Thursday night. Uncle Jimmy's birthday came Sunday, April 4, but just to give his boys an extra holiday, the celebration has been set for Friday. Classes will be dismissed all day in the School of Law. Judge Charles W. Smith, executive and pardon clerk to Governor Caper, judge Silas Porter, of supreme court justice Robert F. Wolff, judge for the law union for the Indian Pacific railway will be the speakers from out of the city at the banquet. Registrars of twenty-eight universities and colleges, including the University of Kansas, have signified their intention of 'attending the annual conference of American educators' to be held at registersts. and 22 at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Registrar George O. Foster, who is president of the Association, said today that the University of Michigan has indicated its for the meeting and many important questions would be discussed at that time. Last year ex-governor George A Hodges, George A. Neely, and Johnston, chief justice of the supreme court, were the speakers at the ban- ARRANGES FOR REGISTRARS Peter Frank Smith, junior College, who was reported missing and was lost in Chicago, Ill., is on his way back to Lawrence. "We expect him back at any minute," said Mrs. E. J. Hilkey, the landlord at his rooming house, when asked if Mr. Smith would return. No plans have been made for the purchase of the memorial, as a growing fund is expected which is impossible to estimate at present. Universities of Kansas, Minnesota, Illinois, Michigan, Indiana, Texas, Maine, Ohio, North Dakota, Sheffield Scientific School, Yale, Harvard, Columbia, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania College, Valparaiso University, Kansas, Michigan and Iowa Agricultural colleges,Vassar, Washington State college, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, *Agricultural and Mechanical College College of Wooster, Christian University and Syracuse are schools that are registered at the present time but there will be many others according to Registrar Foster. A side trip to Niagra Falls is being arranged to take place at the time of the conference and other amusements will be planned for the registrars who attend the meeting Jessie McDowell Mackin, formerly of the registrar* at K. U, but now the Agricultural College, will act as chairman of the agricultural section of the conference. The sophomore memorial committee will meet Thursday evening at 8 o'clock, Fraser Hall, Room 118. The class anticipates a large memorial fund as forty dollars has been collected already this year. The fund was carried from last year. Of the two newwives, chairman of委会, expects to collect 25 cents from every member of the class before the year is over. SOPHOMORE MEMORIAL FUND GROWING FAST FABLE OF STUDE WHO HAD GOOD LINE A Tale With a Moral Once upon a time there was a Student who could stroll into an Analyt class without having cracked a Book and make the Prof think he knew more about Mathematics than U. G. Mitchell. He took up the Science when he was a Freshman, persevered in it while he was a Sophomore, and, by the time he was a Junior, he was right. He happened to be an Engineer, which in itself is nothing against the man. After he had bluffed the University out of a Degree, he got a job with a big Railroad. He made the Company think he him in charge of big bridge construction Job 'way out West. When he got out there, he was a long way from the gentle Atmosphere so conducive to successful Bluffing. He stood on one side of the river and did the job he knew he could right. He bluffed. that didn't Build the bridge. He was Fired. Moral1:—A man must have more than a Line to catch big Fish. MISSOURI DEBATE APRIL 21 trgers Change Date From April 23 to Meet Jayhawkers in Columbia The Missouri Kansas debate will occur on Wednesday, April 21, in stead of April 23, as first announced a telegram received by Prof. Howard T. Hill from Coach D C. M. Euen, of the Missouri team, states the city of the university to meet at the original date, and suggested April 21 as a substitution The change met with the approval of the local council, and has been accepted. The postponement of an important all-University Missouri debate until April 23 is given by the Tigers their reason for changing the date. In preparation for the coming contest, the men on the team remained in Lawrence during the Easter vacation, and received special training from Prof. Howard T. Hill, the University debating coach. The briefs have been drawn and the arguments polished to the work of the team is now directed toward the development of platform appearance. According to an announcement this morning, Cale Carson will be the first Kansas speaker, Don Joseph, the second, and Hugo Wedel the third. Each man is allowed a twelve minute talk, and a five minute rebattal. PAY BOARD FOR VACATION? Committee Will Diseus Problems of Holiday Expenditures Next Week Whether students should pay board during holiday vacations, when rent shall be paid, and several other questions concerning the relations of landlades and tenants at the subject of question next week. On Thursday, April 15, a meeting will be called to discuss these problems. Mrs. Eustace Brown will represent the women of the University and Dean F. W. Blackman and Prof. W. L. Burdick the men. George O. Foster will act as adviser to a set of rules resembling those of some of the larger schools. Tea will be served from 2:30 to 3 o'clock. HOW FAST DID HIAWATHA RUN? Dean Marvin Asked This in Quiz He could shoot an arrow from him, And run forward with such flessness that the arrow would not penetrate. Swift of foot was Hiawatha; That the teacher Thurs. is the good old days in Dr. F. O. Marvin, the founder of the School of Engineering, teach the young Kansans. It does not sound like a problem in mechanics, but it is, and a famous one. This poetical—mathematical equations—how fast must Hiawatha run—was really worked out and given as part of a quiz. And so it was that Frank Marvin the man who influenced thousands and lived a life of real service to his students worked poetry and beauty into bridge building and construction problems. Alumni to be Married The engagement is to Host Butts, of Winston Churchill and Edward Weildlein, of Augusta, former student, has been announced. Miss Butts was a member of the Pi Beta Phi sorority. Mr. Weildlein is now chemist and research work in Pittsburg. He is a member of the Pi Upsilon fraternity. The wedding will take place at the home of the bride's parents Mr. and Mrs.J.H. Butts on April 24. Alumni to be Married Dean Sayre in Harvey Co. Dean L. E. Sayre of the School of Pharmacy was in Newton yesterday where he read a paper before the Harvey County Medical Society. The Reason for Uncle Jimmy Day [A portrait of William A. Warner, a prominent American author and historian. He is depicted wearing a dark suit with a white shirt and a black bow tie.] HIGH SCHOOL VISITOR TAKEN AWAY FROM K. U New Law Puts Inspection Work Under Direction of State Superintendent The office of high school visitor, which has been filled by Prof. W. S. Johnson, is to be discontinued at the end of the present semester. The office of high school visitor has been handled through the University of Kansas. The legislature established a new system of high school visitation which is to be handled by the interendent of public instruction. From 1903 until 1913 high schools were classified and accredited by the official visitor of the University. In the latter year, under direction of the Board of Administration, this work was placed in charge of a committee on school relations, consisting of representatives of all of the institutions. Hereafter the administration of all of this work will be directed by the state superintendent of public instruction. To assist the state superintendent in administering two work four visitors will be appointed, two of whom shall devote full time to high school education and be appointed by the state board of education and will be its agents in standardizing, classifying and accrediting high schools. Section eight of this law reads as follows: "The State Board of Education shall have exclusive and sole authority to define official standards of excellence in all matters relating to the admissions and admission in rural schools, graded schools and high schools, and to accredit the schools in which the specified standards are maintained, and the board may grant to accredited schools an appropriate degree of approval." In the section following this the law states that "any person who shall complete a four year course of study in any high school accredited by the State Board of Education is required to be the freshman class of the state University, state Agricultural College or any of the state normal schools etc." Daily Kansan in H. The interview accessed to H. B. Asher has applied in the Daily Kansan last, Wednesday, was obtained from Mrs. Asher and should have been mentioned instead of her husband. Mechanical Engineers' Society will meet tomorrow night at the home of Prof. A. H. Slus. 1122 Ohio. Ralph S. Fait, Russen State University are scheduled for talks and plans for Engineers' Day may be discussed. A. "Kanam in India" club is being organized by the foreign mission department of the University Y. M. C. A. All who are assisting in the support of "Dad" Herman, K. U., 1909, who is now secretary of the city Y. M. C. A. at Madras, India, are eligible for membership. Extracts from "Dads'" reports will be mailed periodically to all members of the club. A. "Kansas in India" Club Mechanicals Meet Tomorrow Daily Kansan in Error Zoology Club Meets in Snow Snow Zoology Club will meet to night at 8 o'clock in Snow Hall. K. U. PROFESSOR DEAN OF WOMEN AT MICHIGAN Miss White, of Department of Mathematics Gets Appointment at Northern College Miss Marion B. White, assistant professor in the department of mathematics here, has accepted a position as dean of women in the Michigan state agricultural college. She has been on a leave of absence from K. U. for one year and during that time she has been acting in the capacity that she now will hold permanently. Her work during the last ten years has been for the purpose of ascertainting whether the position is to her liking so she has accepted the position as a permanent one, her place here will be filled by another instructor. Miss White began to teach in 1910. teach him. Prof. W. S. Johnson of the department of English and Prof. William P. Ward of the department of Romance language have been granted leaves of absence for one year. Professor Johnson expects to seek better health and at the end of his year vacation, he probably will resume his position there. Professor Ward has defined his intention of not but he was unable to say as to whether it would be abroad. He also expects to return to take his place on the faculty, when his leave of absence expires. WANT NO CABS AT PROM Managers Abo Ask Students Not to Buy Flowers for Junior Event That there be absolutely no cabs and flowers at the Junior Prom was the request issued this morning from the managers' office in Fraser Hall. Creighton and Davis, who are staging the event this year, wish it to be understood that the rule is not to be departed from. departee are the rehearsals of the junior force are being held daily prior to its presentation at the Junior Prom Friday. A recent change in the lead, by which Maria Slade assumes the leading role at first held by Juliah Davis, has only slightly retarded the cast. According to Ceil DeRoi, director, the work is now proceeding with all possible smoothness. Scenery for the play will be seured at the Bowersock. The furniture will come from Ecke's, and DeRoin promises that the setting will be the most elaborate ever used at a Junior Prom. SachsMeet At Pi U. House The SachsMeet will meet this evening at 8 o'clock at the Pi Upilson house. Vote on Amendments The Daily Kansas Board会 meet to the Constitution 7:17 5 o'clock The adoption of the amendments to the constitution will be voted on. Prof. W. J. Baumgartner in K. C. W. J. Baumgartner and family spent Easter in Kansas City. Junior and senior women are asked to make arrangement with Dr. Alice Goetz for archery practice. ... SUNSHINE BRINGS OUT BACKYARD DIGGERS Professors Buy Spades and Rakes The touch of spring in the air and the inherent love of all of us for the outdoors are cooperating nowadays, and the net result is garden-making. The usual town gardener doesn't expect to raise anything—he simply obeys the inner mandate to get out and dig up the soil of his back yard and to sow sunny seeds in the use me he makes, plants that grow into a fruitful sort is fruitless (no pun), and that the best to be hoped for), after the weeds and various vigrant dogs and chickens have done their work, is a few weazened radishes and a sprig of frayed lettuce, but hope springs eternal, so that human spring brings the capped-up prof and townman to the second-hand store for spades and rakes with which to disfigure his premises. In Spooner Library the secondary effect of this call of the loam is seen; fourteen new books on the general subject of gardening have been placed on the shelves. They are: How to Choose a Farm—T. F. Hunt. Soil-F. H. King. Fertility of Land—Isaac Roberts. Principles of Agriculture—C. A. Roberts. fertilizers—E. B. Voohees. Fertilizers.- E. B. Voohes. Farm Management. Warren, J. A. Witkoe. Crops and Methods of Soil Improvement--Alva Agree. premium farm and Garden Rule Book—L. H, Bailey. garden Making—L. T. "Burley. Manual of Gardening—L. H. Burley. Principles of Agriculture—L. H. Bailey. Three Acres and Liberty—Bolton Hall. HOP TICKETS GO ON SALE Second Year Men Are Busy Selling Admission to Their Social Event Invitations to the Sophomore Hop have been sent out, and tickets are now on sale at the check stand in Fraser Hall. With the date of the affair, April 30, less than a month away, the committee in charge has begun actual preparation for the event. even. "A Box of Monkeys," by William Dean Howells, has been selected as the farce. The cast will be announced during the last of this week. Rehearsals will begin immediately, after that. There are six people in the cast; three men and three women. ... mum "A large number of students will be given tickets to sell," said George Yeokun, manager of the Hop, this morning, "but I am not yet, prepared to announce their names. I want it understood that the Hop is open to the entire public, and I especially welcome the freshmen to attend. The Hop will be informal, and white trousers, though customary, will not be required." DEFEAT CITY WATER BONDS Vote 2260 to 1857 Against Municipi pal owned Plant for Lawrence Complete returns from yesterday's election show that the water bonds for the erection of a new plant was lost by a vote of 2260 to 1857. Mayor W. J. Francisco was elected mayor by a majority of 698. murder. The ordinance to abolish the pool halls of Lawrence was lost by 137 votes. The water bonds was defeated in every precinct in the city. Simplicity of Lawrence Threatened Who says K. U. is buried in the blissful peace of rural simplicity? It's a lie. We're not. Haven't we half a dozen artists' models wandering around Mount Oread? That ought to convince anybody that we're Bohemian, blase, risque, and several other French adjectives. jectives. Which it's true that K. Ui's model pose for students and get only 25 cents an hour for it, yet they do appear garbed in up-to-date dressed occasionally. Prof. W. Griffith says that most of them are women University students and one a member of Phi Beta Kappa. Thirty Going to Washington THIRTY "I am at least thirty to make the trip to Puget Sound in June to do special summer work," said Prof. W. J. Baumgartner of the department of zoology this morning, probable that this number will be K.U. students. The party will leave Kansas City the first of June in a special coach. Y. M. Cabinet Meets Tomorrow The Y. M. C. A. Cabinet will meet at 5:30 o'clock tomorow evening at Con Hoffmann's house, 1833 Ohio. TO ORGANIZE COLLEGE DRAMATIC EXCHANGE? Prof. Arthur MacMurray Has Received Favorable Answers From Other Schools From Other Schools IOWA AND NEBRASKA FOR IT Exchange of Performances Between K. U. and Other Schools Would Develop Material Make Competition in Plays An intercollegiate dramatic association is the latest plan of Prof. Arthur MacMurray, head of the department of public speaking and dramatics in the University, for putting the dramatic activities on a sounder basis. Professor MacMurray already has written to the University at Ames, Iowa, concerning the plan of exchanging plays and the dramatic directors in these schools have replied very favorably to the plan. The plan is to have the K. U. dramatic club take its play to the University of Nebraska or any other school that may be a member of the association and stage it for the students. In return the dramatist will come to the school to come down Lawrence with its play and in this way the schools will be in competition, in dramatic work just as in football, basketball and debating. "When a cast in one University works several weeks or months in preparing a good play for presentation it seems too bad that the audience doesn't know what to in one's night," said Professor MacMurray, this morning, in discussing his new plan. "With this intercollegiate dramatic association the players will get a chance to show what they have built up a good interest in dramatics that should be of great help to the University. In the replies which I have received from Nebraska and with the plan seem to prepare me well if everything goes right we expect to organize this association next year." Would Help Dramatics The Glee Club has already tried the experiment of exchanging concerts with the Washburn College club and the plan was a success. It is hoped by the members of the K. U. Dramatic club that Professor MacMurray's ideal will be worked out for it is thought that it will make dramatic work at the University worth much more to the students and the school than it has ever before meant. The attendance at "The Man From Home," the K. U. dramatization production which will be staged next Wednesday, April 14, at the Bowersock theater to, a certain extent, indicate the feasibility of bringing the University of Nebraska play to Lawrence next year. If the students here evince an interest in local dramas this plan of an intercollegiate dramatic association undoubtedly will be started next season. FOREIGN PLANTS MAY ADORN K. U. CAMPUS The department of botany yesterday received a shipment of various seeds from the office of foreign seed and plant introduction of wheat, the management of arbuscular mycorrhizae was Washington and used as its to their hardiness and quality in this location. Among them were: Asiatic muskelmeles seed; Russian sunflower; peach and pear trees, cabbage and eggplant from China and some Japanese vegetable. In the assortment was a large number of species of willow and popular trees from various parts of the world to be tested out in this soil. Prof. C. A. Shull says students in plant biology will have access to information school ends, SEAT SALE OPENS SATURDAY Tickets for "Man From Home" May be Secured Down Town Seats for "The Man From Home" will go on sale at the Round Corner Drug Store Saturday morning, according to a statement made today by Frank McFarland, manager of the production. Profiles will be lowered; orchestra, 75 cents; first ballet, 60 cents; and second balcony, 25 cents. 25 cents. Under the direction of Prof. Arthur MacMurray, three rehearsals have been held weekly for the past two months. With each succeeding rehearsal the action goes better, moves forward more swiftly, and the final touches which will be added during this last week will bring the whole production into the best possible shape. Prof. F. H. Billings and family spent the Easter vacation in Humboldt. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas John M. Henry Editor-in-Chief Raymond Clapper Managing Editor Helen Hayes Associate Editor William Cady Exchange Editor BUSINESS STAFF W. J. Dyche ... Business Manager C. S. Sturtavev... Advertising Mgrr Leon Harrah Ames Rogers J. McCarthy Lesander Guy Scriwner J. M. Miller Charles Sweet Don Davis Gordon Coulter Goff Nattel Rox Miller Paul Brindle Louis Puckett Harry Morgan James Bauer Chaser Falkerson Fred Bowers Subscription price $2.50 per year in advance; one term, $1.50. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office 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. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone. Bell K. U. 25. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the University of Kansas; to go further than merely printing the book, she wants the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courteous; to solve problems to wiser heads, in all, to serve the university and justify the University. Fair Play and Accuracy Bureau Prof. H. T. Hill...Faculty Member Don Joseph...Student Member John M. Henry...Secretary TUESDAY, APRIL 6, 1915. CLUB HOUSE if you find a mistake in statement of impression in any of the columns of the database, report it to the secretary at the Daily Kansan office to construct you as to further procedure. A month ago Raymond Robins came to Kansas preaching the gospel of social service. In yesterday's Kansan appeared the tale of a "Club House" in Lawrence. The establishment and maintenance of this house is in accordance with Robins' idea. The house is doing good, just as every institution based on such an idea will. But it is only one. There is room for more. The University Christian Associations will do social work in the Bottoms, and establish houses. The churches will act. But the work need not be limited to these. If you profess service as opposed to orthodoxy, you have afforded you in your own city all opportunity for the exercise of your belief. Connect with some organization that is working in the Bottoms, and broaden out. Take some active exercise in that opinion which prompted you to say, "Me, oh I am for work, not show." IN WHAT CONDITION! Secretary James T. Lardner has asked Registrar Foster about the condition of the account books sent here for the use of the student organizations. It took three months or more to get thirteen of the sixty-old books into the hands of the organizations. They simply would not come after them. A couple's more months saw a few more go out. And even now a large number of the books are yet at the Registrar's office awaiting the organizations. 'Tis not the Registrar's fault. He has done all he can to distribute them. And now, Secretary Lardner wants to know the condition of the books. What a report Registrar Foster must make because of the indulence, carelessness, and inefficiency of the organizations. PLAY BALL This week-end witnesses the be gimming of the Hash House League season. In all, more than 15 games will be played. The University has given financial aid, and two new fields will be available for the first time. The Daily Kanan wishes it were possible for every team to win every game, but since that cannot be, it can only hope that every game will be a close one, and that the vanquished teams won't lose their pep. The Daily Kansan will try, as nearly as it is possible, to furnish accurate news of the proceedings of the League, so that the various teams can get the "dope" on their opponents. and invites co-operation from team officials. With green dragons, bamboo pergolas, Chinese lanterns, Oriental perfume, and other Eastern touches the Junior Prom promises to be one worth the early date, "tabooed" cabs and flowers, and other requisites. We gladly hasten to acknowledge the receipt of assurance that there is to be a cement walk from the Medic building to Blake, and thank Super-intendent Shea therefor. Further evidence of the growing activity of women at the University is the beginning of the archery classes at the Gym. "The Man From Home" is coming to the University. A return visit for the man from the University that went home Easter? The Kansan's yellowest story Tuesday was the account of the Japan-Junior Prom. Chasing the Glooms Women will use smokeless powder on herself, but never a Maxim silen The Columbia State wonders why she's doesn't organize a she-talker circuit. The Devil will have his hands full now in this choice business between the old chap and the d. b. sea. And Davy Jones has some capacious locker. Several millions of civilized folk fought Monday too. All hail, the electric fan—and jit ney lid. Add list of officially missing; stat school buildings. A two-man fight demanded more front page Monday than a many-million. Correction: Death of Tipperary. The man at the periscope reports a crash in front, and the end of school beyond. Consider the Belgian, you hungry h. h. stude, and eat your prunes. The Great American Swat campaign needs a Bernhardi. This school would be a wonderful place to matriculate and hibernate if all the Jayhawker camera said were the whole truth. Our idea of an exacting professor is the one who was "writ up" recently as having counted the "ties as he ran for a train. There was a young fellow named Fred, Fred, In an aeroplane flew overhead; His barograph showed He had been where it snowed, But his epitaph shows that he's dead Pandora's Box And how about the man who takes such a long time to get ready for a date that he doesn't arrive until along about eight-thirty". Of course we were all in business—there were some out-of-town men at the house, and he simply had to stay to talk to them, don't you know, or "we had faculty for dinner"—but I never would have done to leave them, as much as I wanted to see you." There are innumerable excuses of all sizes and colors—according to the inventive mind of the man—but never the real ones. You never hear him say that he went to sleep from sheer exhaustion from being up the night before, and therefore lost track of the time. He never says that he just left home with his wife, his girl house and chatted with her for so long that the hands of the watch slipped around to eight before he knew it. Shots at Half-Cock Or Foolishment in Verse THE EIGHT-THIRTY MAN But be that as it may, he often comes late, and he always has an excuse. And that wouldn't be so bad—fifteen or twenty minutes off of an interesting date isn't so hard to endure. The rub comes when ten dollars are at hand, and he has gotten wide awake by this time and is just beginning to enjoy himself, he is much put out at that unnecessary ten-thirty date rule. He fusses and fusses about it, tells you that he thinks a girl ought to have mough sense to watch the time without any bell ringing to scare the men away, says you all are the only mouse that keeps it so strictly—why, of his men over at the house don't rent in till way after eleven-hirt. Then you tell him to come earlier next time—and he does, about five minutes earlier, and the same dis- tance up the next time when the bell rings. "LIGHTLY _TURNS TO—" When you get so bloomin' lazy And you think about the tin-cups A-rattlin' round the keg, Just in time the midwife. Just when the mid-week date rule Amounts to 'hout' a subroutine. Amounts to bout a whang. And you're on the verge of flunkin' But don't give a dane: When you get so bloomin' lazy You can hardly shake a leg. You can hardly shake a leg. And you think about the tin-eups A rattling round the leg. Also you're on the verge of funki! But don't give a dang; Why then some hefty thinkin' And concurin' with a ring We bring the wise conclusion: It is time to buy a Coca-Cola. Speaking the Kansas Language With Funston keeping guard down on the Mexican border, Walt Mason furnishing Johnny Bull with war poetry, Arthur Capper cramming into the halls of the throats of the militant eastern liquor dealers, and Scott Charlie being the only person who has been able to visit Belgium and not have his jaws shut in. He tells about it when he got back home this old state seems to be easily maintaining its usual 1,000 per cent batting average in the world league Chanute Tribune. TIME'S FLIGHT The morn is here again—the noon— The afternoon—the night, and scarce our tired heads find rest Ere the next morning dawns. How is it, lord, we keep abreast, This swift time's rapid flight? How that when daylight fades away We find our tasks are done? Not by our own strength, Lord, but Thine Phou givest the strength, the task, the time, Ve, but the tasks fulfill. THE POPULARITY OF THE BIBI POPULARITY OF THE BIBLE An eminent educator speaking not long ago at West Point lamented the disregard of the Bible on the part of students, and consequent loss from the point of view culture in good English. At the close of his address he was confronted by a dozen or more cadets who proceeded to tell him that he must have been misinformed, especially in relation to the interest in the Bible at ten years one half of all the cadets by the corps had been meeting weekly in Bible classes. After further investigation among other institutions the speaker, who was a bishop of one of the large denominations, discovered that during the last college year somewhat more than 48,000 undergraduates of the United States and Canada were reported as engaged for part of the year at least in voluntary Bible study. If the investigator had desired to continue his study he might have found that the various Sunday schools of the world report yearly a twenty-five to two eighty-eight million twenty-seven Bible societies are printing this book, one in the United States, three in Great Britain, and twenty-three on the continent of Europe, aggregating a total output of Bibles year by year of not less than 12,000,000 copies. One would need to have more than 500-500 young men and young women annually enrolled in what are called organized Bible classes in connection with the various churches and Christian societies of the United States alone, while the total annual issue of the Scriptures, in more than 480 languages and dialects, reaches thousands, volumes, making the Bible by far the best selling and most widely distributed piece of literature in print. In some recent journeys there was discovered on the edge of the Sahara desert a caravan which was conveying on the backs of camels 2000 milk and food to the student in St. Matthew and St. John, into the heart of the desert; these gifts, translated into Arabic, were being sold to the Arabs for one English penny or two cents each. A prominent remark recently that the students India knew the English Bible better than they knew any one of the great books of Hinduism, and it is not unusual to find members of the higher castes in India using the Bible in their services. Especially is this true of the members of the reformed sect Bharma Samaj. It was said after the Boxer troubles in China that this would mean the end of the circulation of the Bible in the Middle Kingdom. The Bible societies reported a circulation of 650,000 volumes of the book in China. A traveler recently in Japan reports that in Tokyo he witnessed in a single day, on the campus of a university, a charge of 400 copies of the Christian Bible by the students and teachers. The foregoing figures are significant in their emphasis of the fact that this book, which Goethe called "the best work of all time," proved its amazing capacity to meet Please report any errors in this list to K. U. 25. On call the needs of modern humanity.-C. S. Monitor. Oak Park Fraser High School Botany Hall each month, 3:10 p.m. Snow Hill Where They Meet faculty, usesdays, 3 to 4 p. m. chairman, usesdays, 10 p. m. meeted Wednesday, 7:30 p. m.; Chem- teacher, usesdays, 5:30 p. m. Chancellor's open office hours -Pa- studies, Monday, 3 to 4 p.m. ; for mornings, 10 a.m. -5 p.m. Cercle Francais—Wednesdays, 4:30 p.m. room 306, Fraser. Band—Every Wednesday evening 7:00 o'clock, Faxer Hall, Hall College Faculty—Third Thursday of each month—30 p. m.; lecture room 5126 room, Snow Hall. College Administrative Committee on campus month 1984-05-26 First Monday, of each month, 4:30 p Deutsche Virgin - March, 4:30 p Deutsche Virgin - November, 4:30 p Engineering School Faculty~Last Tuesday of each month, 430 p. m. **EMAIL:** HAIL **Educational Club—Once a month** on cath, afternoon or evening. evenings, entomological Club-B - Wed, afternoon, at 3:30 p.m. room 204. Monday-Sunday monition, al. 230 p. m.; room 202 Merrion, al. 230 p. m. Faculties not listed *On call*. month. on call, afternoons or eventings. Estomological Club—Every Tuesday. Facilities not listed—Meet on call. Wednesdays, each month. 4:30 p. Wednesdays, each month. m., room 203 Haworth. Girl" Glee Club - Mondays and Wed- day. Girl's Glee Club - Mondays and Wed- daynes, 5 p. m.; North College. *dency*, s' p.; m!. North College. *Graduate Club*. Once a month. Grammar Glossary. Graduate School Faculty—Second Tuesday of each month. greek Symposium—First Thursday in greek symposium- 7:30 p.m. at the homes of the greek symposium. Home Economics Club—Last Wednes- day of each month, 4:30 p.m.;m. room. Jurisprudence Club—Every third wednesday evening, at 8. Kansas City section of the American Midwest, between Kansas City and Eureka City, at an intersection, between Kansas City and Eureka City. Lawrence meetings begin at 4 p. m. U. B. Branch of the American Insti- t & U. Branch of the American East- shore, a college for children in other other Monday night, at 7:30, room 682. Mandolin Club—Wedneadaya, 7:30 p. m. Fraser. Mathematical Club—Second and Third Floor, room 103. Administration Building. Mea's *Student* Council—Every Tues- morning. Students *United*研 misting Journal—Every Tue- sday. ednesday, each month. 4:30 p.m. Orchestra—Tuesday. 7:30 p.m. Mfr. Orchestra—Tuesday; 7:30 p. m.; Fra- mer Pharmaceutical Society—Once a week, lecture room, Chemistry Building. Quill Club - Every other Tuesday, 7:30 o'clock, Fraser. Snow Zoology Club-Second and fourth Tuesdays, each month, 8 p.m.; Biological Library, Snow Hall. Student Volunteer Meeting-Wednesdays University Senate—First Tuesday of season 4:30 p.m. in room 110. Fresh Hall, 293 W. 7th St. University Post Office—Every day exe- tent Sunday. $8.00 per book. except Sunday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. University of Kansas Architectural Engineering Society—First and third Thursdays of each month, from April through June. University Dehating Society—Mon- thays, 7:30 p. m.; room 101, Fraser Hall Women's Student Government Asso- ciation Thursday, 4:30 p. m.; Au- rease Hall. Y. M. C. A.-regular meeting, Sundays, 4:30 p.m.; Myers Hall. For Y. M. C. A. Board of Directors—Second Thursday, each month, 7:30 p. m.; Myers Hall. Y. W. C. A. "At Home" - Second, thrd 1093 Oread. For all women. 1098 Oread. For all women. Second Semester - Ipsum Monday, Feb. March 4, 6 p. m.; Ipsum Hall, Feb. January 4, 6 p. m. V. W. B. C. A. Second Cabinet —Tuesdays, 7 p. m. 1598, Odron. w v Y. W. B. 16, *Athens*; 17, *Adrienne*; 20, *Beard*-Second Y. W. B. 16, *Athens*; 17, *Adrienne*; 20, *Beard*-Second 1334 Louisiana. 1344 Louisiana. Easter Recees - Friday and Monday April 2 and 5, 1915. Next Commencement—Wednesday June 9, 1915 Next Summer Session - Opens Thursday, June 10, 1915. Chemical Giub--Second and fourth Classes. Chemistry Building; J. B. Whelan. Chemistry Building; J. B. Whelan. Chancellor and Mrs. Strong—At home and fourth Thursdays of each week. El Atenco - and fourth Thurra- ne each month, 439 p.m.; Fraser- 314. Glee Club - Tuesday and Thursday evenings, at 7:38 Fraser Hall. house, chosen by lot. K. University of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. K. U. Debating Society - Thursday's, p. m. fraser, 3: 25 Y. U. Debating Society - Thursday's, 5: 20 p. m. 1382 Ohio M. U. Debating Society - Thursday's, 7: 15 p. m. 1098 Odgen Good Government Club—Thursday, 8 m. a fraternity house, chosen by lot. A Joke on Bismarck The Iron Chancellor of Germany, Prince Otto von Bismarck, who first welded the nation into an Empire, was a most devoted and docile husband and very amenable to his wife's advice. He ready wit, although it saved him many a weary hour, once got him into a ludicrous position. Lord Russell, an English nobleman, was one day calling on the prince, when he remarked that Bismarck was doubtless annoyed by countess visitors who took up his time unnecessarily. "That is true," responded the chancellor, with a laugh: "but my wife has a trick for getting rid of all bores in a graceful way. If she sees I have a visitor who is likely to prove dull, she comes in and makes some pretext for getting me away." Hardly had Bismarck ceased speaking when his life bustled into the library. "Otto," she said, "you voice," you must go at once and take your medicine; you ought to have had it ten minutes ago." Send the Daily Kansan home. Autographic Kodaks $11 to $60 Complete Special Attachments $2.50 to $3.50 RADNOR RADNOR THE NEW ARROW COLLAR Evans Drug Co. Successors to Raymonds REMEMBER We carry the regulation "Gym" suits with the new features added, that were suggested by Dr. Goetz. Also the rubber bathing caps at 25c and 50c WEAVER'S The Pleasure of School Life is Doubled If you are acquainted with the current happenings "on the hill'". The cheapest and easiest way to get acquainted is through the columns of the University Daily Kansan SUBSCRIBE NOW $1.00 for the rest of the year UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Hash House Rules Number and Eligibility of Players Number and Eligibility of Players 1. Any baseball "K" man, Varsity player, or professional, shall be required to play an outfield position. 2. Any basketball player, "professional" shall hold. A team violating this provision shall forfeit the game or games to its opponent. 3. Any club which has fewer than 18 able-bodied players as qualified players shall be allowed to draught outside players until 18 have been seated and considered as not "table-bodied" when physically or otherwise incapacitated from playing. 3. A team must at all times play at least three men from the boarding house it presides over. 4. The manager of a team, when handing in the names of players, shall be required to designate which players, and which belong to the team. 5. When any new members come to a club they shall be allowed to play after their names have been handed into and approved by the commission. 6. The commission shall have power to decide on the eligibility of players, both club men and outside players. 7. Any team playing other than qualified players shall forfeit the game or games to its opponent, unless the captains or managers have agreed beforehand that an ineligible man may play. 8. Any club making a reduction in board to any ballplayer in order to induce him to join the club shall all games in which such man plays. Grounds 1. The grounds upon which the games are to be played shall be designated on the official schedule. 1 for any reason the field is not available at that time it shall be the dut of the chairman of the commissio at least each team at least 12 hours before the tim scheduled for the game. Time of Playing 1. The managers of each team may play the change the time for playing a game Umpire 2. Any team which fails to appear within 15 minutes of the scheduled time of the game, or falls to competition, is eliminated. 3. The "play篮" ball shall forfeit the game. The umpire shall be selected by presentation of the managers of the opposing team. Protested Games 2. Theumpile shall have power to bench any player for any good cause, and if the player refuses to leave theumpile shall have power to偏戏theumpile. 1. The commission shall have power to decide all protested games, each team to be represented at the meeting of the commission when the case comes up for consideration. 2. The commission shall constitute a quorum, the chairman to have no vote except in case of a tie. List of Players 1. The manager of each team shall prepare a list of players, and place it in the hands of the commission, who shall keep it on record. No addition shall be made to this list without the consent of the commission. Balls 1. Each team shall provide a ball inspection in the openingasket. Number of Innings 1. The managers or captains shall agree before the game the number of innings to be played. In case of disagreement or neglect to specify 7 innings shall be considered an official game. Report of Games 1. The manager of the winning team shall report the result of the game to the Daily Kansan before noon of the following day; games played on Friday or Saturday to be reported before Monday noon. This report shall also contain a list of participants. Championship 1. Division championships shall be decided on a percentage basis. In case of tie a game shall be played according to the average to decide the championship. The league championship shall be widely played by a game between the division champions. 3. In case any team withdrawn from the league before it has played all its scheduled games, all games from that game will be declared forfeited to its opponent. List of Players Y. M. house, 941 Ind.: Bilcoe, Thomann, Kingaborough, Ireland, Payno, Sacramento, Austin, Wilson, Davis, Chelson,荔藤, Zelow- ski, Paloukny. Track Training Table, 1339 KJ; Niles, Frederick, Fink, J, Dean, James, Wood, Lindsey, Hilton, Converse, Smith, Smith, Hilton, Crabble, Thorge, Broun. Hayes, 1237 Oread, phone 2181W Bel Hope, 941. Ala. B. 2336; Bost, Rucker, Jones, Cook, Chandler, Harms, Weidlein, Hogapple, Weible, Gaearh, Ruth. capt. Capitan, Webster, Harlan, Bar- dall, Baldwin, Elysian (Uncomplete) Baldwin, Eligible (Uncomplete) Co-op, 1345 Ky, 1116; J o. D. Berwift, capt., McLaughlin, Wyman, Calin, King, Raemer, Fairchild, McCallough, Dryden, Dwylen, Ferris, Subelkrup, Bowers, Pearson, Huntsman, Blair, Kitchen, Bayles. Midwav. 1042 O.. 2325B.. Weltmer. Martin, 912. 127 B.: Irwin, mgr. Poltz, Sorensen, Swanson, Russell, Attomson, Farley, Bell, Gray, Tampson, Templin, Living, Kooked Custer: Washburn, capt., 1026B, Harden, mgr., 1232W B, Pierce, Harding, Deaver, Cook, Rogers, Cummins, Burns, Nixon, Didge, Young, Williams, DeRoin, Kabler, Coover, Demmert, Shannon, Threve. Dunakin Co. -mgr, 1304 Mass; Street, Shelley, -cog, 2180W x 10; Darryn, -cog, 2180W x 10; Dunain, -cog, 2180W x 10; Dad's Club, 1313 Vt. Larrimore, MacGregor, Long, Hill, Peterson, Major, Fitzgerald, J., Fitzgerald, A, Eaton, Observe, Crowley, Schmitter, Wilson, Stuewe, Slade, Bell, Manning, Stortz, Mathers. 1328 O., 1641J B; Graham, mgr., Glasso, Fritz, Naylen, Young, Bell, capt., Cooper, Robertson, Palmer, Frost. Campbell. Daniels, 2129 B; Arnold, mgr, Schoenfeldt, Buchanon, Madden, Mitchell, Brown, Cooper, Hutton, Ford, Hill, Bowersock. Lee's: Gear, Wyatt, Joliffe, O'Bryan, clark, Smith, Fuller, Bowman, Huey, Young, McCorkle, Morgan, McCamon, Rogers, Champlin, Cox, Weible, Frost, McVey, Nixon, Degen, mgr. Stevenson: Messick, Kubic, Sperry, Jones, Mather, Teasley, Scalpino, Terry, Pickering, Reed, Jeter, Robinson, Murphy. STEPHEN GRAHAM IN RUSSIA Quit Job at 23 and Went to Moscow to See Russian Life From Philadelphia North-American. Stephen Graham, the author, of "Russia and the World," is the son of 2. Anderson Graham, editor of Computer News. Fourteen years ago, at the age of twenty, he made a good business post in London and went to Russia to travel with only £15 in his pockets. At Moscow he shared a room with two young Russian students. "At first he was inclined to be discouraged and despond, but as he began to know more Russian, and that he came more and more happy in his new career. He trumped about the Canaasus, slept under the stars, received hospitality from all sorts of queer folk and incidentally saw a lot of the country. The summer follow-up where he saw another side of Russia The year after that he joined the Russian pilgrims, disgraced as one of the worst leaders in history. PROTSCH "The Tailor" SPRING SUITING lem. Out of these experiences he made his book, 'With the Russian Pilgrims to Jerusalem.' The next year he came to America with Russian immigrants and gathered matters for him. With Poor Immigrants to America, for his Mr. Czar, he has tramped in almost every district of Russia. When the present European war broke out he was on the frontier of China, one thousand miles from a railway station. 'Russia and the World' opens with an act involving the Czar, affected the people there; how the Cossacks rode 'the Czar's summons. It is said that Mr. Graham, who is over six feet in height, looks more like a Russian than like the Englishman, and he doubts but that his face bears a marked resemblance to Maxim Gorky, a fact frequently commented upon by Russians who meet him, but also not to be accounted for by the Caitle in him. Strange as it may seem, however, Gorky was always one of Gra ham's most loved Russian writers. His temperament as a tramp seemed indeed very near to Graham. Mr. Graham confesses that it was the horse he owned in the works of Gorky and Dostoevsky that first drew him to Russia." "Yes," said the parent, with a sigh. "We have the gas going most of the night now," said the psychology professor—Ex. Pine, said the proud parent. "Don't you find that a baby brightens up a household wonderfully?" pursued the friend. Baby Brightens up Things the neighbor asked the neighbor of the new father The K. U. Dramatic Club Order acreated distilled water from MeMish, Phones 192—Adv. LOSI - Chainset nose glasses. Right lense cracked. In fraser 207, about two months ago. Finder call either phone 126, 125-3* THEATRE VARSITY Send the Daily Kansan home. LOST—Chainless nose glasses. TODAY: Complete in 5 parts "Satan Sanderson" By Hallie E. Rives Pan-Hellenic Baseball Schedule DIVISION I. Featuring the Original Star Orin Johonson | | Phi Beta | Sigma Phi | Pi U | Alpha Chi | P A. D. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Phi Beta | RE A D THE | April 7 April 26 | April 17 May 8 | April 24 May 15 | April 10 May 1 | | Sigma Phi | April 7 April 26 | DAILY KANSAN | April 13 May 4 | April 20 May 11 | April 23 May 14 | | Pi U. | April 17 May 8 | April 13 May 4 | FOR THE | April 8 April 29 | April 21 May 12 | | Alpha Chi Sigma | April 24 May 15 | April 20 May 11 | April 8 April 29 | LATEST OF | April 15 May 6 | | Phi Alpha Delta | April 10 May 1 | April 23 May 14 | April 15 May 6 | April 15 May 6 | SPORT DOPE | | | Acacia | Σ AE | ATΩ | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Acacia | | | | | Σ AE | April 13 | | | | ATΩ | April 8 | April 27 | | | Σ N | April 29 | May 3 | April 20 | DIVISION II. Inter-fraternity Baseball League Schedule DIVISION III. With a well trained cast will stage comedy by Booth Tarkington in four acts | | $K \Sigma$ | $\mathcal{J} T \Delta$ | $\Phi J \Theta$ | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | $K \Sigma$ | | | | | $\mathcal{J} T \Delta$ | April 14 | | | | $\Phi J \Theta$ | April 30 | April 9 | | | $B \Theta H$ | April 7 | May 5 | April 26 | | | Σ N | Φ Γ Δ | Φ K W | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Σ N | | | | | Φ Γ Δ | April 19 | | | | U K A | April 10 | May 6 | | | Φ K W | April 28 | May 4 | April 23 | SEAT SALE SATURDAY APRIL 9, at the Round Corner Drug Co. At the Bowersock Theatre Wednesday, April 14. Reasonable prices—25c, 50c and 75c. "The Man From Man From Home" Today Bowersock Theatre Today THE PALATIAL HOME OF PARAMOUNT PICTURES A Paramount Production in 5 Parts Featuring CATHERINE COUNTISS in The Avalanche Matinee Daily 2:45 All Seats 10 Cents Coming Friday: Fritzi Scheff in "Pretty Mrs. Smith" Ladies and Gents Imperial Shining Parlor and Hot Works and Hat Works We clean and reblock all kinds of hats, Ladies and Gents' Panamas Especially. 737 Mass. St. ALL SHINES, 5c. Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE 12 W. Ninth Lawrence Pantatorium Phones 506 SPALDING'S GENEVA RACKETS PRICE $1.50 The Racket for the University Girls SOLD ONLY AT CARROLL'S Phone 607 Tennis Balls 35c and 40c 709 Mass. J. F. BROOK, Optometrist, and Spice Store of New York. Phone 612-985-0024. Office $82. Mason, St. Bell Phone 623. Professional Cards ialist in Scientific Glass Fitting, OF. HARRY REDING, M. D. Eve, nose nos, and throat. Glasses fitted Office, F. B. Bldg, Phones, Bell 513, Home 512. R. H. L. CHAMBERS Office over studios, studios. Both phones. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diseases of Heart and Lungs Residence 1250 St. Bot. Both phone a. Residence 1250 A. J. ANDERSON, M. D., Office 715 Vt. St. Phones 124. DR. PETER D. PAULS, Osteopath, Office and residence, 7½ East 7th St. General practice. Both phones 561. Facility 12, 2 to 5, 2 to 7 and 8 by appointment. DR. N. HAYES, 229 Mass. St. General. Also treat the eye and file glis G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye ear and G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye ear and Guaranteed保险。Dick Hildg. Classified Jewelers ED. W. PARISONS, Engraver, Watch EW. PARISONS, Engraver, Watch Jewelry, Belle Phone 715, 737 Masson PHONE KENNEDY PLUMBING CO. Miss. Maples, 658. MAples lamps, Miss. Maples, 658. MAples lamps, Barber Shops Insurance Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK, 913 Mass FIRE INCURANCE, JOANS, and al- bums. Building B. Bald 158; Home 2302. FRANK E. BANKS, Ins., and abstracts of Title, Room 2, F. A. U. Building Want Ads LOST—A Masonite pin in the form of a blue and gold piece mounted on a board with pin 1324 LOST—On campus or at the Santa Fe depot, plain gold locket with repech chain. Finder please return to Miami, Kansas. Turner, Blue Rapids, Kansas. FOR RENT—A large south room in modern home for one or two men. Cheaper if taken soon. 1312 Ohio. 198. FOR SALE—Harley Davidson Motor Cycle in perfect running order, Will sacrifice for $50.00, Call 2314 Bell. 122.3* LOST—Rose coral stick pin with diamond center, between 1234 Mississippi and Bowersock, by way of 12th. Return to Kanese office, 122-3 122-3 Box Stationery All Grades—All Prices McColloch's Drug Store McColloch's DrugStore SNA PPY SPRING SUITINGS Schulz 913 MASS. ST. BURT WADHAM'S "College Inn Barber Shop" Business College *Largest and best equipped business college* *Kansas.* School occupies 2 floors laram- *type or shorter, by we teach STND- TYPE or shorter, by we teach STND- sample of Stenotype notebook a catalog. WATKINS' WATKINS' NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depository. FRANK KOCH "THE TAILOR" Full Line of Spring Suitings *STUDENT HEADQUARTERS* STUDENTS' SHOE SHOP R. O. BURGERT, Prop. 1107 Mass. St. Satisfaction Guaranteed THEISIS BINDING Engraved and Printed Cards. Sheafer's Self-filling Fountain Pens. 744 Mass. Street. A. G. ALRICH 744 Mass. Street. The University of Chicago HOMEN in addition to resident STUDY for detailed information 22nd Year U. of C., Div, H. Chicago, Ill. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C. B. BARNARD BENCHED —for the Prom Every evening dress accessory that's correct, from the silk "topper" to the soft soled dancing oxfordes, you'll find in our wardrobe department. $1.00 Because of warmer weather we suggest a pair of white silk gloves with black stitching. They are good looking and very comfortable. The new soft soled dancing oxford sell at $5.00 Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUT-FITTERS Sport Hash A brief chat with Captain Tony James of the Jayhawk football brigade reveals the fact that the K. U. protagonist is far from satisfied with the way workouts are progressing. sing We have between 25 and 30 men out," said James, "but there ought to be fifty, yes, even eighty, in a school like this. We could then aspirate into a couple of squads who some real interesting competition. petra. Olentas has written us and laid out the method of procedure for the coming few weeks. Every man ought to benefit by it. It's incongruous to have spending so much money that we did not have the fellows turn out any better than this. out 'any depth' in all 'all around', things look good. We know that the material is in the institution and we know that we have a good advisor coming and that he is here to stay long enough for a thorough tryout. for them, of some these fellows who lay off now will have the surprise of a lifetime," continued James. And the way he said it coupled with the glitter in his eye indicated that Tony is taking note of the recreatures. The spring training schedule is not particularly strenuous compared to the real work in the fall. The men are supposed to appear for practice at 4:30 o'clock and indulge in one hour of action, giving them time to get out into street clothes before dinner is served. Pretty off in comparison to some of the two and three hours in which often keep the candidates in the quarters until well after the clock strikes the sixth hour. H. L Lamport of the Manual Arts school of Los Angeles clipped two-fifths of a second from the American interscolonial record in the 220 yard low hurdles Saturday in the first anterview truck and field meet of the California Federation of High Schools. Lamport's time was :24:2-5. The former record of 24:14-5 seconds was made by A. Cory at Ann Arbor, Mich., two years ago. Indian Schulte, track mentor at the University of Missouri, has issued another call for distance men, for a larger squad. The natives of Columbia modestly admit they have a pretty fair little track team when you don't count the distance runs. As the Missourians couldn't even place against Kansas in the half-mile or two-mile game that unless Fawcet come into form or some veterans are developed they will stand little show in these events in the Missouri Valley meet. the Missouri thefords the speedy quarter-miler who led the Rodkey in the quarter at Convention Hall and Floyd the pole vaulter are both counted upon for firsts in the conference meet which is held May 29, at Columbia. Missouri meets K U., May 15, McCook for the annual door meet. But it is McCook's winner of the last Kansas Missouri meet, that the Tiger cohorts look for most of their points. Simpson may not get fifteen points in this classic competition and then again he may get more for he is an adept at broad jumping, despite his 160 pounds, and a bear with the discus. Speaking of Bears, it is proper here to pause for a moment and consider what those California 'University' grizzlies did to the Illinois western conference last Saturday. The final score was 7-4, the California topped it off with a win in the relay, heretofore an impregnable Illinois stronghold. Captain Stanton and Schobinger were the heavy point winners for their respective aggregations. Stanton easily won the century and followed this by reeling off the furlong in 22:1. The Illinois leader tied with Alabama in 22:0. On the pole, each man clearing 12:1 and took second in the 16 pound shot. Maker of California broad jumped 22:10:10 in addition to high jumping himself into a tie for first with two of his team mates. Illinois was shut out in thir sevent and the Californians quit at 5:10:3-4. Kansas will be represented more fully than ever before at the annual Des Moines Relay Carnival if the plans of a manager W. O. Hamilton are not altered. The Jayhawk mentor has entered four teams in the competition, the half mile, mile, two mile and four mile quartets being slated for the trip if they show a requisite amount of ability. Hamilton is doubtful about the two milers however for that race is scheduled to come off soon before the blue ribbon four mile event which Hamilton wants to use as a tryout to see if his men are good enough to send to the Penn Relays at Philadelphia the subsequent Saturday. "We have a great four mile team," said William Oliver yesterday, "and I want to send them out for all they are worth at the Drake Games to satisfy myself that they really have the goods for the classic Eastern competition. If they go East they will have to place and it takes a fast bunch to stand up after a trip like that." The one-mile relay at the lowa metropolis is almost the first thing on the program and Rodkey as well as Captain Edwards could recuperate to run a fast mile, according to Hamilton. This would also give the Jayhawkers another chance to quartet of Tiger indoorometers who snatched the annual indoor meet from the jaws of the Jayhwak monster. An Expanding Vocation that merits the investigation of the high school student who is attracted towards science is that of Chemical Engineering The demand for experts in this line is as keen as the desire of manufacturers for better processes and for the utilization of by-products. The pecuniary rewards include both large salaries and liberal percentages of the saving which the chemist brings about. The course in the University is complete, and after the necessary practical experience and work in research, leads to the degree of chemical engineer. Address Vocation Editor UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas b>0 Lawrence, Kansas The prospective four milers worked out in Lawrence during the Easter vacation, none being willing to give another a decided advantage by a few days absence. On one of these days, the coach staged a time which some of them were recorded. "Junk! Herrriott negotiated the 8urlings in 4:35 flat without breaking his long ambling stride. Archie Grady put a little more behind it all and succeeded in forcing himself up that they jumped at 4:35:4. That it off, young Sproull showed that all the athletic ability in the family was not centered in Lefty by reeling off the distance in 4:38. "There is room for some good sprinters on the half mile relay team," said Hamilton, "and I think we ought to be able to develop a team which will hold its own with any of these Missouri Valley teams. None of them have shown exceptional class this far." Each man in this competition runs 220 yards. The veteran Hilton will undoubtedly be the stellar performer but Crum can also step the furlong off in rapid time. He, with men, will never hear the ability of another can be unearthed, the team which downs the Jayhawkers will have to amble. WANT TO PLAY BALL.? German Football Union Calls Members Not to Participate BOYCOTT OLYMPIC GAMES The withdrawal of one of the Hash House League team leaves a vacancy which the management wishes to fill. Added staff being due to enter, may be ready to preside at the Compression at the Daily Kansan office as soon as possible. From the Boston Transcript. Fusball-band, the leading football league in Germany, in a statement just published throughout the empire, opposes the participation by German football players. The empire was the great contempt was to be staged in the German stadium. The statement says: "The directors of the Deutsche Fussballbund are of the opinion that the time and energy of all Germans would be worth a grave times to more important aims. Team managers who have not yet fled a list of players with the Commission should attend to the matter at once. "The directors of the Fussballball therefore expect from its members that they will not participate in that contest." --- BADGE HAS HISTORY "The Does" Scarlet Circle Traced to American Revolution From the Springfield Republican, London—The Duke of Cornwall, Light Infantry Company, badges of buffalo and backpack with scarlet cloth. The little splash of red is one of the most highly treasured honors of "the Docs." The tiny circle is all that remains of the scarlet feathers which the preceding section describes. For the Forty-sixth Regiment of Foot brought back after the American war of independence. The story has often been related and testifies to the reputation which the regiment secured from the enemy. With five other corps forming a light bar, the Forty-seventh regiment feathers red so that the Americans might know "The Light Bobs," to whom they had promised "no quarter." Prof. Charles A. Shull of the department of botany will go to the University of Chicago this summer for his doctor of philosophy degree. Ladies' Tailoring Mrs. Morgan up to date dressmaking and ladies' tailoring. Also party dresses. Prices very reasonable. 1321 Tennessee. Phone 1161 W. 825-780-2900. Order acreated distilled water from MeNish. Phones 192—Adv. Creighton Says: The Junior Prom this year will be the best ever, and if you haven't made arrangements to go, you are going to miss the season's best party. TUXEDO MAN Dress Suits— Dress Accessories— For the season's best party. We've made extra preparations to take care of your dress wants. All the new ideas in evening wear are here ready for your inspection. Better come in tomorrow and fix yourself up a little. Johnson & Carl Benjamin Dress Suits FLOWERS FOR THE PROM FLOWERS FOR THE FLOVER ORders should be placed early. Don't wait until the last day. Give the Florist a chance to get them out on time. ass. THE FLOWER SHOP Phones 621 Hash House League Schedule DIVISION I. | | Co-op | Ulrich | Martin | Neal | Hayes | Willis | Long | K K | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Co-op | | Sat A 10 Hw-2 | Sat A 17 N1-4 | Sat A 24 N1-10:30 | Sat M 1 He-10:30 | Sat M 8 Hw-2 | Sat M 15 N2-8:30 | Sat M 22 N1-10:30 | | Ulrich | Sat A 10 Hw-2 | | Sat A 24 He-4 | Aat A 17 N2-4 | Sat M 8 N2-10:30 | Sat M 1 N2- 8:30 | Sat M 22 He-10:30 | Sat M 15 He-2 | | Martin | Sat A 17 N1-4 | Sat A 24 He-4 | | Sat A 10 He-8:30 | Sat M 22 N2-2 | Sat M 15 Hw-2 | Sat M 8 Hw-10:30 | Sat M 1 N2-4 | | Neal | Sat A 24 N1-10:30 | Sat A 17 N2-4 | Sat A 10 He-8:30 | | Sat M 15 Hw-4 | Sat M 22 He-2 | Sat M 1 N1-4 | Sat M 8 N1-2 | | Hayes | Sat M 1 He-10:30 | Sat M 8 N2-10:30 | Sat M 22 N2-2 | Sat M 15 Hw-4 | | Sat A 10 N1-4 | Sat A 17 Hw-2 | Sat A 24 Hw-10:30 | | Willis | Sat M 8 Hw-2 | Sat M 1 N2-8:30 | Sat M 15 Hw-2 | Sat M 22 Hw-2 | Sat A 10 N1-4 | | Sat A 24 Hw-2 | Sat A 17 Hw-10:30 | | Long | Sat M 15 N2-8:30 | Sat M 22 He-10:30 | Sat M 1 N1-4 | Sat A 17 Hw-2 | Sat A 24 Hw-2 | | | Sat A 10 N2-2 | | K K | Sat M 22 N1-10:30 | Sat M 15 He-2 | Sat M 1 N2-4 | Sat M 8 N1-2 | Sat A 24 Hw-10:30 | Sat A 17 Hw-10:30 | Sat A 6 N2-2 | | DIVISION II. | | Daniels | Y. M. | Dad's | Custer | 1328 O. | Stevenson | Franklin | Lee's | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Daniels | | Fri A 9 N2-4 | Sat A 17 He-10:30 | Sat A 24 He-2 | Sat M 1 Hw-8:30 | Sat M 8 Hw-4:30 | Sat M 15 He-10:30 | Sat M 22 He-4 | | Y. M. | Fri A 9 N2-4 | | Sat A 24 N2-8:30 | Sat A 17 He-10:30 | Sat M 8 N2-4 | Sat M 1 N1-2 | Sat M 22 Hw-10:30 | Sat M 15 N1-10:30 | | Dad's | Sat A 17 He-10:30 | Sat A 24 N2-8:30 | | Sat A 10 He-2 | Sat M 22 Hw-4 | Sat M 15 N2-10:30 | Sat M 8 Hw-8:30 | Sat M 1 N2-2 | | Custer | Sat A 24 He-2 | Sat A 17 He-10:30 | Sat A 10 He-2 | | Sat M 15 N1-8:30 | Sat M 22 N1-4 | Sat M 1 N2-10:30 | Sat M 8 Hw-10:30 | | 1328 O. | Sat M 1 Hw-8:30 | Sat M 8 N2-4 | Sat M 22 Hw-4 | Sat M 15 N1-8:30 | | Sat A 10 He-4 | Sat A 17 Hw-4 | Sat A 24 N2-10:30 | | Stevenson | Sat M 8 Hw-4 | Sat M 1 N1-2 | Sat M 15 N2-10:30 | Sat M 22 N1-4 | Sat A 10 He-4 | | Sat A 24 Hw-2 | Sat A 17 N2-20 | | Franklin | Sat M 15 He-10:30 | Sat M 22 Hw-10:30 | Sat M 8 Hw-8:30 | Sat M 1 N2-10:30 | Sat A 17 Hw-4 | Sat A 24 Hw-2 | | Sat A 10 Hw-2 | | Lee's | Sat M 22 He-4 | Sat M 15 N1-10:30 | Sat M 1 N2-2 | Sat M 8 Hw-10:30 | Sat A 24 N2-10:30 | Sat A 17 N2-2 | Sat A 10 Hw-2 | | DIVISION III. | Hope | Midway | College Campus | D. Co-op | Los Amigos | North College | Track Training | Moody | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Hope | Fri A 9 N 1-4 | Sat A 17 He-8:30 | Sat A 24 N2-2 | Sat M 1 Hw-4 | Sat M 8 N1-10:30 | Sat M 15 Hw-8:30 | Fri M 21 N2-4 | | Midway | Fri A 9 N1-4 | | Sat A 24 He-8:30 | Sat M 1 Hw-4 | Sat M 1 Hw-2 | Sat M 22 He-2 | Sat M 15 Hw-10:30 | | College Campus | Sat A 17 He-8:30 | Sat A 24 He-8:30 | | Sat A 10 N1-2 | Sat M 22 N2-10:30 | Sat M 15 Hw-4 | Sat M 8 N2-2 | Sat M 1 He-2 | | D. Co-op | Sat A 24 N2-2 | Sat A 17 He-2 | Sat A 10 N1-2 | | Sat M 15 Hw-8:30 | Fri M 21 N1-4 | Sat M 1 Hw-10:30 | Sat M 8 Hw-8:30 | | Los Amigos | Sat M 1 Hw-4 | Sat M 8 He-4 | Sat M 22 N2-10:30 | Sat M 15 Hw-8:30 | | Sat A 10 N2-8:30 | Sat A 17 N2-1 | Sat A 24 N1-2 | | North College | Sat M 8 N1-10:30 | Sat M 1 Hw-2 | Sat M 15 Hw-4 | Fri M 22 N1-4 | Sat A 10 N2-8:30 | | Sat A 24 Hw-10:30 | Sat A 17 Hw-4 | | Track Training | Sat M 15 Hw-8:30 | Sat M 22 He-2 | Sat M 8 N2-2 | Sat M 1 Hw-10:30 | Sat A 17 N2-2 | Sat A 24 Hw-10:30 | | Sat A 10 Hw-4 | | Moody | Fri M 21 N2-4 | Sat M 15 Hw-10:30 | Sat M 1 He-2 | Sat M 8 Hw-8:30 | Sat A 24 N1-2 | Sat A 17 Hw-4 | Sat A 10 Hw-4 | | UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII. NUMBER 126 IS COLLEGE TO HAVE ITS HOLIDAY LIKE OTHERS? Waits on Faculty While Laws and Engineers Celebrate With Vacation MAKING ARRANGEMENTS NOW Whether a holiday will be allowed for the College to hold its first real College Day is to be decided by the University Senate. The plans for the day's program have been hanging fire since the first of the year, until announcement is made that the holiday will be granted. Ogden Jones Plans Baseball Game Between Students and Faculty and Picnic Lunch The arrangements for the day's entertainment, which have been worked out by Ogden Jones, president of the College, are still in the process. Mr. Jones should in rapid order, as soon as final decision is given by the faculty. Plan All Day Picnic An all-day picnic affair is the idea, with a baseball game between faculty and undergraduates in the morning. Either at noon or in the evening, a big basket dinner will form one of the big features of the day. A dance in the evening will conclude the celebration. Numerous inquiries that have been made from reasonable indications that a lively interest is being taken in the question as to whether the Senate will allow a cessation from the daily grind. Only the consent of the governing body remains to make it a success. The failure of the holiday to be granted last year was due to the lack of interest on the part of the state and themselves defeated the proposition. NEW Y. W. HOME NEXT YEAR Plan to Move in Apartment House Now Being Built The University, Y. W. C. A. will have a new home next year. In the apartment house now being erected at the corner of Oread Avenue and Twelfth street they will occupy a suite of rooms where parties and receptions may be held. A comfortable reading room will be fitted up and rooms for the use of guests will be provided. Miss Anne Gittins, the secretary of the Y. W. C. A., will have her office in the apartment. The association had planned to have a house where women students might room, but that idea was given up. As usual, the committee approved list of rooming house for girls, but will furnish no rooms in their own apartment. LAWS HONOR UNCLE JIMMY Hold Banquet in Honor of Dean Green's Birthday One hundred and ten students will assemble at the Eldridge House tonight to do honor to Uncle Jimmy Green, dean of the School of Law. The banquet will begin at 8 o'clock. A three-piece string orchestra, with Sweede Wilson as the featured performer, furnish music during the courses. Following the banquet, Judge Sue Porter, of the supreme court; Judge Charles W. Smith, executive and pardon clerk to Governor Capper; and the Hon. Robert W. Blair, general attorney for the Union Pacific railway, will speak. Representatives of the classes in the school of Law are also slated for show talks Uncle Jimmy, in whose honor the judge is be held, will be called upon for a speech. It may not be on the program—but the Laws will insist on hearing from the man they honor. No classes will be held in the School of Law tomorrow. MISS WHITE GOES TO NORMAL NOT AG. SCHOOL The Daily Kansan erred in its story last night to the effect that Miss Marion B. White had been elected dean of women at the Michigan State Normal school, and that she has been elected at the Michigan State Normal school. Also the initials of Prof. W. H. Johnson, high school visitor, were made S. J. Johnson confining him with authority. W. H. Johnson, of the department of English. Gets Government Job W. C. Magathan has resigned his position in the office of Prof. E. H. S. Bailey and will leave immediately for the Philippine Islands where he will become associated with the United States. He passed the examination last spring. He will remain abroad for two years. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, THURSDAY AFTERNOON. APRIL 8, 1915. "SEINE EINZIGE TOCHTER" German Play Will be Presented Sat urday in Green Hall A full house is prophesied for "Seine Einzige Tochter," the German play to be presented by the Deutsche Verein in the basement of the Bayerischen Museum, ending April 10. The preparations for the production are nearly completed and the cast is practicing in the afternoons under the direction of W. Weikart-Haime Margarete Hochkopf instructors in the department of German. Elaborate costumes have been secured for the cast of "His Only Daughter," and special setting will be arranged for on the Green Hall stage, open at 10 a.m. o'clock and the performance will begin at 8:15 o'clock. Following is the cast: Reinsberg - George Berg. Pauline - Charlotte Jagger. Karl - Karl Noll. Bertha - Ruth Smith. Rudolph v. Wendt h. H. W. Paul. Mathilde - Martha Piotrowski. Kamila - Elsa Wilhelmi. Leopoldine - Helen Riddle. Herman Dillberg - Alfred Brauer. Hermann d. der Weise - Osoa Major. PHI BETA PI TAKES LEAD Friedrich—L. A. Winsor, Medics Win in Opening of Inter-Fra- ternity League In the first game of the Inter- Fraternity league schedule, Phi Beta Pi trounced Sigma Phi Sigma 7 to 5. The game was well played and was a pitcher's battle between Poirier and "Doc" Miner, the latter winning out after a batting rally by his teammates. Hamilton Field was the scene of the conflict and Russ Cowgill was the "referee." The Sigma Phis got up after the knock-out and swore revenge at t' next meeting of the teams. Pi Uplison and Alpha Chi Sigma will battle for the chance to tie with the Medics for the lead today at 4 o'clock at the same field. The women of the School of Fine Arts are voting on the proposed amendments to the W. S. G. A. constitution today in North College. The number of persons who have voted is more than 100 less than the number required to pass the amendments. WOMEN ARE VOTING ON AMENDMENTS TODAY If the women who vote at North College today are insufficient to satisfy the requirement the belleding continue in Fraser Hall tomorrow. Maurice K. Dàbiry, freshman College last night for his home, in Washington. PICTURE STOLEN FROM UNIVERSITY NOT FOUND No Information Yet Concerning Painting Taken From Art Collection No clue has been discovered to the disappearance of the water color picture from the Administration Building. The loss was discovered by A. Griffith after his return from a university's absence from the University. Professor Griffith does not know when the picture was stolen. Neither does he know why it was taken. The picture, a water color by Walter Schultz, is in Alexander Street. It was named "The Walled Town of Buo-Suada." "It was one of the best drawings in the collection at the University," said Professor Griffith this morning, "and the person who took it evidently was a good judge of art. However, he was a man of integrity and thief, he would doubtless have taken other valuable pictures. Probably someone took a fancy to it." Professor Griffith has offered a reward of $10 for information leading to the recovery of the picture. If it is not claimed, he will have no claim. The loss as the collection is loaned to him for exhibition at the University. The picture was torn out of its frame, which was hidden behind a door. Two fasteners which held the frame in place were found on the floor beneath the place where the picture was hung. The sophomore memorial committee will meet Thursday evening at 8 o'clock, Fraser Hall, Room 118. The class anticipates a large memorial fund as forty dollars has been collected already this year and no fund was carried over from last year. Oscar Brownlee, a graduate student, will collect 28 cents from every member of the class before the year is over. SOPHOMORE MEMORIAL FUND GROWING FAST No plans have been made for the purchase of the memorial, as a growing fund is expected which is impossible to estimate at present. The Pan-Hellenic baseball game scheduled for yesterday between Kappa Sigma and Beta Theta Pi has been postponed until next week. Game Postponed Typhoid inoculation will be given tomorrow afternoon from 1:30 to 5:30 o'clock in the basement of the Dyche Museum Building. Inoculate Tomorrow Arranging Tickets and Dates in Fraser; Making Jap Garden of Gym THESE ARE BUSY DAYS FOR PROM PROMOTERS Concerned with making the final arrangements for the Junior Prom, the busiest men in school today were the chaps behind the ticket desk in Fraser Hall and the squad of twelve decorators working frantically in Robinson Gymnasium. It was the task of the ticket men to see that everyone was dated up properly and that there is no confusion in regard to where they are wrestling with the equally important problem of converting Robinson Gymnasium into a reproduction of a Japanese flower garden. According to a statement made this morning by Alex Creighton, co-manager of the Prom, over six hundred people will attend. This includes almost a hundred faculty members, perhaps fifty alumni, and some four hundred and fifty students. A long desk is needed for each desk this morning patiently waiting for a chance to secure the little pink and blue cards of admission. Over in the Gym, Tony James, chairman of the decoration committee, stood in the center of the immense playing floor and shaded directions to a squad of eleven workmen, who were building huge crates of decorations imported from Japan City especially for the Prom. Japanese lanterns and umbrellas scattered about combined to produce an effect of chaos; but by this time tomorrow order will reign, and the gaudily colored papers will have assumed their places in the decorative scheme. This morning, however, Gym was overloaded with masses of bamboo pergolas, green dragons, and flowers and fans. In preparation for the dance, the Gym floor has undergone repairs and will be in better condition tomorrow night than ever before. Those people who have experienced difficulty in dancing upon its rough surface will be pleasantly surprised when they discover how smooth it is. WINFIELD MINISTER IN MORNING PRAYERS NEXT Prof. U, G. Mitchell's subject for his chapel talk tomorrow morning is to be "The Basis of Fellowship." It will conform with the general subject for the week which is "Tendencies of Present Day Christianity." Rev. William B. Lampe, of the First Fresheryian church in Winfield, will have charge of morning prayers next week. Named for Uncle Jimmy THE MUSEUM OF THE UNION PRESIDENTS K. U. HAS ONE MORE MOVIE BUG NOW Miss Lynn Yields to Real Shows Miss Lynn Yields to Reel Shows Discovered: A woman who has just seen a movie for the first time is overcome with excitement. Miss Margaret Lynn of the department of English and noted among Kansas authors attended her first motion picture show last week. Perhaps it is unpolitical to say her name in this context, but that implies that there are to be other attendances. But you never can tell. The bug is most tenacious and loses its hold only after a great struggle. Prof. Goldwin Goldsmith had the permission Miss Lynn and he says that she weighed properly pressed. GRADING HAMILTON FIELD FOR BASEBALL DIAMOND Grading on Hamilton Field the last three days is rapidly turning it into a regulation size baseball diamond. The ditch just west of the field and the low ground between it and McCook are being cleared and leveled off. Tile arrived this morning for the ditch and the task will probably be completed by tomorrow noon according to W. O. Hamilton. This improvement will permit the backstep to be moved west fifty or sixty feet and the ground south of the field is being leveled and the outfield of the new diamond will extend fifty or sixty feet south of the old boundary, making the field considerably larger. Anent the Point System That the students really want to vote on the point system is shown by the following form from a number submitted: W. H. Dodds: "If the students want to decide on the point system they should be allowed to do so." Hal Coffman: "By all means, let the students have an expression on the point system by it directly to them or by the appointment of a committee to discuss it with the student and to report it to the Student Council." Lefty Sproul: "I do not see what business the Student Council has in putting the point system off on the ballot, and allowing them to vote on the proposition." E. G. Kaufman: "The adoption of the point system would be a matter for the company." Bill Weaver: "In my opinion the paint system is of enough importance to warrant a review." G. M. Lamar: "I question very much whether the Student Council has the power to adopt the point system without a referendum vote of the men students of the University." Herbert Howland: "The point Herbert Howland: "The point system should be put before the stu- Owen W. Maloney: "it is the right of the student body to take the point system." Howard Adams: "The student body has the right to say whether they want to adopt the point system and could be voted on by the student body." R. R. Radar: "The students should be a vote on the point system before a game." Allen Sterling: "The point system is a fine thing, and it is such an important part of the body brought before the whole body of the men students of the University." J. L. Sellers: "If the point system is brought before the students, they will take more interest in it, and the outcome will be more satisfice E. F. Schooley: "The Student Council has not showed itself to be competent to pass on anything as the adoption of the point system." TOPEKA GAME CALLED OFF TOUFLER GAME CALED OFF Valley Rule Forbids Play Profes sional Teams—Trying Wm. Jewell The two games which were scheduled for the K. U., baseball nine with the Topeka League team Monday and Tuesday have been called off because of a conflicting rule of the Missouri Valley Conference, that prohibits any games with a player reached this morning when Coach Gay Lowman, of the Kansas State Agricultural College, entered a protest. This is not a new ruling but one that has never been strictly observed by the members of the conference. Coach Hamilton immediately called off the game upon hearing of the prosecution and reminded the William Jewell team here for the opening of the season Monday. If Coach Hamilton is unable to get another game scheduled for that date the opening of this year's season will be Thursday April 15, when the Chinese team comes for two games on a tour of the States. HASH HOUSE LEAGUERS PLAY BALL TOMORROW Opening Games of Season to be Fought Out This. Week End FANS WILL BE THERE ALSO Every Live Boarding House Rooter is coming Out to Work for His Team Tomorrow and Saturday it has been advisable to change the place of playing the two games scheduled for tomorrow as follows: Daniels vs. Hamilton to Hamilton east, at 4; Hope Midway, to Hamilton west, at 4. Additional announcements of importance will appear in this column tomorrow evening, rel. to the Kid's games. Watch for them. For a month several hundred men at the University have been planning for the Hash House League season. They have brought out old worn out mites, saved from their grade school days and practiced daily. Some have new, up-to-date gloves, but most of the men will go out to play with equipment more cherished than mites. But that enthusiasm from playing with all their enthusiasm. Some will muff, and "pull bones," and catch "butterfingered" and "fan-out," but it'll be real—fun real. And those who are not fortunate enough to "make the team" will be on the coaching lines and they'll laugh when the other side muffs the ball and they'll cheer when their players swat a two-bagger. This Week's Games Two games will be played tomorrow: Daniels vs. Y. M. C. A. at 4 on Hamilton east; Hope vs. Midway at 4 on Hamilton west. On Saturday the following games will be played: Co-op vs. Ulrich, Hamilton west, at 2; Martin vs. Neal, Hamilton east, at 8:30; Hamilton west, at 12; Wesley vs. K. K. North, at 2; at Dad's Club vs. Custer, Hamilton east, at 2; at 1328. O. S. Stevenson, Hamilton east, at 4; Franklin vs. Lee's, Hamilton west, at 2; College Campus vs. Dunkin Cooper, North College, North 2, at 8:30; Track Training Table vs. Moody, Hamilton west, at 4. At the meeting of team representatives last week a schedule was adopted, which appears elsewhere in the paper. Abbreviations like "He" and "He for the east diamond on Hamilton Field, just south of McCook; 'H"w for the west diamond on the same field; "N"1 for the east diamond on the field north of McCook; and "N"2 for the field south of McCook. The figure in the lower right hand corner of each square is the hour set for the game. The League adopted an official ball, securing reduced rates by ordering in large quantities. One ball will be available for each game, the winning team being allowed to keep it. Minor alterations have been made in the rules, requiring any baseball K man, Varsity player, or professional to play an outfield position; and imposing a penalty of forfeiture of games on any club team. The corrected rule is any ballplayer in order to induce him to play. The corrected rules are printed below. Additional Hash House League teams are: The Neal Club. 17 W. 14th: Swatek, Crow, Weiters, Martin, Crowley, Steinhauder, Mella, Reed, Thele, Merrill, Nystrom, Yokum. Lam Amigiro; Parker, Kemper, touches the ball. Busenkard, Vaughn, Jones, O'Bryan, Swartz, Grecion, Beal, Ritter, Ferguson, Moss. K. K., 1225 Oread Ave, 2418 B: C. Richter, T. Richter, Davidson, Wocknitz, Pattie, Sullivan, Robins, Pattie, Pattie, Monahan, Monahan, Appel, Wentworth. runakin Co-op Club, 1304 Masa, St. Street, court O, Caraud, Shelly, leader, Maeta, Spencer, M. Smith, Smith, Cherley, Johnson, Hilton, Zine Kenney Club, 1038 Tennessee: Hugh Brown, Franklin Miller, Harry Curtman, Geo. Ball, Art Thomas, Geo. Pauly, Orin Ruth; Victor Hunt, outside; Winton Smith; T. Newman; Carl T. Raer, outside; Geo. Boltzis, V. T. Newton, manager, B. 1277J, 1131 Tennessee street. Schweger to Speak at Y. M. Prof. Raymond A. Schweger will be billed as guest speaker. Regular Sunday afternoon meeting of the Y. M. C. A. in Myers Hall. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas IMMOTIONAL STAFF John M. Henry...Editor-in-Chief Raymond Clapper...Managing Editor Helen Hayes...Associate Editor William Cady...Exchange Editor BUSINESS STAFF J. W. Burrell Manager C. S. Sturart Advertising Mgr REPORTEIRIAL SCHOOL Leon James, Rogers Lion James, Rogers Gilbert Clayton, John M. Gleisner Anger, J. M. Miller Charles Steele Elmar Arndt Carolyn Duffel Brittland Brudel Louia Puckett Harry Morgan Glendon Athletic Alfredson Frist Bruce Rhea Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office 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. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate at Kansas as a student to further or to further than merely printing the news by standing up and playing no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to play more serious problems to wiser heads, in all, to satisfy the students of the University. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Fair Play and Accuracy Buren Prof. H. T. Hill...Faculty Member Jon Joseph...Student Member John Fairly...Secretary If you find a mistake in statement or impression in any of the columns of the Daily Kansas office, he will instruct you as to further procedure. THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 1915. JUST PICTURES Have you seen the exhibition of drawings by American illustrators over in the Administration Building? No? Well, you have missed something, and it behooves you to repair the omission at once if not before. The art of such men as Charles Dana Gibson, James Montgomery F'agg, F. Fox, and Thomas Fogarty, to mention a few at random, is of a sort that doesn't have to be painfully studied and consciously labored over to be understood and appreciated. It is popular art, of the kind that the common or garden variety of citizen enjoy. Nor does the word popular have any depreciatory sense in this connection. Mendelshon's Spring Song and Dovorak's Humoresque, and Rubenstein's Melody in F are popular in exactly the same way, and nobody would say that they aren't genuine good music. So it is with the work being exhibited on the Hill this week. It is perfectly good art - say the people who know—and at the same time it is the stuff that we see all the time in our favorite magazines and Sunday papers. The collection includes illustrations, decorations, story headings, cartoons of all varieties, and even two examples of the doings of the beloved Intellectual Pup. Wash drawings, pen and ink, charcoal, and an occasional etching, are shown. Whatever your favorite kind of art may be, you will find it there. If you like to laugh, if you like more serious stuff, such as war cartoons, if you prefer fanciful or poetical conceptions to either of these, you have only to look around to see them. In each class are to be found one or two drawings worth a trip across the campus if there weren't another picture in the building. If you think that statement is exaggeration, go and see for yourself. RIDICULOUS Now comes the news that the adoption of the point system was made by a ruling of the Student Council, and will not be put to the students for vote as a constitutional amendment. Presumably the Council is acting on the premise that since it is elected from the student body it has the power to adopt measures affecting the students without reference to the student body in election. But the point system is of so broad effect, and sentiment on it is so divided that the eighteen members of the Student Council are not capable of learning what the will of the student body is. For this reason alone a vote should be given But then there is a question of the Council's authority to adopt a measure which would throw students out of positions, without the students' consent, or the consent of the organization with which the students are connected. It is ridiculous that students holding positions should be expected to give them up because of a ruling of the Student Council, in which they had no voice, places a number and limit of points on them. A case of such character was tested last year when the Student Council attempted to declare John Madden out of the office of editor of the Kansan. It couldn't do it. And likewise, the Council this year cannot put a man out of office though it be by the point system. In all sense of justice and legality the point system should be submitted to the students for vote. The W, S, G. A. has taken this stand and is right. The Men's Student Council should do likewise. Lawrence still holds her reputation of the most beautiful college campus, the scene of the bloodiest work of the border ruffians, and the muddiest city water. FACULTY IN ROBES Commencement, when the students that have worked for four years in the school, preparing for the fight for supremacy in the world, say, "It is sufficient," go from the stage of apprenticeship to that of master, and step forth to throw their strength with the forces of good, should by the very nature of things be a solemn and impressive occasion. Anything that would add to the impressiveness and solemnity should be welcomed by those in charge of the ceremonies. This dignity is added to the occasion in many schools by the faculty wearing caps and gowns. The black robe and an upper give an effect to the economies that cannot be apper- mated by other girls. A professor in somber black is more expressive of education than one in street clothes. Commencement at its weakest is a momentous occasion, and if caps and gowns on the faculty can enhance the consequence, caps and gowns should be worn. The senior class this year could well set this precedent at the school. The use of the robes this year would mean their use hereafter, and the further consequence of commencement. How about it, seniors? There is all reason why an exchange of plays should be made with Iowa and Nebraska. And practically none why it should not. If an amendment were to be added to the constitution of the United States, Congress would not assume the power of passing this amendment without consulting the people would be most affected by the change. Editor Kansan: Student Opinion By what right, may I ask, does the Men's Student Government pass a sweeping constitutional reform over the heads of the men in the Unitarian Universalist group, giving them some opportunity of voicing their approval or disapproval? It was rumored on the Hill yesterday that the white dots showing down in the Jakarta Valley were vicious to customers, the victims of the "Man-Eating Hos." I have my own views on the point system; I feel that I should have the chance to express these convictions and listen to the opinions of others. At least the baseball correspondent are住 down by the box scores [1] "This man who writes Second Thoughts," says a certain member of our faculty, "ought to think three times and then keep still." Chasing the Glooms W. H. Ynot Question in the Columbia State: "Is there any danger of contagion from cancer of the breast by kissing a woman who has it?" Tis a wise man who will not be miss-guided. Flames From the Bush MONT SOPHIE ANSWERS My Beloved Nices—Marie, Betty AUNT SOPHIE ANSWERS The time has come when I feel that I must write to you dear people and express my appreciation for all your many letters and expressions of love and sympathy. I am an old woman, dear girls, and death is starting me in the face. I have been able to be abruptly get down to that wonderful University of yours and see if it is really as bad as all you have painted it. But alas, I can not. For weeks my daughter Prissy has had to read your letters outloud to me—I could not use my eyes or head. But I en- However, I take my pen in my withered hand to wish you all much luck in life and no further misfortunes than you have experienced by men tramping on your slippers or keeping you up later than you like or girls listening to you talk to us when you get to be as old as I will realize how trivial after all are your little troubles and evautions. But to you, Marie, I leave a pair of black party slippers—which were too big for me, and I never wore them. But these are guaranteed not to go off the floor, politish their shoes and step on your feet. I also leave you my eternal chip—which I have carried around on my shoulder for years. I really believe you need it—you are so peaceful and timid that you let it go on your Mimi's hip, which is to be worn on the right which is quite large! Before I die, dear children of my favorite brother, I want to bequeath to you certain possessions of mine. It is sad but true that I have no worldly possessions to bestow upon you. As you know my marrion for money did not occur I expected, I have little to leave you. To you, Betty, I bequeath my former husband's Chigirma Mi pin. I have no wish to be buried with it, for I'll get my Cross on the other side. I want her to be in your house-party as you expected, this might alleviate your disappointment. I also leave to you as a minor gift my Gentile Sarcasm. You need it sorely, as you are so much at a loss. I still think talking to folks. Use this well, Betty. Patsey, I leave to you a private telephone booth, with sound-proof walls, that you may enjoy your lengthy conversations without being annoyed by the chatter and remarks of those about you. And now I say fare well! I hope that I shall meet you on the other side. Do your best to be as oratory as possible, and we shall enjoy the Tropics together. Yours till death, Aunt, Sophie. Speaking the Kansas Language CLEAN LIVING WINS Clean living won a Wiley over dissipation on Monday. It is winning every day. The world's champion fell in a pugilistic encounter. He had become too perosperous. He livelil the life of ease and idleness. He indulged his desires, because he was too riotous the fiasco passed the fifteenth round dissipation began to tell. Johnson, the better fighter of the two in ring generalship, showed the effect of riotous living and weakened. Willard, raised on the Kansas prairies, was strong, and the result was evil. The biggest discrepancy on earth is that between the amount of money a woman spends on her clothes and on her body, she has more on her body—Rosleyville Reporter. It was a royal contest. Dissipation fought with all the skill it possessed, but clean living was victorious. It always is—Atchison Champion. Now don't kick, you've been want ing this kind of weather for three months. TO THE CONTENDERS Play ball's the cry, the fight's begun. Now comes the mighty test; To make our rivals quit or run Nix on the alibi.—Leslie's. A Mexican officer abducted a Vas tador in Mexico. Now for the pacifi- cation of Mexico. You've got to do your best. Only the vince wears the crown, The loser meets with jest or frown. Excuses simply won't go down, We suppose that before long some paper will be running a picture of the sun. "My dear," said the proud father, "I cannot understand your objection to young Pradely as a suitor for me. I cannot understand that he is a model young man." "There is no question about his being a model," replied the bewitching beauty, but father, dear, the man he was in is a 1913 model—Exxt—Skoglund. RELATES EARLY EXPERIMENTS Galileo's Book Shows How Physic Demonstrations Were Carried On From the Chicago Tribune. Physicists and astronomers will be interested in Galileo interesting, because it treats of all phases of motion or change of position, making, as Galileo himself says, "a very new science dealing with a very ancient subject." With neither nor chronoscopie, Galileo proceeds in physics with gravity, at first estimating deviations no greater than "one-tenth of a pulse-beat"; and later, "For the measurement of time we employed a large vessel of water placed in an oil-filled tank. This vessel was soldered a pipe of small diameter giving a thin jet of water, which we collected in a small glass during the time of each descent, whether for the whole length of the vessel or only for the water thus collected was weighed, after each descent, on a very accurate balance; the differences and ratios of these weights gave us the differences and ratios of times, and this with such accuracy that, although the distances and times were not comparable, there was no appreciable discrepancy in the results." Here it is that propositions underlying Newton's laws of motion were first developed, and geometric demonstrations given which provided the foundation of mathematics. Particularly is the strength of materials insisted on with regard to mechanics and architecture, as well as engineering. Prevaient opinion, *Physicists and astronomers will be interested in Galileo interesting, because it treats of all phases of motion or change of position, making, as Galileo himself says, "a very new science dealing with a very ancient subject." With neither nor chronoscopie, Galileo proceeds in physics with gravity, at first estimating deviations no greater than "one-tenth of a pulse-beat"; and later, "For the measurement of time we employed a large vessel of water placed in an oil-filled tank. This vessel was soldered a pipe of small diameter giving a thin jet of water, which we collected in a small glass during the time of each descent, whether for the whole length of the vessel or only for the water thus collected was weighed, after each descent, on a very accurate balance; the differences and ratios of these weights gave us the differences and ratios of times, and this with such accuracy that, although the distances and times were not comparable, there was no appreciable discrepancy in the results." Here it is that propositions underlying Newton's laws of motion were first developed, and geometric demonstrations given which provided the foundation of mathematics. Particularly is the strength of materials insisted on with regard to mechanics and architecture, as well as engineering. Prevaient opinion, PROTSCH "The Tailor" SPRING SUITING Autographic Kodaks $11 to $60 Complete Special Attachments $2.50 to $3.50 Evans Drug Co. Successors to Raymonds seemingly right, is often cited; and`monished`, "You see how readily one thereapon Galileo proceeds to point falls into error, and what caution and out that it is absolutely wrong, and circumspection are required to avoid this." `Their` is often used as a preposition to introduce why. Simplicity is ever on hand conversation are "freely chosen and with the erroneous statement, and® not forced on us, a matter vastly diffen when he gets into a tight place, Sal'ferent from dealing with dead books which give rise to many doubts but reappear in the guise of a "good remove none" angel?" to help him through. Then Send the Daily Kansan home There's Zip to it, Boys! HERE'S the yell master of them all—the campus favorite with college colors in stripes across the breast and sleeves. There never was a more attractive design—never a better made, a better styled, or a better wearing shaker sweater. It's a Aldh "Bradley" KNIT WEAR -ideal for all 'round service—a big luxurious sweater that will stand four years and more of "roughhousing" on the campus. If your dealer doesn't sell Bradley Sweaters, America's best Shakers, Jumbos, Jerseys, and the only genuine naviades, write us for the names of dealers who—it will pay you. BRADLEY KNITTING CO., Delavan, Wisconsin MAR MAIN Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx IT'S very easy to point out the direct line of march you should follow to arrive at the best clothes in town. Just walk right along until you come to this store, and ask to be shown Hart Schaffner & Mark new spring models in suits and overcoats for men and young men. The Varsity models are especially good: see model Fifty Five for something extra snappy; at $25 we'll see that you get extreme value. PECKHAM'S The home of Hart Schaffner and Marx clothes UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN COUNCIL TRIES AGAIN TO CLEAR UNION DEBT Plans Dance at Woodland Park in Last Effort to Pay Off Money In a last big attempt to clear up the indebentness incurred by the late Student Union, the Men's Student Council will give a dance, probably at the pavilion in Woodland Park on Friday nights. Final arrangements have not yet been made—in fact, the whole plan has just been devised; but Vie Bottomly, president of the Council, says it is highly probable that K students will trip the Fantastic Food and to clear up the remaining debt. According to Bottomly, between sixty and seventy dollars yet remains to be raised. Another dance, he thinks, would produce the necessary financial support in return to the matter will be made at the Council's next meeting. In the meantime—just to be safe, y'know, the fussers will do well to call Her up and get the little red date book busy. Bottom says. List of Players Following are the names of players on several of the teams. Managers are required to place a list in the hands of the chairman of the Commission, and those who have agreed are needed to attend to the matter at once. Y. M. house, 941 ind. IBlanceo Thomann, Kingsbrough, Ireland Payne, Sandraard, Austin, John Harden, Carlellion, Igons, Zelowsk, Palkonsky. Track Training Table, 1393 Ky: J Niles, Frederick, Fink, J. Dean James, Wood, Lindsay, Hilton, Con. Joseph Smith, Smith, Hilton, Crabbe Thoree, Bond. Hayes, 1237 Oread, phone 2181W Bell; Hope, 941 Ala. B. 2336; Best mgr, Tucker, Jones, Cook, Chandler Harms, Weidlein, Hogapple, Weible Geahrart, Rath. Midway, 1042 O, 3225B, Welтmr capt, German, Webster, Harlan, Barg Bennett, Frisch, Paul, Wadell Baldwin. Elswirch (incomplete) Co-op, 1345 Ky, 1116; Jo D. Berwick, capt., McLaughlin, Wyman Culin, King, Raemer, Fairchild, McCullough, Dryden, Dawley, Davis Subelkrup, Bowers, Pearson, Huntsman, Blair, Kitchen, Bayles. Martin, 912., 127 B. I: Irwin, mgr., Foltx, Sorensen, Sørensen, Russell, Pattonson, Farley, Bell, Gray, Thompson, Templin, Living, Kledo Dakinik Co-op, 103 Mass. *Street* captain, Shelley. *School* Bishop, Blair. *J., Smith* Custer; Washburn, capt., 1026B, Harden, mgr., B192W, B. Pierce, Harding, Deaver, Cook, Rogers, Cummins, Burns, Nixon, Didge, Young, Williams, DeRoin, Kabler, Coover, Dermitt, Shanton, Threve. Dad's Club, 1313 Vt: Larrimore, MacGregor, Long, Hill, Peterson, Major, Fitzgerald, J. Fitzgerald, A, Eaton, Osborne, Crowlein, Schmitter, Wilson, Stuewe, Slade, Beil, Manning, Stortz, Mathers. 1328 O., 1641J B.: Graham, mgr, Glasco, Fritz, Naylen, Young, Bell, capt., Cooper, Robertson, Palmer, Frost, Campbell. Daniels, 2122 R; Arnold, mgr, Schoenfeldt, Buchenan, Madden, Mitchell, Brown, Cooper, Hutton, Ford, Hill. Bowersock. Lee's: Gear, Wyatt, Joliffe, O'Bryan, Clark, Smith, Fuller, Bowman, Huey, Young, McCorkle, Morgan, McCamon, Rogers, Champlin, Cox, Weible, Frost, McVey, Nixon, Degen, mgr. Stevenson; Messick, Kubic, Sperry, Jones, Mather, Teasley, Selpino, Terry, Pickering, Reed, Jeter, Robinson, Murphy. METRIC SYSTEM FOR DRUGS It Has Been Adopted by the British Medical Council From the Boston Transcript From the Boston Transcript. Great Britain has adopted the maritime system in the new British military course. This is the official formulary for medicine and pharmacy. The action was taken by the British Medical Council, which is a representative but not a Government body. The effect will be that prescriptions will have the quantities expressed in metric terms. The system is optional unless drugs of drugs as well as quantities are now expressed metricly, the drugrist will order from the wholeleran in these terms. The pharmacopoeias of practically all countries using the United States, are now in the international metric system. Seniors Arrested for Playing Marbles Two Wisconsin seniors were recently arrested for playing marbles on the sidewalk. The charge against them was disorderly conduct. Wheard that conduct is a debatable question, but perhaps perfectly logical to a Madison policeman. CINDERELLA DUE TO BLUNDER Glass Slipter Incident Result of Mist take in Translation from the Chicago Tribune From the Chicago Tribune, Miss Cecile Hugen, lecturer in the College of the Oxford S ociety for Women's Education, recently read a paper in answer to the question, "Should Fairy Tales be told to Children?" Miss Hugon, in a sketch of the history of fairy tales, in which she included all tales of magic and supernatural beings, said they were probabled to invent the potter's job or the invention of the potter's wheel. Incidentally she suggested that the "glass slipper" of Cinderella, at once so puzzling and captivating a detail of the story of Enghien, told by another version of the French of Perrault. Perculf wrote, not "soulier de verre," but "soulier de vair," "vair" being a kind of fur. We may be sure, said Miss Hugon, that Cinderella wore phoenix shoes with fur round her top, and had never heard of glass slippers. SUN SPOT 100,000 MILES LONG SUN SPOT 100,000 MILES LONG It is Found on the Northeastern Limb of the Orb From the Chicago Herald A photograph of the sun taken at the naval observatory on March 29, just developed, discloses a spot about 6 miles north of the northeastern limb of the orbit. As the sun revolved this disturbed area came into view and will probably be visible, the officials say, up to about April 10. The officials give instructions for observing the spot as follows: "By holding a piece of smoked glass in front of one of the object glasses of an ordinary opera glass, with the smoked side toward the side only, through this side only, using one eye, the spot may be plainly seen. "Caution should be observed not to get the full glare of the sun in the eye, and the side of the glasses not in use should be turned away from, instead of toward, the other eye, so as to avoid the possibility of the sun's rays striking that eye through the glass." Too Plain He—"i wish you'd drop the 'Mister' and call me plain George." He—"I wish you'd drop the 'Mister' and call me plain George." She—"Oh, but it would be unkind to twit you on your personal appearance that way." —Boston Transcript. Do You Remember That Impulse You Did Not Obey? University Daily Kansan You Intended to take the But—You Delayed You can now read the Kansan's stories of Track, Baseball and other spring activities SPECIAL OFFER UNTIL JUNE 6th for Inter-fraternity Baseball League Schedule $1.00
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D.M.C. This morning's express brought our purchase of white fans for graduating gifts. They are certainly beautiful; come in and see them. We are now prepared to sell you D.M.C.in white or ecru, in a full range of sizes from 3 to 120. 1. Theorem 18.2. A finite Markov process $X_t$ with $\mu(X_t)$ and $\nu(X_t)$ are $n$-step Markov processes if and only if there exists a closed set $S_t$ of length $n$ such that for all $t \in S_t$, $P(X_t = s) = P(X_t = t)$ for all $s \in S_t$. Weaver's WHITE FANS We doubt if another store in the entire state can show you such a complete stock. MIDLANDS State Souvenir Spoons 10c The State Souvenir Spoon has become a crave in every city and town that has been able to get delivery on them. This store is the first to show them here after weeks of waiting. We have KANSAS and seven other states to offer, as follows: Oklahoma, Oregon, Minnesota, Wisconsin, New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts. Others will follow. These Silver Spoons are heavily plated and the guarantee below goes with every spoon. This spoon is guaranteed by the manufacturer to be plated with genuine sterling silver 999-1000thes fine on a basic plating of nickel. GUARANTEE If for any reason it should prove unsatisfactory to the purchaser a new one will be given in exchange at any time. INTER-STATE SILVER CO. Onnes, Dullene & Hackman THEATRE VARSITY Today: D. W. Griffith's personal directed 5 act Mutual Master Picture "THE OUTCAST" A Big Theme, Done in a Big Way by a Big Man First Show 7:45 Admission 10c. By THOMAS NELSON PAGE Ladies and Gents Imperial Shining Parlor and Hot Works We clean and reblock all kinds of hats, Ladies and Gent's*Panamas Especially. 737 Mass. St. AL SHINES. 5c. For Your Pleasure for your profit—drink Coca-Cola Every sparkling glass of it brimful of vigor, enjoyment and downright goodness. Delicious—Refreshing Thirst-Quenching THE COCA-COLA CO. Atlanta, Ga. Whenever you see an arrow Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE th Lawrence Pantatorium Phones 506 Professional Cards J. F. BROCK, Optometrist, and Speech Therapist 902 Mass. St. Bell Phone 695. HAIRY REDING M. D. Eye, ear, nose, and the throat Riteed, Office F. BELL Phone 695. HARRY (GIDDING) M. D. Ere, ear, bury, Bob (JUDY) J., Bidg, Phones, Bell 315, Honey N., Bigg, Phones, Bell 315, Honey J. R. IBCHETT, M. D., D. O. 823 Bathroom. Both phones, office and residence. G, W. JONES, A, M. M. D., Diseases of Leukemia, Residence 1201, Bohle, Both Phone 12507 DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires studio. Both phones. DIL. N. HAYES, 292 Mass. St. General Care. Also treat the eye and fits care. Jewelers A. J. - ANDERSON, M. D., Office 715 Vt. Phone 715. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye ear and Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Blag. DR. PETER D. PAULS, Ogeatepach, Office and residence, 7½ East 7th St. General practice. Both phones sit. Hourly 12, 13, 2 to 1, 2 to 7 and 8 by appointment. ED. W. PAISONS, Engraver, Watcher, Jewelry, Bell Phone 711, 717, Mass Classified PHONE KNENEDY PLUMBING CO. for just good and Mazda lamps. 952-783-0611. www.knenedy.com Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK, 912 Mass Insurance FIRE INSURANCE LOANS, and ab- cord Building. Bail 155; Home 2063. Building. Bail 155; Home 2063. FREAK E. BANKS, Ins., and abstracts of Title. Room 2. F. A. U. Building. Want Ads LOST—A Masonic pin in the form of a blue and gold slipper. Finder return to Kansan office or phone 2126J. LOST—On campus or at the Santa Fe depot, plain gold locket with rope chain. Finder please return to Marcia Turner, Turner, Blue Rapita, Kansas. FOR SALE—Harley Davidson Motor Cycle in perfect running order. Will sacrifice for $50.00. Call 2314 Bell. 122-3* LOST—Rose coral stick pin with diamond center, between 1234 Mississippi and Bowersock, by way of 12th. Return to Kansan office, 122-3 FOR RENT—A large south room in modern home for one or two men. Cheaper if taken soon. 1312 Ohio. LOST—Chainless nose glasses. Right lense cracked. Left in Fraser 207, about two months ago. Finder call either phone 126. 125*3-8 Sand the Daily Kansan home. 122-3 Ladies' Tailoring Mrs. Morgan up to date dressmaking and ladies' tailoring. Also party dresses. Prices very reasonable. 1321 Tennessee. Phone 1116 W. Box Stationery All Grades-All Prices SNA PPY SPRING SUITINGS Schulz 913 MASS. ST. McColloch's DrugStore BURT WADHAM'S "College Inn Barber Shop" G LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas Largest and best equipped business college Kansas. School occupies 2 floors Law- cabine and cladding. teach TYPE of building masuage. Write for sample of Stenotype nota and a catalog. WATKINS' NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depository. FRANK KOCH "THE TAILOR" Full Line of Spring Suitings STUDENT HEADQUARTERS TUDENTS' SHOE SHOP R. O. BURGERT, Prop. 1107 Mass. St. Satisfaction Guaranteed THEISIS BINDING Engraved and Printed Cards. Sheaffer's Self-filling Fountain Pens. 744 Mass. Street. A. G. ALRICH 744 Mass. Street. The University of Chicago HOME in addition to resident work, offers also instruction by correspondence. STUDY For: detailed information 22nd Year U. of C., Div, H, Chicago, Ill. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The AQUITANIA A new one-button suit model designed by A.G. Peine, the master designer for "Society Brand." We are showing it in dark blue cassimere with overlaid and light gray diamond weave Glen Urquhart plaid. $20 and $25 Styleplum 117 clothes are sold in Lawrence exclusively by us. Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUT FITTERS Harrisly Brand Clothing PALESTINE MAY HAVE BOOM Capitalists Planning to Make it a Great Tourist Centre From Philadelphia North-American. The Allies already have reached an understanding regarding the disposition of the Holy Land and of those who are in Consolation in the event of the fall of the Turkish Empire, according to information reaching here from England through missionary channels. The plan, these reports say, is to make the Holy Land more accessible to travellers and to develop it as more of a tourist centre than it has been under Turkish rule. St. Sofa, according to the same information, is to become a cathedral of the Russian church. British capitalists are represented as already looking over the ground in Palestine with a view to the construction of trolley lines, the development ofagrarian fields and modern hotels. A support which will be adapted to the expected increase in commerce is included in the plan. The capitalists behind the venture are said to be favorable to the Zionist plan of populating Palestine with Jews from other countries, while others are interested in the schemes as affording a centre of Christian inspiration and worship. LOST - Mesh bag in or between Fraser and Administration building Return to Maude Coverdale, 1245 Louisiana; Bell phone 1244. Send the Daily Kansan home. HARRY WHITE SPEAKS TO Y. M. C. A. MEN Harry White, Y. M. C. A. worker in India, spoke in Myers Hall last night at 7 o'clock to discuss Y. M. afairs. He told of the work being done. Inside the Hermann, it is kept in Madras by the support of the University Y. M. There was considerable discussion of the possibility for Kansas to take its plans further, and this is one of the nation in establishing a sort of University extension in the far east. Yale, Princeton, Harvard and many smaller schools maintain men in the Orden in work among the orienteers in their intention of the founders of this work is to extend the influence of American universities to these students of the far east who in time will expatriate - influence in their own countries. H. L. Heinzmann, of Chicago, a K. U. alumnus, spoke in favor of the plan as regards the possibilities of this school in the far east. OPENING THE DARDANELLES An English View of the Commercial Results Which Should Follow from the N Y Times from the current discussion as to how much Russia wheat would be released by the opening of transit from the Black Sea to the Mediterranean, how much wheat it would produce and what would be the result on the commercial situation, the London Economist directs its attention. 1 says; How much grain will be available is uncertain, as no one can say whether last year's Russian harvest has been got down to the ports or is lying up country for want of transport facilities. It is, however, so much to the interest of the Russian government to get the grain through and help to rectify the exchange, that the government will try to get the grain to the seaboard; and as the Government has doubtless known of these naval operations for some time past, they have had an opportunity to carry all the grain down. We may, therefore, assume that a large quantity of grain will be thrown on to the market by an effective opening of the Bosporus. Hence, the revenue from the sea steamers are shut in the Black Sea, no one can say. In the early days of the war, cautious owners were shunning Black Sea ports, and those others who have lost the use of their steamers through the profitable trade of grain have been cursing themselves for not showing the same foresight. The amount of tonnage, however, actually in the Black Sea at present is probably small, and can scarely have any effect in weakening rates. We may, in fact, anticipate that the ship will greatly outweigh the tonnage set free. In other words, the probable result of the effective forcing of the Dardanele would be to send freights to a still higher level; and they are now 70 shillings shipowners who are confident expecting to get 100. But it adds that "we appear to be in for a period of cheaper grain; the 'bull movement' in wheat has come to an end." VALLEY TO HAVE GYM TEAMS IN COMPETITION Intercollegiate Contests in Athletic Stunts Would Reach More Men In an effort to encourage more University men to get into athletics the schools of the Missouri Valley are establishing teams that compete in other schools of those other schools. The need of such teams is imminent and directors of physical education in the various schools feel that it will stimulate interest in the gymnasium work. In this line Missouri University is taking the lead in the Valley. A gym team of four men was organized at the first of the year, but has since grown to be the work than in competition. However, the plan is to be a permanent one and the promoters plan to give letters to the gymmasts. These would not be given away in exchange for a kind of a minor emblem. The Missourians expect to open negotiations with Kansas in regard to a meeting of the gym teams in connection with the Annual Indoor track, meet between universities in Convention Hall. "I have long been in favor of gymnastic games between the different schools and I think it is one branch of athletics that should be used to give me all of KU, in speaking of the plan. "Some men take a delight in gymnism work. They should be given a chance to exhibit their skill as well as the other athletes. We are trying at this moment to put the man with Baker University and Emporia Normal but probably none will be arranged until next year. We could not expect to give a regular "K" for this work but if enough meets an expectation we would its worth. I believe some sort of emblem should be given. "We have heard nothing of Missouri's plan to meet us in Convention Hall at the time of the track season. We are not favor any plan offered to extend this branch of athletics. I believe it is possible and practical to hold such meets and it will probably be started by University of Kansas next year." The University Orchestra will give its annual spring concert with in the next two weeks. The date will be arranged later. The concert will be in Fraser Hall under the direction of J. C. McCanles. ORCHESTRA WILL GIVE SPRING CONCERT SOON The Orchestra is now preparing the program. William Dalton will play a cello solo and Miss Nina will solo assist in the program with a piano solo. Foreign Official—You cannot stay in this country. In accordance with a bill passed by the meeting of the Dental Faculty of State Universities, held in Philadelphia last week, four years will now be received as a D.P.S. degree, in the Michigan College of Dental Surgery. Four Years' Dentist Course Traveler—Then I'll leave it. for financial help. Have a permit to leave? of San Francisco, California, in the Chapel in Fraser Hall, on Friday, April 16, 1915, at 4:30 in the afternoon. Dr. Fluo is a member of the Board of Lectureship of the Mother Church, the First Church of Christ Scientist in Boston, Mass. DR. FRANCIS J. FLUNO, C. S. D. Traveler—No, sir. Foreign Official—Then you cannot leave. I give you six hours to make up your mind as to what you will do. —Boston Transcript. The Christian Science Society announces a Free Lecture on Christian Science to be given by Senior—“Can a basket ball?” Faculty Member—“I think not; at least, I have never heard one.” Rain Coats Rain Coats Pan-Hellenic Baseball Schedule for Ladies— for Men— Especially we want to call your attention to our double texture coat at $5 The best value in town. Hats to match. Acacia April 13 April 8 April 29 April 14 April 30 April 7 Σ AE ATQ Σ N DIVISION II. K Σ Δ T Δ Φ Δ θ H Θ H DIVISION III. Σ X Φ Γ Δ H K A Φ K F April 10 April 10 April 28 Φ Γ Δ April 14 April 30 April 7 May 5 May 6 May 4 April 23 Johnson & Carl that merits the investigation of the high school student who is attracted towards science is that of Chemical Engineering The demand for experts in this line is as keen as the desire of manufacturers for better processes and for the utilization of by-products. FLOWERS FOR THE PROM Orders should be placed early. Don't wait until the last day. Give the Florist a chance to get them out on time. 825½ Mass. THE FLOWER SHOP Phones 621 An Expanding Vocation The pecuniary rewards include both large salaries and liberal percentages of the saving which the chemist brings about. The course in the University is complete, and after the necessary practical experience and work in research, leads to the degree of chemical engineer. Address Vocation Editor UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Subscribe for the Daily Kansan Seat Sale Saturday BOOTH TARKINGTON The popular short story writer of "Penrod" fame, wrote Seat Sale Saturday "The Man From Home" To Make People Laugh William Hodge who created the principal role carried Booth's laughs to millions of Americans The K. U. Dramatic Club Seat Sale Saturday Will produce this play at the BOWERSOCK THEATRE, APRIL 14 Prices:25c, 50c and 75c Seat Sale Saturday SENIORS A picture of yourself in Cap and Gown is almost the same as a degree as it shows you are a College Grad. SQUIRES' STUDIO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII. NUMBER 127 ALL READY FOR JUNIOR PROM IN GYM TONIGHT Governor and Mrs. Arthi Capper May be on Receiving Line FARCE STARTS AT 7 O'CLOCK 2 o'Clock "Letter of Introduction" to be Staged Dancing Continued Until Place: Robinson Gymnasium: time: 7 o'clock. "A Letter of Introduction", farce by William Dean Howells, the opening event. Cast of six. To be given in a special constructor, that serves arranged on the first floor of the Gym. Reception follows the farce on the main playing floor of the Gym. Ball begins at 8:30 o'clock, immediately following the reception, and continues until 2 o'clock. Saturday morning, dance be served during eight dance numbers and intermission. Cabs and flowers are taboo. Tonight the Prom! After weeks of planning and preparation, the premier social event of the year at the University of Kansas—the Junior Promenade—will occur tonight in Robinson Gymnasium, beginning at 7 o'clock and continuing until 2 o'clock Saturday morning. The annual Jock meeting will open the program, reception of guests by the members and junior class officers will follow; and the ball will provide the last and best feature of the entertainment. "A Letter of Introduction," by William Dean Howells, is the farce to be given. A special theater has been constructed on the first floor of the Gym for presentation of the play, and guests upon arrival entertain themselves to seat. The performance begins promptly at 7 o'clock. Following is the cast: mrs. Roberts--Maria Slade. Mr. Campbell-Don Burnett. Mr. Campbell-Ruth Lillis. Mr. Westgate-John Lilly. Nelle Nellie, Houston. Mr. Robert—Cecil DeRoin. The playing time of the farce will be about thirty minutes. "It is pure farce," says Cecil DeRoin, the disciple of the late poet Edgar Allan poetic skaphtick comedy in it. We have secured scenery from the Bowe-sock and magnificent furniture for the setting from Eckes. The stars are all most stoically ever used at a Prom. From the theater, the guests will be ushered upstairs to the main playing floor of the Gym, where the reception and ball are to be given. Prosia studies will rub their eyes in amazement and grasp information when, as well as during the hall, they their first view of the magnificent decorations. "A little bit of Japan" is what the decorators intended to make of the Gym. Bamboo Pergolas to Rest in Under a vari-colored umbrella ceiling, through which peep lightened Japanese lanterns of scarlet, saffron, green, and purple, there is a vine-trained, flower be-sprinkled lattice work which completely hides the Gym balcony from view on the sides of the tionn, at regular intervals, are placed twenty small bamboo pergolls from which hang balloon-like roseate lanterns. At each window, cleverly fashioned in frames of bamboo, hang white banners bearing fiercely fanciful designs. A huge white pergola, with morning glories twinning about its posts, occupies the west end of the hall, affording comfy seats for the dancers and a flower-dotted bower for the orchestra. Along the walls, verdant similar, green wood panels used to hide indoor viewers from view, and from them hang lavender wistaria blossoms, like violet pennants from a border of green. Gvernor Capper to Receive The receiving line will form in the hall at the conclusion of the farse; fourteen faculty members, seven patrons, and eight students, including the junior class officers, being admitted to the hall which will receive the guests. Following are the names of those who are to be in line: Governor and Mrs. Arthur Capper; Chancellor and Mrs. Strong; Dean and Mrs. Olin Templin; Dean and Mrs. C. A. Dykstra; Prof. and Mrs. C. A. Dykstra; Dean and Mrs. J. W. Green; Dean and Mrs. F. W. Blackmar; Mrs. Eustace Brown and husband; Mrs. HEADLINER: A MEN'S CHORUS Prof. Palmblad's Singers to Entertain Before German Play The German play, "Seine Einzige Tochter," is to be given tomorrow night in the theatre of Green Hall at 8:15 o'clock. 8:10 o'clock. Prof. H, V. E. Palmblad's men's chorus will give two numbers in German before the play begins. The play was written several years ago in the Polish language by Count I. A. Fredro and has been revised and improved by the work of William Lange who has translate it into German. The leading character in the play is Reinsberg which is taken by George Berg. Reinsberg has five daughters each of whom is innocent of the fact that they have any sisters. The main thread throughout the plot is the ability of Reinsberg to keep his several daughters from knowing of each other. Reinsberg has a large estate and when he dies each daughter thinks she will be string love affairs through it, and in the end it proves that Herman Dillberg and Pauline, and Heinrich von der Wense and Kamilla are to be married. The setting of the play is in the territory near Reinsburg and the acts of which there are two are supposed to take place in the Salon Following is the cast: Reinsberg—George Berg. Pauline—Charlotte Jagger. Karl Noll. Bertha—Ruth Smith. Rudolph v. Wendt-H. W. Paul. Mathilde-Martha Piotrowski. Kamilla-Elsa Wilhelmi. Leopoldine-Helen Riddle. Herman Dilberg-Alfred Brauer. Richisch von der Weuse-Oscar Major. CHEMICALS BACK FROM TRIP Friedrich—L. A. Winsor. Marvinites Return From Trip—Made Inspections With Suckers The junior and senior chemical Engineers returned yesterday morning from their annual trip to Chicago. While in Chicago they visited about twenty different plants of interest to chemists. They also inspected the famous steel plants at Gary, Indiana. The men from here were joined in Chicago by the senior chemicals from the School of Engineering at the University of Illinois. The trips and meetings the four men were together. The men from Kansas say that the trip is well worth the price from an instructive point of view but a week of sight seeing at places like New York Proof. Whitaker is the first number of about two weeks of rest. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 9, 1915. The following men made the trip: Prof. W. A. Whitaker, L. A. Benn, Fred Blacha, L. A. Welch, L. P. Garcia, L. Johnson, D. H. Lackey, and W. L. Aworth. Y. M. C. A. BOARD THINKS ASSISTANT IS NECESSARY Con Hoffmann may have an assistant in his work as secretary of the University Y, M. C. A. next year. Tue Y. M. Board at its meeting night appointed a commission of Prof. Con Hoffmann, Hal Cohf. Con Hoffmann to look about for a suitable man to take the position of assistant secretary. The committee has as yet taken no definite action, but will probably be able to report its findings in a bundle of weeks. Tests Scales Prof. E, F. Stimpson, head of the department of weights and measures at the University, made a test of its city scales of Lawrence last week. Immediately after the reception, when Richard Burton, president of the junior class, and Miss Mabel Mackie lead thepromenaders in the grand march, the ball will begin. Haley's ten piece orchestra of Kansas City performs freshments will be served in three relays during the dance; the first relay during numbers 4, 5, 6 and 7; the second during intermission; and the last during numbers 17, 18, 19 and 20. According to a special dispensation of the faculty, dancing will be allowed to continue until Corn G. Lewis and husband; Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Hoch, and Mr. Ed- ward T. Hackney. The student representa- tives are: Misses Mabel Mackie, Eva Adams, Adams Coors, and Lila Atkinson; Messrs Richard Burton, Howard Adams, Bryan Davis, and Alex Creighton. Prof. H., P. Cady read a paper he received from an English author Wednesday at the *Activity*." Reads Paper Then the Grand March Starts Six hundred persons are expected to attend the affair, according to a statement made this morning by the managers. As is customary with the Junior Promenade, cabs and flowers will be taboo. BALL PLAYERS WAIT ON JUPITER PLUVIUS Hash House Leaguers Cross Bats This Week-end if Weather Permits Weather permitting, this weekend will witness the opening of the Hash House League season. Two teams played this afternoon, and ten tomorrow. The withdrawal of three teams has necessitated the substitution of other even. These corrections applied would have aplied could not be entered. The LAWS GIVE BIRTHDAY PARTY FOR UNCLE JIMMY James Woods Green has seen more of the ups and downs of the University of Kansas than any other person. Starting in November, 1887, when forty students made known their wishes to become lawyers, and the School of Law was established to supply the need for such an institution, Dean Green has seen it grow steadily; has seen it outgrow its quarters in Fraser Hall, where the School was first begun; and in 1904, be installed in the building, called "Green Hall" in his honor. From that time its growth has been a rapidly increasing one, and each year sees a larger enrollment in the institute. Dean Green first acquired his title of "Uncle Jimmy" in 1896. Because of the universal admiration for him among the students, the moniker became popular at once and rapidly grew in use. Archibald Robert Querry, who died at Tulsa, Oklah., in 1905, was the first student to call the venerable dean "Uncle Jimmy" to his face. Uncle Jimmy Green had a birthday party last night. It wasn't exactly a surprise party, for everybody knew his boys would gather to do him honor, just as they have for the past ten years. "Querry came into my office for some information and addressed me as 'Uncle Jimmy.' That was the first time I ever heard the name, says Dean Jimmie. "The poor fellow died a few months ago. Whether having me for an niece had anything to do with it or not." T. A. H. Uncle Jimmy's friends are not confined to Laws. Every man and woman in the University who loves democracy, clean sportsmanship, and fair play, is a disciple of Uncle Jimmy Green. Law Students, Past and Present, Hold Banquet for Dean Green OUR UNCLE JIMMY C. H. Talbot, head of the municipal reference bureau in the extension division, has been chosen a judge for the debate between O.J. Baker. The contest takes place tonight at Bedwin. The question is "Resolved: That the United States should, within a reasonable length of time, establish a Philippines." The reasonable time mentioned is undertook to five years. will be given first choice in case of any more vacancies. The Daily Kansan will give a complete report of all games as nearly as possible, and with this end in view invites co-operation from the managers of all teams. The large number makes it difficult for reporters to locate reliable information, and if they will abide by the requirement requiring games to be reported, the task of keeping accurate record of team standings will be greatly facilitated. The Daily Kansan's number is K. U. 25, Bell. When grounds specified in the schedule are not available the teams will be notified by telephone the evening previous. Failure of the equipment, put them the diamonds north of McCook in good condition may necessitate a revision of the schedule. Woodland Park may have to be utilized, and it is possible that his diamond will be encountered. The dining room at the Hotel Eldridge was crowded with his students, past and present, and his friends in the faculty and on the Talbot to Judge Debate rtalf of the contesting teams will be notified by telephone to get base-balls from Carroll's this evening. A event will be devised before next week-end. W. Rothwell Banker, toastmater of the evening, read letters of congratulation from Judge Charles W. Smith, who was unable to attend, and from Prof. W. E. Higgins, who is on a day of absence from the School of Law. Dean Green's birthday was really last Sunday, but the banquet given in his honor was postponed until Thursday evening. bench and bar, who were gathered to commemorate his seventh-third Chancellor Strong responded to the toast, "Pro Bona Universitatis." This was followed by a paper on "A Popular Misconception," read by Justice Silas Porter of the Supreme Court of Kansas. "Ad Hominem" was the subject of the toast given by Robert W. Blair, attorney general for the Union Pacific Railroad. Then came talks by C. C. Stewart of the class of 14, Robert T. McGuiggan and Henry Lamar for the middle class, and Paul R. Greever of the junior class. And then Uncle Jimmy Green himself, the grand old man of Kansas, with eyes dimmed with tears, arose and expressed his appreciation of the kindness shown him by those who he has been adviser and friend. On behalf of the faculty of the School of Law, Dr. William L. Burdick answered the question, "What Sav You?" Miller Dislocates Knee J. M. Miller, sophomore College, dislocated his knee while playing baseball yesterday afternoon. Send the Daily Kansan home. IS ROSS KEELING A REAL FARMER' Tiller of Soil Thinks So During the Easter vacation, Ross Keeling, the K. U. football center, got another fellow about his size to put on tall boots and old clothes they went out for some muscle-hardening labor — and a remuneration. At noon they turned into a downtown restaurant, dusty and disheveled, and slumped down at a table across from a benevolent looking old farmer. The old man stroked his white whiskers and looked at the boys with considerable curiosity for a minute, then tapped Keeling on the arm and asked: "Be ye farmin'?" FRENCH CLUB STAGES PLAY Moliere's Comedy to be Given in Green Hall Theatre The Cercle Francais will stage the play "Le MeDCenie Malgré Lui" in Green Hall theatre Saturday, April 17. The piece was recently played successfully by the Cercle Francais of Illinois University. It is a comedy in three acts, written by Moliere in 1666, and is the first old play to be given by the Kansas Cercle. Costumes of the period will be worn. Sganarule- Lewis R. Miller. Martine- Louise Imus. Robert- D. E. Jolly. Valere- Bruce Shomber Lucas- Harold C. Miller Geronte- Raymer McQuiston Jacqueline- Barbara Bara Lucinde- Gertrude N. Lobell Leandre- Dormian O. Leary. Milhaut- Hobart H. Kriegh. Parker TRIGG AT PEOPLE'S FORUM Editorial Writer From Star to Discuss Commission Form "Commission form of government for states," is Fred C. Triggs' subject Sunday afternoon at a meeting of the People's Forum. Mr. Triggs has been an editorial writer for the Kansas City Star and the State Journal, and the commission form of government. For some time Mr. Triggs was a reporter for the Star and covered all meetings of the state legislature. His thorough knowledge of the routine observed by that body and the way in which it can be used in a position to give a few pointers in regard to our state government. C. H. Talbet said today that the address would be of special interest and especially beneficial to students attending the event, and other subjects that deal with current conditions. The meeting will be held in the city hall at 3 o'clock and affect about 150 students who will resolve into a round table discussion of the subject. K. U. GOSPEL TEAM TO K. C. Will Conduct Morning Services a Congregational Church A gospel team composed of Jesse Gardner, Neal D. Ireland, Clyde R. Gelvin, T. H. Vaughan, and Rex Miller will go to Kansas City Sunday under the auspices of the University Y. M. C. A. The team conduct the morning service at Congregational church, and will speak at a men's meeting at the Y. M. C. A. in the afternoon. The talks given by the members of the team will be on the general topic of Christianity from the student point of view. Appoint New Manager Frank McFarland, middle law, has been appointed business manager of the K. U. Dramatic Club to succeed Don C. Burnett, who was forced to resign because of conflicting duties. Gives Rocks to K. U. Prof. W. H. Twenhofer, of the department of geology, while on his trip to Saline county during the Easter vacation, obtained a collection of fossils in the University in the next few days. The fossils are what is known as Comanchean rocks, Professor Twenhofel is planning to spend next summer in that section studying which comparatively little is known. Zoology Club to Meet Zoology Club to Meet the next Zoology Club to meet next Tuesday at 7:30 o'clock At Morning Prayers Tuesday: "Sanitation and Moral Life." Speaker: Rev. William B. Lamps, First Presbyterian Church, Winfield Wednesday; "Fair Weight in Laboratory and Life." Thursday: "Survival of the Fitter." Friday: "The Choice Part of Education." STUDENTS TO VOTE ON POINT SYSTEM Council Officers Say it Was Intention to Submit Schedule SOME MEMBERS DISAGREE Councilmen Were Under Impression That Action Was in Form of Council Ruling However, he says if the students evince too much dislike for the system a vote will be taken on the system itself, without the schedule. Now it appears that the Council intends to give the students a vote on the point system schedule and always did. This comes from Vic Bottomly's president, another mom of the school board, and Council has the authority to adopt the system without reference to the students, and are going to. But Bottomly holds that the Council will put up the system as outlined by the Board at its last meeting to the students, at a date to be decided upon later. No Power to Adopt It Bottomly says the Council has no power to adopt the system under any schedule without the approval of the student. If the student has the power. For, he says, the Council cannot determine the student will. A vote would be necessary for that. Members of the Council may exercise the authority and will exercise it. Russel Gear, secretary of the Council, and chairman of the committee that drew up the schedule, says it was the intention of the Council to give the students a vote on it. Submit Through Kansan "A lot of the Councilmen know nothing about th ematter, and it is not surprising that the wrong impression got out. I drew up the schedule as best I could by going to the various organizations, and getting acquainted with the members of the should be allotted to the officers. I submitted this to the Council at the last meeting, and the fellows slashed it up. "The idea was to submit this through the Kansan to the students, and let them thresh it out, and make any suggestions to the Council through the Kansan, or directly. Then after that, I sent a module generally the Council was to gather their suggestions, work them into a plan, and put the whole thing to a vote in election. This was my idea as chairman of the point system committee, and I believe that of all the things I did to the work, I am mighty sorry that the impression was given that the Council was going to shove anything onto the students, because it wasn't." Ritter Says. "Council Ruling" Bud Ritter, a Councilman, who wrote the story of the Council's action says, "I thought it was definitely lecled that the system would go into effect as a Council ruling, and not as that case would not beoted on." Jack Greenstreet, a member of the point system committee, was under the impression yesterday that the students were not to get a vote on the plan. Pat Crowell said he did not know but he heard from Alex. Creighton, another Councilman, that "it had done through." Since Gear is secretary, and has the minute books of the Council, and Bottomly is president, no doubt the students will get a vote on the ENGINEERS VISIT K. C. INSPECT NEW VIADUCT Prof. H. A. Rice, of the School of Engineering with about twenty senior civil Engineers spent yesterday in Kansas City, studying bridge construction. The different bridges of the city were visited and ideas obtained for the bridge designing work the Engineers have to do. The most notable piece of work inspected by the students was the newly completed 12th street viaduct which is one of the biggest concrete structures in this part of J. L. Harrington, who was graduated from the School of Engineering in '96. Board Not to Meet A meeting of the Board of Administration was called for this morning but on account of the absence of a member, a meeting was postponed indefinitely. Prof. Hopkins to Judge Prof. E. M. Hopkins will be one of the judges for the Ottawa-Baker debate to be held tonight at Baker University. I UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University Alty of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF EDITORIAL STAFF John M. Henry Editor-in-Chief John Happer Marketing Editor Helen Hawker Associate Editor William Jadky Merchandise Editor BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS STAFF J. W. Dressant Manager C. S. Sturventev Advertising Staff REPORTORIAL STAFF REPORTORIAL STAFF Leon Hutcheson John M. Gleason Glenn Clayton John M. Gleaser J. M. Miller Charles Sweet Dave Dawl Elmer Orndt Carolyn McNutt Louis Puckett Harry Morgan Glendon C. A. Gitter Glendon Patterson Subscription price $2.50 per year in advance; one term, $1.50. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office 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. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. The Daily Kansan aims to picture students in the University of Kansas; to go further than merely printing the book; to teach the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courteous; to solve problems to wiser heads, in all, and to satisfy the students of the University. Fair Play and Accuracy Bureau Prof. H. T. Hill...Faculty Member Don Jason...Student Member John Henry...Secretary If you find a mistake in statement or impression in any of the columns of Daily Kansan...to the secretary of Daily Kansan. He will instruct you as to further procedure. VALE, F. H. S. F. Hopkinson Smith, author, artist and practical engineer, is dead. And so the American public is robbed of the further production of a much loved man, but his memory will be carried on by the wok he has accomplished and given to the world. FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 1915 He was born seventy-seven years ago in Baltimore, Maryland, and died in New York City where he has been making his home for the past few years. After leaving school at fourteen he went to work as a shipping clerk and later in the metal industry. He did not give up educating himself, however, and began the study of mechanical engineering. As evidence of his ability in this practical work we have the sea walls at Tomkinsville, Staten Island, Governors Island and the foundation of the Statue of Liberty in New York harbor. To the majority of the people of the United States he is known best, probably, as an author and artist. His works have been appearing for many years both in the form of short stories and books. Copies of his paintings have appeared in the Ladies' Home Journal. In all his works, both in literature and art, we have no great splashes of vivid color or huge world problems. Mellowness, quaint humor and understanding characterize what is left to the world of F. Hopkinson Smith. A man or woman that has gone through three and a half years of school successfully, satisfying all requirements, getting the necessary grades, and filling all groups called for, usually can be trusted to carry on that work for the final part of the fourth year, when he is a candidate for a degree, and taking a more serious attitude toward his courses than at any other time. And that man or woman is usually busier at that time than any other. EXEMPT 80% SENIORS For these reasons the University authorities should act favorably on the Sachems' petition to exempt seniors having above 80% grades from the final examinations. THE RIGHT WAY We are glad to learn that the Student Council intends to give the students a vote on the point system schedule. As the men's schedule now stands we believe the students are not satisfied with it. A vote will settle all dispute. And if the students do not want the system at all they will have a chance to reject it. There will be no forcing a system on the student body by the Council. The University high brows, "who were so very indignant that they asserted that every case of typhoid in the last three years was the direct result of drinking water" are glad to learn that their contention was really the "flat and undisputed truth." WE ARE GLAD But as has been said by the advocates of the muddy water the matter is settled now, and Lawrence citizens will go right on buying drinking water and smelling city water. For sake of emphasis the Kansas would say that it does not oppose the point system proposition as drawn up by the W. S. G. A., but that it is opposed to that adopted by the Student Council. We hasten to suggest M. Jess Willard to the convocation committee. Student Opinion Editor Karsan: Are the students going to let the "Point System" die? That is the question that is being asked over the Hill and I think it is time that some action is being taken to increase our education. University certain fraternities and individuals have been in control of elections and have heaped the electoral honors on themselves and friends, amid the mighty and painful system of the student body. The Point System has made a stop to this unfair and undemocratic practice, and it is now up to the student body to see that some action is taken on the matter as the Student Council has stated that it will be moved to a vote unless the students manifest some interest in the matter. Let's get together and whoop 'e' up boys! Pepper. Chasing the Glooms We would write some more wheezes about that, Russian-captured fortress, (or was it masculine gender) called P——, but the proof-reader has threatened to strike. Add famous last line; Continued on Page —. Wonder if there's an arbitration court in Mars to which we could reer the Earth's case. Why not call him the Kansas cycle? Not every student who economizes in school is preparing to enter the ministry. Sie semper Barleycorn—champion eeis. Dr. Irving Fisher says European science has added 17 years per century to man's life. He did not refer to military science. At last Spring shows the dimples in her pretty shoulders. Well, if the back collar button is eradicated as per the movement there will be but one button to roll under the bureau. Lives there the man who has not saw what did you think of the fight? " Some of the Kansan cubs and kitties say the janitor of the office could get out a better paper from a content editor of a basket than is now published daily. It is supposed that the freshman of this generation are so much worse than those of last because of the growing disuse of shingles. You can't spank them very handily with a tin roof, don't you know. The Harvard faculty has barre book agents from the campus. If the Kanaas faculty should take such action the present buildings would easily accommodate the students in school. At least man always knows where he got his headache. In spite of his defeats John Bar leycorn has the punch, "One, two, three, dip." No, not tango; tobo a freshman. Shots at Half-Cock Or Foolishment in Verse Now, it'll be the Italian hesitation Quick, James, She Winked Her Ear Oh, the tennis ball is "pinging." While the "spring poet" is singing 4. most "joyful roundelay," The "summer girl" is strolling, Down, by the "habbling brook.", So the "ducats" start to rolling A most joyful roundday. The "summer girl" is strolling, om "dear Dad's" "slim pocket book" Speaking the Kansas Language Billy Sunday abuses the church members and the sinners but never abuses the newspapers. Billy Sunday is the most successful preacher in the country, standing in with the men who form public opinion. We had a president once who undertook to dictate to the newspapers and he served only one day. He was also in the making by the business men trying to run the newspapers. The best preachers, the best statemen and the best and most successful men are all on friendly terms with the newspapers. -Leavenworth Post. The best definition of a friend we have ever seen in print was that given by a writer in London Tit-Bits, who said: "A friend is the first person who comes in when the world has gone out."-Anna Carlson. If you can fool half the people all the time, be satisfied, don't be a dog. —No man ever pushed himself ahead by patting himself on the back.—Noah was six hundred years old before he knew how to make an ark. Don't lose your grip.—Noreadur Dispatch. THE REAL, KANSAN THE REAL KANSAS Jerry Hines, he honeymooned. Ed Howe muses billions amid the bowers of Potato Hill. Joe Bristow is out of work. Victor Murdock is hiding the irony of his name and the unquenchable fire of his poll in Iowa. He has become an impressive expanded that once romantic form as did they Mr. Tracy Tupman's. In literature, in politics, in progressivism, in theoretical and applied all-crankery, the Sunflower droops and fades. The Hon. Jess Hemsley also wrote *esthetic* state Hope. He carries Kansas and her glorv.-N. Y. Sun. RULLEN AND THE BIBLE BULLEN AND THE BIBLE recently there was an English author, Bill O'Brien, who has to his credit some of the best sea stories ever written. His "Cruise of the Cachelo" has perhaps not been surpassed even if we do not forget our own Dana's "Two Years Before the Mast," and that Clark Russel wrote. Bullen wrote much other matter about the sea, both didactic and educational, but there was a style that ranked him with the great masters of the language. When he submitted his first manuscript to Kipling, who advised publication, Kipling asked him where he got his fine style, Bullen answered, "I got my style from the Bible; it was my only university." He went on to writing as anything that he ever wrote. Until he was nine years old he lived with an aunt, who taught him to read the Bible and read it with him. On his aunt's death he was thrust into the streets, but under his ragged coat he carried his Bible. In his twelfth year he went to sea in a cabin bay under one of the ships he almost the type of the British merchant service. He flogged the boy so mercifully that the crew threatened mutiny. For twenty years Bullen sailed the sea, rising by degrees until he became mate. With him all the time was his Bible, which he read twenty-five times from cover to cover men in his family and a port of family on five on $10 a week. In desperate straits he wrote of his life at sea and sent the manuscript to Kipling. His first book was the "Cruise of the Candeloet." Afterward he wrote much, and became in the end a wealthy author of high rank, his one line of sea stories and sea observation books, and gave his thought distinction. There are all sorts of deductions to be made from this unusual life. But there is at least one reflection worthy of note, and that is how fortunate is that people whose sacred书 is in the vernacular translated at just the time when the earth was pure and perfect. The style of the Bible in those days was in the air. Writing men of any parts all had it. Bullen's story but repeats what others have illustrated. Some of the greatest writers and speakers in the language have frequently acceded to the style and finest in their thought came from their diligent reading of the English Bible—Indianapolis News. A CHANCE FOR CARRANZA Oh, Citizen Carranza. If you'd make a hit with us. Go busy down in Moxt. Be kind and mouss. Meet Johnson when he comes ashore Present him with a gun. Then tell him if he still wants fight Then tell him if he still wants fight To try make Villa run. —Ed. A. Goeway in Leslie's. Friday and Saturday are fruit salad days at Wiedemann's—Adv. If you like Swiss Chocolate Sundays and Eclairs, try ours. Wiedemann's—Adv. Skating at the Auditorium Friday and Saturday nights.—Adv. An excellent line of chocolates at Reynolds Bros-Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. The Pleasure of School Life is Doubled If you are acquainted with the current happenings "on the hill'". The cheapest and easiest way to get acquainted is through the columns of the University Daily Kansan SUBSCRIBE NOW $1.00 for the rest of the year VOLKSWABE COPYRIGHT BY ED. V. PRICE & CO. Where your father? The Little Schoolmaster Says: "Everything has a reason,except cheapness" Satisfaction! -one of the greatest words in "Webster's Unabridged"the one thing that lingers longest in memory. As the Largest Tailors in the world of GOOD made-to-order clothes, we Specialize in Satisfaction. SAMUEL G. CLARKE CLOTHIER 707 Mass. St. Bell Phone 505 our exclusive local dealer will consider it a favor upon your part if you will take time to see our styles and woolens whether you buy or not. Chicago E. Wrice C. U.S.A. E. Grice C COPYRIGHT BY BAY PRICES & CO. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence Church Directory First Baptist, 801 Ky. O. C. Brown, Pastor, 808 Tenn. F. W. Ainslee, U. Pastor, 1111 Vt. Warren St. Baptist, 847 Ohio. W. N. Jackson, Pastor, 901 Mo. Brethren, 1400 N. H. B. Forney, Pastor, 1812 Conn. German Methodist, 1100 N. Y. E. T. Ashing, Pastor, 1145 N. J. Presbyterian, 901 Vt. W. A. Wopell, Pastor, 843 Lau. Stanton Olinger, U. Pastor, 1221 Oread United Presbyterian, 1001 Ky. W S. Price, Pastor, 1201 R. I. United Brethren, 1646 Vt. F. M. Testerman, Pastor, 530 Ohio Christian Scientist First Church of Christ Scientist Church Building, 1240 Mass. Sunday Service, 1 a. m. Sunday school 10 a. m. St. John's Catholic, 1230 Ky. Father G. J. Eckart, 1231 Vt. Christian, 1000 Kg E. T. Barnard, U. Pastor, 1031 Vt1 Arthur Bury, U. Pastor, 1090 Gread Congregational, 925 Vt. N. S. Elderkin, Pastor, 1100 Ohio Friends, 1047 Ky. W. P. Haworth, Pastor, 1027 Pa. Episcopal, 1001 Vt. E. A. Edwards, Rector, 1013 Vt. Evangelical Association, 1000 Comm C B. Willming, Pastor, 1021, I KR Lutheran, 1042 N. H. E. E. Stauffer, Pastor, 1046 N. H. Methodist Episcopal, 946 Vt. H. E. Wolfe, Pastor, 937 N. H. G. B. Thompson, U. Pastor, 408 W. 14th. List of Players Following are the names of players on several of the teams. Managers are required to place a list in the hands of the chairman of the commission so they are urged to attend to the matter at once. Y. M. house, 941 ind. *Blincee, Thomann, Kingsborough, Ireland, Payne, Kingsbourough, Austine, Stean, Cilson, Lyons, Zelow- sky, Palkonsky.* Track Training Table, 1339 Kj: Niles, Frederick, Fink, J. Dean, James, Wood, Lindsey, Hilton, Connors, Jefferson, Smith, Hilton, Crabbe, Hayes, 1237 Oread, phone 2181W Boll; Hope, 941 Ala. B. 2336; Bost, mgt, Trucker, Jones, Couch, Chandler, Harms, Weidlein, Hogapple, Weible, Gearthart, Ruth. Midway, 1042 O., 3225B. Weltm, capt., German, Webster, Harlan, Bar- ren, Bennett, Frisch, Paul, Wadell, Raldwin, Elswick (incomplete) Co-op, 1345 Ky., 1116; J. D. Ber- wick, capt., McLaughlin, Wyman, Culin, King, Raemer, Fairchild, Mc Cullough, Dryden,WDylen, Ferie, Subklruppe, Bowers, Pearson, Huntsman, Blair, Kitchen, Bayles. Martin, 912. 127 I.B.: Irwin, mgr. Foltz, Sorensen, Swanson, Russell. Pattonson, Farley, Belli, Gray. Papst, Templem, Livingston, Kelog. Custer: Washburn, capt., 1026B, Harden, mgr., 1323W B, Pierce, Harding, Deaver, Cook, Rogers, Cummins, Burns, Nixon, Didge, Young, Williams, DeRoin, Kabler, Coover, Mitton, Shannon, Threve. Dunakin Co.-op, 134 Mass. : Street, Square. Darby Dumbbell, Elijah Smith. Darby Dumbbell, Elijah Smith. Dad's Club, 1313 Vt. Larrivree, MacGregor, Long, Hill, Peterson, Major, Fitzgerald, J., Fitzgerald, A. Eaton, Osborne, Corbine, Schmitter, Wilson, Stuewe, Slade, Beil, Manning, Stortz, Mathers. damets, 2129 B.: Arnold, mgr. Schoeffel, Buchanan, Madden, Mitchell, Brown, Cooper, Hutton, Ford, Hill, Bowersock. Lee's: Gear, Wyatt, Joliffe, O'Bryan, Clark, Smith, Flower, Bowman, Huey, Young, McCorkle, Morgan, McCamon, Rogers, Champlin, Cox, Weible, Frost, McVey, Nixon, Degen, mgr. Stevenson; Mossick, Kubic, Sperry, Jones, Mather, Teasley, Calpino, Terry, Pickering, Reed, Jeter, Robinson, Murphy. the Neal Club, 17 W. 14th: Swatek, Crow, Weiters, Martin, Crowley, Steinhauer, Mella, Reed, Thell, Merrill, Nystrom, Yokum. Los Amigos: Parker, mgr, Koez, Henry, McIlhenny, Busenbark, Vaughn, Jones, O'Bryan, Swartz, Grecion, Beal, Ritter, Ferguson, K, K. 1225 Oread Ave, 2418 B. Workshire, K., Woolcock, Sullivan, Robbins, Workshire, K., Woolcock, Sullivan, Robbins, WANT COURSES IN ENGLISH Correspondence Students Pick Literature in Preference to Other Studies According to a report made by the correspondence study department of the extension division there were forty registrations made during March. Nineteen Kansas cities were represented in the registrations and five of those who wish information though the extension division reside Topeka, Oklahoma, Missouri, Oklahoma and California also have individuals who are taking advantage of the opportunity offered by the University of Kansas. English courses were the most popular. Twelve of the forty registrations were made in some branch colleges, and two with six entrances. The report this month shows a slight decrease in registrations as compared with summer; however, was an unusually heavy demand for the correspondence department. Anderson, Woolsey, Brown, Mona ban, Appel, Wentworth. Dunakin Co-Op Club, 1304 Mass St. Street; captain, O. Darby, Shel manager, DutMetz, Spencer, M. manager, Moore Smith, Cheney Johnson, Hilton, Hilze Kenney Club, 1038 Tennessee; Hugh Brown, Frank Miller, Harry Curfman, Geo. Ball, Art Thomas, Geo. Pauly, Orin Ruth; Victor Hunt, outside; Winton Smith, outside; Lee Smith, outside; Newton,坐下; Geo. Bob, Geo. Bead, V. T. Newton, manager, B. 1277J 1131 Tennessee street. Ulrich: Hite, manager, Stiller, Baker, Gear, Terrent, Chandler Webb, Thomas, Carter, Tucker, Jar- boe. Schwegler at Presbyterian Church Prof. R. A. Schwegler will occupy the pulpit Sunday at the Presbyterian church. Morning topic, "The People That Perish". Evening topic, "The Master Servant."—Adv. Friday and Saturday are fruit salad days at Wiedemann's.—Adv. Skating at the Auditorium Friday and Saturday nights. - Adv. Ice cream sodas, all flavors—try them at Wiedemann's—Adv. LOOK OUT SECRETARIES, MR. LARDNER IS COMING James C. Lardner, general purchasing agent for the Board of Administration, has just written Registrar Foster that he will probably be in Lawrence the last of next week, and that during his visit he will call in the account books issued to the student organizations on the Hill. Arrives at K. U. Next Week to Inspect Student Account Books According to the instructions given with the books, they should be turned in to Registrar Foster every ten days or so to see that they are being checked. The books have been brought in. Mr. Lardner will ask for a strict accounting when he calls the books in, and the books should be given to Mr. Foster at once for a preliminary examination, to see the correct method of checking.allowed Oklahoma Club; University Debating Society; freshman class; Jurisprudence Club; Sachems; junior elective Council; Civics engineering society; A. I. M. E.; Kansas Engineering Magazine; Architectural Engineers; Annual; band; sophomore class; Home Economics Club; Annual; Junior; Sphinx; architecture; engineering club; Entomological Club; W.S. G. A.; Automatic Club. The following organizations have been supplied with books; Professor Goldsmith admits that he escorted a feminine member of the University faculty to the motion hall, how, but refuses to tell who she was. Aha Goldwin, Who Was She? Prof. Goldwin Goldmith and Miss Margaret Lynn deny that they broke the mid-week date rule to attend a motion-picture show as stated in the Daily Kansan last night. I ice cream sodas, all flavors—try them at Wiedemann's—Adv. Reynolds Bros. for good smooths. -Auv. If you like Swiss Chocolate Sundae and Eclairs, try ours. Wiedemann Send the Daily Kansan home. RADNOR RADNOR THE NEW ARROW COLLAR PROTSCH "The Tailor" SPRING SUITING VARSITY THEATRE TODAY—Shubert presents Margaret Weyesley and Robt. E. Kellard and Shubert Theatre cast in "The Fight" N. Y. Hudson Theatre sensation. Five act political drama by Bayard Veillier, author of "Within the Law." DIVISION I. Hash House League Schedule
Co-opUlrichMartinNealHayesWillisLongK K
Co-opSat A 10 Hw-2Sat A 17 N1-4Sat A 24 N-1 10:30Sat M 1 He-10:30Sat M 8 Hw-2Sat M 15 N2-8:30Sat M 22 N1-10:30
UlrichSat A 10 Hw-2Sat A 24 He-4Aat A 17 N2-4Sat M 8 N2-10:30Sat M 1 M 2-8:30Sat M 22 He-10:30Sat M 15 He-2
MartinSat A 17 N1-4Sat A 24 He-4Sat A 10 He-8:30Sat M 22 N2-2Sat M 15 Hw-2Sat M 8 He-10:30Sat M 1 N2-4
NealSat A 24 N1-10:30Sat A 17 N2-4Sat A 10 He-8:30Sat M 15 He-4Sat M 22 He-2Sat M 1 N1-4Sat M 8 N1-2
HayesSat M 1 He-10:30Sat M 8 N2-10:30Sat M 22 N2-2Sat M 15 He-4Sat A 10 N1-4Sat A 17 Hw-2Sat A 24 Hw-10:30
WillisSat M 8 Hw-2Sat M 1 N2-8:30Sat M 15 Hw-2Sat M 22 He-2Sat A 10 N1-4Sat A 24 Hw-2Sat A 17 Hw-1030
KinneySat M 15 N2-8:30Sat M 22 He-10:30Sat M 10:30Sat M 1 N1-4Sat A 17 Hw-2Sat A 24 Hw-2Sat A 10 N2-2
K KSat M 22 N1-10:30Sat M 15 He-2Sat M 1 N2-4Sat M 8 N1-2Sat A 24 Hw-10:30Sat A 17 Hw-10:30Sat A 6 N2-2
DIVISION II. | | Daniels | Y. M. | Dad's | Custer | 1328 O. | Stevenson | Franklin | Lee's | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Daniels | | Fri A 9 N2-4 | Sat A 17 He-10:30 | Sat A 24 He-2 | Sat M 1 Hw-8:30 | Sat M 8 Hw-4:30 | Sat M 15 He-10:30 | Sat M 22 He-4 | | Y. M. | Fri A 9 N2-4 | | Sat A 24 N2-8:30 | Sat A 17 He-10:30 | Sat M 8 N2-4 | Sat M 1 N1-2 | Sat M 22 Hw-10:30 | Sat M 15 N1-10:30 | | Dad's | Sat A 17 He-10:30 | Sat A 24 N2-8:30 | | Sat A 19 He-2 | Sat M 22 Hw-4 | Sat M 15 N2-10:30 | Sat M 8 He-8:30 | Sat M 1 N2-2 | | Custer | Sat A 24 He-2 | Sat A 17 He-10:30 | Sat A 10 He-2 | | Sat M 15 N1-8:30 | Sat M 22 N1-4 | Sat M 1 N2-10:30 | Sat M 8 Hw-10:30 | | 1328 O. | Sat M 1 Hw-8:30 | Sat M 8 N2-4 | Sat M 22 Hw-4 | Sat M 15 N1-8:30 | | Sat A 10 He-4 | Sat A 17 Hw-4 | Sat A 24 N2-10:30 | | Stevenson | Sat M 8 Hw-4 | Sat M 1 N1-2 | Sat M 15 N2-10:30 | Sat M 22 N1-4 | Sat A 10 He-4 | | Sat A 24 Hw-2 | Sat A 17 N2-20 | | Franklin | Sat M 15 He-10:30 | Sat M 22 Hw-10:30 | Sat M 8 He-8:30 | Sat M 1 N2-10:30 | Sat A 17 Hw-4 | Sat A 24 Hw-2 | | Sat A 10 Hw-2 | | Lee's | Sat M 22 He-4 | Sat M 15 N1-10:30 | Sat M 1 N2-2 | Sat M 8 Hw-10:30 | Sat A 24 N2-10:30 | Sat A 17 N2-2 | Sat A 10 Hw-2 | | DIVISION III.
HopeMidwayCollege CampusD. Co-opLos AmigosNorth CollegeTrack TrainingMoody
HopeFri A 9 N 1-4Sat A 17 He-8:30Sat A 24 N2-2Sat M 1 Hw-4Sat M 8 N1-10:30Sat M 15 Hw-8:30Fri M 21 N2-4
MidwayFri A 9 N1-4Sat A 24 He-8:30Sat A 17 He-2Sat M 8 He-4Sat M 1 Hw-2Sat M 22 He-2Sat M 15 Hw-10:30
College CampusSat A 17 He-8:30Sat A 24 He-8:30Sat A 10 N 1-2Sat M 22 N2-10:30Sat M 15 Hw-4Sat M 22 HSat M 1 He-2
D. Co-opSat A 24 N2-2Sat A 17 He-2Sat A 10 N1-2Sat M 15 He-8:30Fri M 21 N1-4Sat M 1 Hw-10:30Sat M 8 Hw-8:30
Los AmigosSat M 1 Hw-4Sat M 8 He-4Sat M 22 N2-10:30Sat M 15 He-8:30Sat A 10 N2-8:30Sat A 17 N1-2Sat A 24 N1-2
OreadSat M 8 N1-10:30Sat M 1 Hw-2Sat M 15 Hw-4Fri M 22 N1-4Sat A 10 N2-8:30Sat A 24 He-10:30Sat A 17 Hw-4
Track TrainingSat M 15 Hw-8:30Sat M 22 He-2Sat M 8 N2-2Sat M 1 Hw-10:30Sat A 17 N1-2Sat A 24 He-10:30Sat A 10 Hw-4
MoodyFri M 21 N2-4Sat M 15 Hw-10:30Sat M 1 He-2Sat M 8 Hw-8:30Sat A 24 N1-2Sat A 17 Hw-4Sat A 10 Hw-4
BOWERSOCK A Paramount Photo Play Featuring FRITZI SCHEFF IN "Pretty Mrs. Smith" Matinee 2:45 Any Seat, 10c TO- DAY Ladies and Gents Imperial Shining Parlor and Hat Works We clean and relock all kinds of hats, Ladies and Gents Panamas Especially. 737 Mass. St. ALL SHINES. 5c. FLOWERS FOR THE PROM Orders should be placed early. Don't wait until the last day. Give the Florist a chance to get them out on time. 825½ Mass. THE FLOWER SHOP Phones 621 The Christian Science Society announces a Free Lecture on Christian Science to be given by DR. FRANCIS J. FLUNO, C. S. D. of San Francisco, California, in the Chapel in Fraser Hall, on Friday, April 16, 1915, at 4:30 in the afternoon. Dr. Fluo is a member of the Board of Lectureship of the Mother Church, the First Church of Christ Scientist in Boston, Mass. Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE 18 W. Ninth Lawrence Pantatorium Rabindranath Tagore Hindu Poet awarded the Nobel prize for Literature 1913 Subscribe for the DAILY KANSAN LECTURE ON Unitarian Church CHRISTMAS CHURCH SUNDAY, APRIL 11th, 7:30 p.m. No Admission Charged Professional Cards J. F. BROCK, Optometrist, and Spe- cific Ophthalmologist of OFFICE $202 million. St. Bell Phone 6951. HARRY HEDING, M. D. Eye, ear, nose, and throat, Glasses fitted, Office, F. A. U. Bldg. Phones, Bell 513. Home 512. Phones 506 J. R. BECHELT, M. D., D. O. $22 J. R. BECHELT. Both phones, office and residence. W. G. JONES, A. M. M. D. Disease of State. E. H. Bing. Residence 1809 State. F. H. Bing. Residence 1809 DR. H. L. CHAMBERS Office over Squires studio. Both phones. A. J. ANDERSON, M. D., Office 715 Vt. St. Phones 124. DR. PETER D. PAULS, Osteopath, Office and residence. 7½ East 7th St. General practice. Both phones at (30) 120, 2 to 5, and 7 to 8 by appointment. DR. N. HAYES, 2029 Mass. St. General Alisa. Also treats the eye and brain. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Bye, ear and head injury. Guaranteed. Dick Bldg. Jewelers Classified ED. W. PAIKSONS, Engraver, Watch- and Jewelry, Bell Phone 711-717. 717 Mass. Plumbers PHONE KNENDED PLUMBING CO. PHONE KNENDED PLUMBING CO. MIA Phone, 6358. MIA Phone, 6358. Barber Shops Insurance Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK. 913 Mass. FIRE INSURANCE LOANS, and ab- sorption. Building. Dlift 157. Home 259. Bark b FLANK E. B. ANKS, Ins., and abstracts of Tilt. Room 2. F. A. U. Building Want Ads LOST—Chainless nose glasses Right lens cracked. Left in Fraser 207, about two months ago. Finder call either phone 126. 125-38. LOST-Mesh bag containing dollar in or between Fraser and Administration Building. Finder keep dollar in or between Coverdale, 1245 La phone B. 1244. Send the Daily Kansan home. McColloch's DrugStore Box Stationery All Grades-All Prices Schulz 913 MASS. ST. SNAPPY SPRING SUITINGS BURT WADHAM'S UKT WADHAMS "College Inn Barber Shop" G LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas Largest and best equipped business college *Kansas*, School occupies 2 floors Bureau Bank building. We teach STND- ing. We have a large number of sample of Stenotype notes and a catalog WATKINS' NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depository. FRANK KOCH "THE TAILOR" Full Line of Spring Suitings STUDENT HEADQUARTERS TUDENTS' SHOE SHOP R. O. BURGERT, Prop. 1107 Mass. St. Satisfaction Guaranteed THEIS BINDING Engraved and Printed Cards. Sheaffer's Self-filling Fountain Pens. 744, Margo Street. A. G. ALRICH 744 Mass. Street. The University of Chicago The University of Chicago HOME in addition to resident buffalo nursing correspondence STUDY For detailed information 22nd Year U. of C., Div, H, Chicago, Ill. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TRACKMEN MAKE GOOD SHOWING IN TRYOUTS As the time for the Des Moines Relay games approaches the track men are taking unprecedented interest in the tryouts. Competition among the men has reached such a stage that a day never passes with no change. The mile and the half mile have been run most lately because the men expected only to be entered in the four- and two-mile relays. With the announcement yesterday that the one-mile and half-mile teams had already entered in the competition, already entered the shorter distance men are coming out in full force. Announcement was also made that the tryouts would not be held in any one afternoon but the standing of the men in all races up to the time of the meet would be considered. This gives the men a chance to show their ability without having a lucky streak on a certain day. The main effort of the Kansas men will be on watching the four-mile relay for it depends on their showing at Des Moines whether they will be sent to compete with the eastern colleges at Philadelphia a week later. In the regular practice yesterday the coach put the men through a preliminary tryout and fast time was made in both the mile and half-mile races. Then he up for the 880-yard run, the former winning by a few feet in the fast time of 2:02 flat. Herriott's specialty has always been the mile but with such time as 2:03 to his credit in the race, he had a hand at repeating in this event. Des Moines Relay Candidates Speed up—Grady Leads in Mile The mile was not quite as exciting as the half but was full of surprises. Grady won this event in 4:40 with Sproull a few feet behind. Edwards was forced to take third in 4:43 with Poos coming in fourth a second later. With all the men running around the same time it will be hard to pick out the winner. Really, The men from whom the four-mile team will be chosen will be Captain Edwards, Rodkey, Herriott, Grady, C. Sproull, Poos and Stateleer The two-mile team making the trip will be picked after the line up for a game, and then chosen. The men who have been trying for this event and from whom the team will be composed are Capable Creighton, C. Sproull, and Fiske. SPOONER LIBRARY GETS 229 RELIC VOLUMES The craving to hide away in the attic and dig through the musty old relics that have gained their fascination through their age may soon be satisfied in Spooner Library by a visit to the "History and Chronicles of Great Britain." Many of the books in the library have been collected from the dusty corners of libraries and even attics much older than any in America. Some of the books bear on their fly-leaves comments that show they were written wit he quill pen while other volumes have book-plates engraved in Latin, French or even old Anglo-Saxon. Send the Daily Kansan home. ALPHA TAUS WIN FIRST, 8-2 Last Year's Champs Take Initial Game From Acusin The Alpha Taus took the Acacias into camp in the first game of the Pan-Hellenic league yesterday, 8 to 2. The work of both teams was ragged at times, a slow game resulting from the lack of practice. Poor fielding resulted in three-base hits by King and Benton being stretched into home runs. Besides these two long hits the game was featureless with no conditions like last two innings resemble a game of water baseball. Stuewe, pitching for the Alpha Tau, held his opponents to one hit, while his teammates found Trecee for five solid swats, two triples and three singles. Padgett, who pitched for the A.T. O.'s, was found for one hit, Score by innings: R. H. E. Apa Tai Tau .202 13 1 2 3 .010 10 2 1 2 3 NEW GYM COURSE OPEN TO FOOT TEACHERS A practical course in gym work will be given for the rest of the term, beginning April 20, for the benefit of students who do not play netball or rect athletics. The class will meet Tuesdays and Thursdays at 4:30 o'clock. No credit will be given for the course, but anyone interested and willing to work is invited to join the course. H. A. Lorenz, in speaking of the plan, said "We are doing it only because the men who expect to teach want some experience in handling such a class before they get out of school." We should have charge for one period at least, and will get the idea fairly well in the short time left this term." It is the first time that such a course has been offered, and the success of the plan depends on the interest shown in it by the students. The student will have the course in coaching methods given at 8:30 o'clock by Coach Hamilton. A memorial for the junior class is nearer realization than ever before, according to Henry A. Shinn, chairman of the junior memorial committee. Collectors have been appointed to work in the different schools and their reports are beginning to come in. JUNIOR COMMITTEE WORKS FOR MEMORIAL The exact standing of the work will not be known before April 15 when Shinn will be free from his debating work and will be prepared to make reports concerning the progress of the collections. An excellent line of chocolates at Reynolds Bros.-Adv. The robin and the redbird may fall, the flowers may come "a bit too soon," and even the slow moving oak buds may be premature in their bursting, but there is one sign that each year unquestionably marks the coming of spring on the campus: the going of the storm fronts. STORM FRONTS TAKEN TO SUMMER QUARTERS STORM FRONTS TAKEN the first one to disappear this year was from the east entrance of Fraser Hall; this one was closely followed. The two doors are finally the two north doors on the Spooner vestibule departed for their summer quarters. Miss Bailey Withdraws Miss Battey Miss Bailey junior College, has withdrawn from school. Move Fowler Motor The motor which lifts the elevator in Fowler Shops is being moved from the second floor to a shelf on the first floor where it will be out of the way. This is being done to make space for an enlargement of the tool room. Swiss Chocolate Sundays and Eccl- ery try them at Wiedemann's. Adv. For "Goodness" Sake get a coke at Reynolds Bros.-Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. Hats galore showered from the bats of the Pi U's during their game with Alpha Chi Sigma yesterday and sixteen of Pi's brothers crossed the threshold while not a single Chemist passed third base. PI U'S SWAMP CHEMICALS Stockton pitched superb ball for the winners, allowing one hit and not passing a man. "Cherry" Baldwin, for the Chemicals, started well but tired soon and wounded at will. Tired soon and wounded with two on was the hitting feature. Heavy Hitting and Superb Hurling too much for Alpha Chi Sigmas Tuesday at 4 o'clock, the Pi U's sit on Sigma. Pi Sigma in the second round. Binks— What course is Jones taking? Jinks-Dental Engineering. Binx—Denah kipnethen Binx—(He asks the natural question Jinx—Bridge Building—Nebraska Awwan. For "Goodness" Sake get a coke at Revnolds Bros.-Adv. Series Chocolate Sundries and Ec Swiss Chocolate Sundes and Ec- trary —try them at Wiedemann's—Aat Reynolds Bros. for good smooths Ady. Pan-Hellenic Baseball Schedule DIVISION I. DIVISION I. Acacia Acacia Σ AE Σ TΩ April 13 April 27 April 8 May 3 April 20 DIVISION II. K Σ Δ T Σ Φ Δ θ April 14 April 9 April 30 April 5 April 26 DIVISION III. Σ X Σ Φ T Σ Φ K Ψ April 19 May 6 April 28 May 4 April 23 Inter-fraternity Baseball League Schedule
Phi BetaSigma PhiPi UAlpha ChiP A. D.
Phi BetaRE AD THEApril 7 April 26April 17 May 8April 24 May 15April 10 May 1
Sigma PhiApril 7 April 26DAILY KANSANApril 13 May 4April 20 May 11April 23 May 14
Pi U.April 17 May 8April 13 May 4FOR THEApril 8 April 29April 21 May 12
Alpha Chi SigmaApril 24 May 15April 20 May 11April 8 April 29LATEST OFApril 15 May 6
Alpha DeltaApril 10 May 1April 23 May 14April 15 May 6April 15 May 6SPORT DOPE
VARSITY THEATRE Special Attractions Next Week Thursday, Friday and Saturday "With the German Army at the Front" Monday-one day only Original pictures of the European world's war; nothing acted or posed. Genuine scenes of their lives taking these pictures. The Salisbury Family Vocal, Instrumental and Novelty Entertainers. Better than ever. Change of act and pictures daily. Spalding's Base Ball Declared Official By The Pan-Hellenic, Hash House and Inter-Fraternity Leagues. Just another evidence to the quality of this merchandise. Exclusively at CARROLL'S 709 Mass. St. Phones 608 Shoes plus service This is the combination we offer you. This is the combination we offer you. Strong and Garfield shoes for men have the stamina and the looks. Why not get this combination with your next pair of shoes or oxfords? You have many styles and colors to select from. You have many styles and colors to select from. $6^{Pr}$ FISCHER'S Just Received by Express Some Swell New Tipperary Bat Ties. One for fifty cents More of those silk sox 2 pair-2 bits A complete showing of Palm Beach Suits. Come look. Robert E. House A little farther up the street, a little less to pay Subscribe for the Daily Kansan MEASUREMENT FOR SENIOR CAPS AND GOWNS AT CHECK STAND in Fraser from Monday 12 to Friday 16. $1 Deposit with Measure. THE DRAMATIC EVENT OF THE SEASON NOT THIS MESSRS. SHUBERT Present William Hodge in Booth Tarkington's Comedy "The Man From Home" APRIL 14 Original N. Y. Cast — PRICES $2.50, $2, $1.50 CARPALLES 10-45 FREE LIFT SUSPENDED FREE LIST SUSPENDED THERE'S a baker's dozen of laughs for every K. U. student in this clever 4-act comedy. THE date rule will be off. Nothing stands in your way. Meet your friends at the Bowersock Wednesday, April 14 BUT THIS The K. U. Dramatic Club Will Offer a Well Trained Cast in "The Man From Home" Bowersock Theatre—APRIL 14 PRICES 25c, 50c, 75c STREET CARS AND JITNEYS FREE LIST FORGOTTEN SEAT SALE OPENS TOMORROW AT 8:30 O'CLOCK AT THE ROUND CORNER DRUG STORE-BUY YOUR SEATS EARLY UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII. HOCKEY WILL BE REAL GAME FOR K. U. WOMEN NUMBER 128 Dr. Alice Goetz Would Estab lish One Principal Sport for Students at University WILL PRACTICE ALL YEAR Physical Training Instructor Would Have Women Participate in Athletics Winter and Summer Hockey will hold first place in sports for the women at K. U. If Dr. Alice Goetz's plans and hopes come true. Game Established at Other Schools "Hockey at Nebaska and Missouri is well established, and Missouri is anxious to play with the men of Kansas. If we organize a good team we can give them the opportunity, and it will be great fun. "The Woman's Football" "It is really the only good sport in which college women are at all interested," went on Dr. Goetz. "Basketball is more for girls of high school age and peters to our college. Girls come to our college. College boys come to something new, something a little less strenuous and rough, and hockey fits in with that requirement. As played by women it is an all year sport, and is played in the wrist on the frozen ground. The costume used consists of a short skirt and a shirt wavy or middy. Next year we hope to tion of uniforms if skirt, waist, and coat be warm colors. High shoes should be worn, and shin guards to protect the players from any possible wild shots of the enemy." Hockey for women corresponds in some ways to football for men, with all the objectionable features left out. There are eleven players on a side, and they are placed on one end of the football, with five forwards corresponding to the line men, three half backs, two full backs, and one goal keeper. The field itself is 100 yards long and ty-five yards wide, and has yard posts at each end in a gridron, through which the ball or pack must be shot to score a goal. The women's tennis courts back of the Gym are being converted into a hockey field, and will be ready for practice by next Wednesday. VAUDEVILLE TO BE APRIL 20 "We want lots of ethnomusic for the game," said Dr. Goetz as a final touch to the team's victory. Women's athletics at Kansas is a real factor in the life of the school." Student Actors Stage University Circus in Robinson Gymnasium Robinson Gymnasium will be the scene Tuesday night, April 20, of the K. U. Vaudeville show staged by the department of physical education at the university fund. The largest stage ever built in the Gymnasium will be erected for the occasion and the forty gloriously costumed characters who will perform during the evening moment that there will not be an idle moment. The production will surpass the circuses of former years and the introducing of the vaudeville program in 1920. The production will be forgotten. The admission for the whole affair is twenty-five cents and the sale of tags was started today. The reception will be the W. St. Reserved seats will go on sale later at ten cents extra. Commends Daily Kansan Prof. W, H. Carruth, formerly the head of the department of German at the University of Kansas, but now at Leland Stanford, Jr., University, writes his recommendation of the University Daily Kansan papers carry an serious a concern for their institutions," he concludes. Prospective Teachers Candidates for the University Teachers' Diploma and the State Teachers' Certificate are requested to come to Room 119, Fraser Hall, at their early convenience not later than April 16th, to fill out and sign applications for the same. Arvin Olin, Dean, School of Educaiton. PROFESSOR HAWORTH WANTS WAR TO END Only Peace Can Free His Son UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, MONDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL, 12, 1915. One K. U. professor is hoping or an early peace in Europe. Paul Iaworth, son of Prof. Erasmus Haworth of the department of German history at the Irish army where he serve until four months after the end of the war. "If the war lasts ten years, Paul will have to serve ten years and four months," Professor Haworth said; confirming a letter Paul wrote him recently. "We hear from him quite often, but the mail comes irregularly and nearly always in bunches. The last letter and message was from him. He saw a lot of pictures, some of them taken at the Pyramids; where his company was stationed. Paul said that he and some of the men were in one of the pyramids one night. Paul Haworth never entered the University. He enlisted in the Australian department of the army. He left Lawrence late in June, last year, before the war with Britain. His thought of the United States. He invited a vacation trip, intending to be gone two or three weeks. He arrived in San Francisco about the time when the news of Austria's declaration of war on Servia was made public. The occupants of the hotel travelled from fruit salesman who persuaded him to join in a trip to Sydney, Australia where he enlisted. K. U. MAN FIGHTS ON AISNE Fritz Kollerman, Formerly Profes- sor of German, Defender Fatha- ter. Prof. H, O. Kruse has had a letter from the father of Fritz Kellerman, who was a German instructor in K. U last year, saying that Mr. Kellerman took part in the battle of Vouziers, on the Aiine about half way between Reims and Verdun. The battle was a very demanding attempt but Kellerman to break the lines which was unsuccessful Mr. Kellerman was well and unwounded according to the last reports that the father had received. Mr. Kellerman was at home to rest, after having attended the University of Marsburg and passed with merits his examination for a doctor's degree, when the war out. He was then stationed at Tosdam near Berlin to drill and was later transferred to the western battalier near Lille. He was taken sick and sent to a Belgian hospital. On his recovery he was again sent to the front and took part in the battle of Vouziers. Y, M. INSTALLS NEW OFFICERS THURSDAY An installation dinner for the new officers of the University Y. M. J. A. will be held at 5:30 o'clock Thursday evening in room 2 members of the old and new cabinets of the old and new boards will be present. Hal Coffman, retiring president, will act as toastmaster, and short talks will be made by former Governor W. R. Stubbs, Chancellor Frank Strong, E. E. Blincec, Lyle Anderson, Rex Miller and Con Hoffmann. Reports of the various committees for the past year will be turned over by the former chairmen of committees to the new chairmen. K. U. MEN SPEAK IN KANSAS CITY CHURCH A gospel team composed of Neal Ireland, Jess Gassher, Clyde Gelvin, T. H. Vaughan, and Rex Mickey representing the University Y. M. C. A. The team conducted the morning services at the Prospect Avenue Congregational church and took charge of the week's service of the Y. M. C. in the afternoon. **meters** One of the latest purchases in the department of physics is a potentiometer to measure voltage. Its cost is fifty dollars. At the morning service, four members of the team talked on the general subject of practical Christianity and at the afternoon meeting, each member of the team answered the question "Why Am I A Christian?" Speaker: Rev. William B. Lampe, First Presbyterian Church, Winfield Tuesday: "Sanitation and Moral Life." Physicists Get Instrument At Morning Prayers Wednesday; "Fair Weight in Lab oratory and Life." Friday; "The Choice Part of Education." Thursday: "Survival of the Fit test." Students desiring to confer with Reverend Lampe will find him at Myers Hall Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday from 2:30 until 5 o'clock. At other times he can be seen by appointment through Con Hoffmann. DRAMATIC CLUB MAY START PRIZE FUND Expect to Set Aside a Part of Proceeds of Play for Playwright In the hope of putting dramatics at the University on a higher plane and also adding more local interest the K. U. Dramatic Club expects to establish a permanent fund to be held by the students who will write original plays. A part of the receipts of this season's play, "The Man From Home," which will be staged at the Bowery sock theater into this fund and the Club expects to make an offer of at least twenty-five dollars for a play for next year's production. If the attendance at the play Wednesday night indicates the members of the Club hope to offer fifty dollars in prizes. "Students in other schools write good plays for their dramatic clubs and I see no reason why the students of the University of Kansas cannot do the same," said Prof. Arthur MacMurray, head of the department of public speaking, this morning, the drama department proposed to start should stimulate the geniuses enough to get busy. Next year we hope to be able to stage a home-talent play, from playwright down to the smallest part." A report of this boy dramatist's work which appeared in a New York paper says that the play is an "upide-down play." It is pure melancholy, has a manual view and original. Here's what Reizmutein said about his play: It has been suggested by members of the Dramatic Club that K, U, may get into "the big leagues" just like other schools when some of the local playwrights get busy. Not long ago, Elmer L. Reizenstein 23, received a doctorate from University, had a play, "On Trial," accepted by the Cohan and Harris producing company and it is estimated that he will receive $150,000 in royalties. "Last winter I was reading a criticism by Clayton Hamilton in which he said that the plays then on Broadway were so badly done that they could be acted backward as well as forward. It occurred to me that it would be an interesting experiment to try a play backward just to see how much effect it had on analytic instead of synthetic—deductive instead of inductive—to make it break down instead of build up. I wrote the play in six days." The "upside-down" play has had its 266th performance at the Candler theater, New York and interest to be as high as on the first night. H. C. OF L. BACK AGAIN Miss Anna Barrows, of Columbia, to Tell Women How to Down Costs "The Cost of Living, Do We Want to Reduce It?" will be the subject of a lecture by Miss Anna Barrows, instructor in Teachers College, Columbia University, and secretary of the National Home Economics Association, Thursday afternoon, at 3:30 o'clock in Fraser chapel. Miss Barrows will be the guest of the department of economics from Wednesday until Friday. On Friday afternoon Miss Barrows will give a demonstration in the new laboratory kitchen. Miss Barrows has been a teacher of cookery for more than twenty years and has lectured widely on different phases of the science. She has published a book on "Eggs" and "Cookery" in several titles. Cookery" and is a contributor for agricultural, religious and household papers. Abilene High School—The fourth annual Dickinson County field meet will be held at Abilene April 17. All the high schools of the county and many of the graded schools will send contestants. There are usually hundreds of athletes entered, Ray Edwards, of K. U., has been asked to referee. The members of the women's mixer committee will meet Wednesday afternoon to plan for the next mixer. Those on the committee are Dorothea Hackbusch, Eunice Pleasant, and Elizabeth Morrow. Mixer Committee Meets Edwards to be a Referee The Snow Zoology Club will meet Tuesday evening at 7:30 o'clock in Snow Hall. Miss Alice Brown will speak on "Miller and Physiology" with Dr. W. W. Cox, a producer for discussion the subject, "The Cell as the Basis of Heredity." Zoologists to Discuss Muller Beta vs. Kappa Sigs Betta Theta Pi and Kappa Sigma pla- baseball at Woodland Park this air- ground in the Pan-Hellenic League. CAPS AND GOWNS MAY BE WORN BY FACULTY Long Black Robes are Highly Favored by Many Professors Will the faculty went caps and gowns this year during commence- ment week? Professors This is the question that is upper most in the minds of some of the faculty at present. Probably the most enthusiastic one over the new idea is Prof. J. N. Van der Vries. Professor Van der Vries thinks the idea is splendid and believes commencement exercises, including a campus diet, are widely adopted them. All the leading Universities and schools of the United States and nearly all the schools of Europe wear during commencement week. Professor Van der Vries said that in Eastern schools it was customary not only to wear the caps and gowns there, but also to wear them it would also customary for the faculty to wear them to all convocations. "Caps and gowns give a tone and dignity to commencement that nothing else can," he said. "Besides the different graduates from the departments in the University have a distinctive pattern on their gowns and thus are recognized in the process. School colors are in the center. Students worn the public cap tell from what school the graduates come. In many Universities the whole student body wears caps and gowns." professors P. B. Dains and W. A. Whitaker expressed themselves favorable to the faculty wearing caps and gowns. ONATES BOOKS TO LIBRARY Walter C, Pierce, of Darlow, Kansas Presents 'Volumes to Spooner A box of interesting old books and periodicals arrived at the Library this week as a gift from Walter C. Pierce, of Darlow, Kansas. In the collection are a number of old French books dating back to the 18th century history. It also contains several hundred interesting engravings. Another book is a "Manual of Chemistry" by John W. Webster, M.D. of Harvard University, publish- ing in the New York and works of Brande, Henry, Berzelius and Thomson. In writing of this book Mr. Pierce says: "Professor Webster was convicted of murdering a man who was trying to collect a debt of him. He burned his viac body in his laboratory forurance." Other books in the collection are "A Handbook of Natural Philosophy and Astronomy," by Dionysius Lardner, of the University, London; "University of Illinois on Surveying, containing as a prefix a Perspicuous System of Plane Trigonometry," by John Gummere, A. M., published at Philadelphia in 1829; "The Book of Numbers published in Paris in 1829; and 20 numbers of "The Berenac," a religious publication of Wilmington, Delaware, in 1825. There are also several numbers of the Atlantic Monthly Journal of the American Agriculturist, published in the 50's and 60's. The books will be cataloged and placed in the stacks. The mural painting of a geological map of Kansas on the east wall of the staircase in Haworth Hall was finished Saturday. The map shows the different clays and strata o the state. JAWORTH PAINTING HAWORTH PAINTING SHOWS CLAYS OF STATE A workman commenced preparing the border of the east wall for the painter this morning on which will be painted a cross section view of the state similar to the cross on the United States on the opposite wall. S. T. Dickinson, a graduate of the School of Fine Arts, is long the painting. Former Dean to Mayans Dr. M. A. Barber, formerly dean of the School of Medicine of the University of Kansas will leave his brother's home at Burlington, Kansas this week for the Malay Archipelago to make a study of the tropical diseases. The Rockefeller International Commission is sending him. Fish Culturist at K. U. R. I. D. Lindsay, Fish Culturist, at the State University, Pratt was a guest of Prof. and Mrs. W. J. Baumgartner over Sunday. Former Dean to Malays Fish Culturist at K. U. Alden Called Home Roger O. Alden, special Engineer, from Springfield, Mass., was called home Saturday by the sudden ill- ness of his brother. Alden will not return to school this semester but will probably re-enroll next year. Alden is a member of the Pi Upsilon fraternity. SPRING BRINGS OUT GRAFTER'S WARM HAND Agents Talk Easy Money Scheme Shortly after the grass begins to make its first appearance on the campus and early songsters are looking over possible summer quarrels with homes infected with a multitude of very different beings—the grafters. One of this motley crew meets an unsuspecting student on the campus and after shaking him warmly by the hand, starts out to convince him that he is particularly well fitted for salesmanship. The upshot of the conversation is that the student begins meeting with several other, "particularly fitted," companions and in the end shell out three delines for his teacher and becomes a full-fledged grafter. After numerous practices in which certain members of this new organization play the unsuspecting farmer while others practice the intentional loosen up they let loosen upon their intended victims. They separate to various parts of the state and begin the task of impressing their intended customers with the ideas, techniques and generally with a poor opinion of the results of university training. But the real farmer is not the looking glass or squad companion type so often practiced upon. He has ideas of his own and the result is that about one-twentieth of the get-rich-quick aspirants who saw all their fraternity dues, paid bills for the expenses, and缴满 bills, for the annual school year, paid from three months work, ever finish the season. The ten dollar bill from dad pays their railroad fare home and there they remain the rest of the summer. ACCOUNT BOOKS ARE DUE "All students' accounts will be audited Friday morning and their account books must be in Thursday." **The astrar George O. Foster** this morning. Secretary Lardner Comes Friday and Reports Must be in by.Thursday James T. Lardner, secretary of the Board of Administration is to be here Friday. His visit, for the purpose of study programs, for institutions, are an annual affair and any possible entanglements of student funds are traced at this time. Mr. Lardner will be able to be necessary one day and may be required that account books are in by Thursday Mr. Foster said. IOUSEKEPERS TALK SHOP OVER TEA CUPS The housekeepers' tea party, to which invitations have been issued by Mrs. Eustace Brown, advisor of women, and Con Hoffmann, inspector of rooming houses, will be held at the residence of Mr. Myers Hall. Every keeper of a student rooming house is expected to be present. Resolutions will be presented for adoption which will fix universal regulations governing points which are often in danger between students and landlubes. D. W. L. Burdick, Dean F. W. Blackman, and Registrar George O. Richardson OFFER'S TWO PRIZES FOR POETS AND WRITERS Five dollars for the best story, two dollars for the best poem, honorable mention for the second best poem and story, and membership in Quill Club to all successful contenders are offered to them. All three are freshmen of the University submitting their copy before May 10. The stories must be not more than 3,000 words in length. All submissions are to be the property of Quill Club, and may be published later in the Oread magazine. Successful contributions will be published in the next issue of the Oread following May 10. Contributions may be dropped in the box in Fraser Hall. STOLEN PICTURE COMES BACK THROUGH MAIL The picture which was stolen from the collection in the Administration Building has been returned to Prof. W. A. Griffith through the mail. Professor Griffith has no idea who took it, but after the news of its disappearance was announced, it came back. The picture was an Algerian street scene by Walter Walez and was valued at $75. It was one of the best picture in the collection. C. K. Ober Coming to K. U. C. K, Ober Coming to K. U. C. K, Ober, the man who men- John R. Mott to take up his religious work among us, will be the leader of the meeting of the Y. M. C. a. Next Sunday afternoon in Myers Hall. Mr. Ober is the Fellowship Secretary of the International Committee of the Y. M. C. A., and the author of "Out of the Fog" and "Adventures in Faith." WANT A SIMPLER PROM TO STOP USUAL LOSS Elaborateness of 1915 Junior Event Keeps Many Away and Causes Deficit WAS A BIG SOCIAL SUCCESS Formal Party Was Planned to Last Detail and, Went off Without Confusion—But Lost $50 Comparatively few paid admissions to the Junior Prom will cause a deficit of not less than fifty dollars which the management will be required to make up. A fully itemized account of the expenditures and income has not yet been made but it was estimated that the affair lost money. Too many free admissions, to seniors who paid their dues last year and to faculty members, and not enough paid tickets are the reasons assigned for the financial failure of the event. The elaborateness of the event runs up the cost so high that only a small number buy tickets. Would Reduce Free List Bryan Davis, co-manager of the Prom, is of the opinion that a simpler Prom should be given next year, and if possible, the free list should be reduced to the absolute minimum. Notwithstanding the fact that this year's Prom was a financial failure there is no denying that as a social event it was one of the biggest successes in K. U. history. The junior farce, "A Letter of Introduction," opened the festivities. With Maria Slade and Cecil DeRoin in the leading roles, and John Elliott furnishing the chief comedy part, the players furnished thirty minutes of real farce. Don Burnett, who played the villain, getting the plot of the playlet hopelessly entangled, while Ruth Lillis and Nellie Houston, in minor roles, succeeded in providing a proper background for the main action. Following is the cast: Reception Follows Farce Following is the cast: Mr. Robert - Cecil DeRain. Mr. Roberts - Maria Slade. Mr. Campbell - Don Rushnell. Mr. Campbell - Ruth Lillis. Mr. Westgate - John Elliott. Bella, the maid - Nellie Houston. Following the fare, the receiving line formed on the dancing floor, and the guests passed upstairs to be introduced down the line. Some disappointment was occasioned through the failure of Governor and Mrs. Capper to attend, but the great majority of the students, at least, were satisfied with meeting such cellars. T H Ashmore of the Board of the Board of Administration, Mrs. Cora G. Lewis, and Chancellor Strong. The grand march began at eighthirty, led by Dick Burton, president of the junior class, and Miss Malaise of the dance followed. The dance included or programmed dances on cards for cases for the ladies and bill folds for the men, met with favor among the crowd. Four course refreshments were served at dimly lighted tables where they could enjoy intermission. Dancing continued until two o'clock Saturday morning. There were many exclamations of delight when the guests filed upstairs and gained their first view of the magnificent decorations. Tony the artist of the decoration committee, had sprung a little surprise of his own, in the form of an electric fountain, which added just the right note to the splendid effect produced by the Japanese affairs office. A woman, who was a woman, who has attended four Proms, and who became as excited as any freshman when she saw the beautiful hall, gave the highest criticism to the decorations. "Why?" she exclaimed, "I didn't imagine Bobbie Gymnastium could ever be like this." Decoration Well-Received And that's what everybody else thought, too. Seine Einzige Tochter "His Only Daughter," a German play, was presented in Green Hall, Saturday evening by the German Club. Miss Margarethe Hochderf and Prof. W. W. Hawkins had charge if the affair. Following is the cast: Reinsberg - George Berg. Pauline - Charlotte Jagger. Max Esseb - Karl Noll. Rertha - Ruth Smith. Mathilde - Wend H. W. Paul. Mathilde - Martha Pitrowski. Kamilla - Elsa Wilhelmi. Leopodine - Helen Riddle. Herman Dillberg - Alfred Brauer. Heinrich von der Weuse - Oscar Friedrich—L. A, Winsor. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kenya EDITORIAL STAFF HIPPOPULAR John M. Lee...Editor-in-Chief Raymond Clapper...Managing Editor Helen Hayes...Associate Editor William Cady...Exchange Editor BUSINESS J. W. Dyckey...Business Manager S. Sturlevant...Advertising Mgr. - REPORTORIAL STAFF Leon Harsh Ames Rogers Gilbert Clayton John M. Gleisner J. McCormick J. McCormick Charles Sweet Don Davis Eimer Arndt Carolyn McNutt Rex Miller Paul Brindel Hewitt Hattie Glenden Allvine C. A. Ritter Chester Patterson Fred Bowers Subscription price $2.60 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. Entered an second-class mail matter with the postmaster at Lowrence, Kansas, under the act of at Lawrence. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone. Bell K. U. 25. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate at Kansas to go further than merely printing the text of a mascot; to go further than merely printing the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courteous; to solve problems to wiser heads, in all, and to identify the students of the University. Fair Play and Accuracy Bureau Prof. H. T. Hill...Faculty Member Don Joseph...Student Member John M. Henry...Secretary of the Daily Kansas office in mistake in any or impression in any of the columns of the Daily Kansas, report it to the secretary at the Daily Kansas office. Construct jon as to further procedure. MONDAY, APRIL 12, 1915. WESTWARD HO! Although that section of the country to the right of Father Jacques Marquette, as he glided down the Mississippi on his adventurous quest, has never been able to produce a chief executive for the nation, it has forged to the front along the line of athletic endeavor. A perusal of the Spalding baseball and other athletic almanacs for the past season shows the prominence of western men in games requiring skill, strength and endurance. Gregg, Seaton, Peinpuckau, Chance and a host of other big leaguers gathered their preliminary experience in the west. The names of Kelly, Beeson, Parker and Drew, all worlds record holders, are on the lips of cinderpath men throughout the world. Our own Cupid Haddock set up a fifty mark of 5-1 four years since, which seems unlikely to be shattered. This early in the 1915 season, Drew, Kelly and Karl Shattuck are approaching records, while Simpson, the prolific Missouri point winner, and his team mate Floyd threaten to break into the exclusive class. Richards, the Cornell jumper, learned enough about the game to clear the bar at 6-5 before registering at Cornell. What good all this? Greece recognized the necessity of developing her great statesmen, her dramatists and her orators as well as her soldiers by the fostering of athletics. Hence the Olympic Games. We revere Washington and Lincoln, great specimens of manhood, who could throw stones and wrestle. A San Francisco lawyer and patron of western art has offered a cup to the high school athletes of the coast each year for excellence in the shot put, explaining his action by saying that the American people were too prone to neglect this side. Perhaps this western rise in physical development presages a corresponding action along other lines. USE SOFT PENCIL A recent article reprinted in these columns advises readers to mark their books as they read; to under-score and annotate freely, in order to emphasize in their own minds the more important points and to enable them to skim a book at the second reading and still get the best out of it. Now that may be all right when reading one's own books, though there is room for argument even here. At any rate it is legitimate. But when it comes to other people's books, and especially those that are virtually common property, such as . Library books—well, that's something else on n.ain, Mawruss. Nothing is more irritating to the sensitive reader than to have to read a book that is underscored in all the wrong places, as it seems to him, while the things he considers particularly good have been passed up without a scratch. The temptation is strong to supplement the markings with some of his own, but is generally resisted for the sake of those who are to come after. As for the unspeakable persons who attempt to improve on the style of well known and accepted authors by crossing out words and substituting others; by changing the grammar to suit their own opinions on disputed points; by inserting gratuitous question marks and exclamation points; by half a dozen other fiendish, ill mannered and boorish tricks they aren't fit to read books at all, and shouldn't be allowed inside a library. To those who are addicted to any or all of these habits, and have become such slaves to them that they can't read a book without disfiguring it and insulting the author, we beg to suggest that they make their decorations with a soft pencil, so that the next person who tries to read the book can erase the marks. This we ask in the name of altruism, Christianity, and the Golden Rule. VICTORS: "We've got some little team, what?" "That last one just came down as easy." "I was all out of practice, but—" "That battery of ours ain't so slow, now." "It certainly did me good to fan that chap out after he was so windy." "I'll tell you fellows, we we've got a good chance at this championship." VANQUISHED; "Well, it might have been worse." "That field was in a dickens of a shape." "I'd just got out of bed." "My arm was sore. I could hardly rainbow it to second." "And the sons-of-guns would have swiped our ball if I hadn't watched them." "They can't say we ain't good users, anyhow." The vanquished last week-end may be the victors in all the games to come. If you are on the team that got the smaller score don't lose your pep. Get out and throw a few this week, and bat it around a little, and come back Friday and Saturday. Chasing the Glooms If a man and a woman eat onions when they feel lik it it is a pretty good sign that they are engaged. A word from our wives is sufficient, says N. A. Crawford. The water bond issue is ssettled, but the water itself is a long, long way Slowly it begins to dawn upon your inner understanding that the girl perhaps doesn't care for you all. Perhaps—ob, unworthy thought until event with you to the Junior Prom because no one else would ask her. Yes, she will be delighted to go with you to the Junior Prom, she will dress up and look her prettiest (not only for you but for those other men who stung her), she will dance with you, first with you, talk to you (while she makes eyes at the man on the bed) or dance with the evening,—or rather morning—she will tell you that she never had such a good time in her life. "I have them all full," she says, impatiently. "leave you and go up to downy cottons." Then you swell out, and feel dreadfully important. You pluck up courage, and ask her if she has a date for the next Friday night. Pandora's Box DATES, JUST DATES "I am sorry," she will reply, "but I have had one for a long time." "That is perfectly possible," you think to yourself, so you ask her for the other week-night that next week. Well, it couldn't be helped. Anyway, your face brightens, you'll manage some way or other to tell her that you asked her third choice. Shots at Half-Cock Or Foolishment in Verse THAT POPULAR VEGETABLE It's always found in poetry. It's popular in news. It's popular in prose, And every second drama Sticks one beneath my nose. I can't believe the thing; But sometime mighty soon, I think I'll take a running chance And eat it a Macaron. Speaking the Kansas Language Appearances are often deceitful. The plainly dressed citizen whose garments give off an aroma that is suggestive of the barryard, may be in a position to acquire an amount and have it honored, while the gay young Lothario in the dress suit and patent leather pumps, who floats like a butterfly about the ball room, often is in debt for the very clothes that make him look so gay. The man in the present presents a different perspective behind the scenes. —Downs News. The Wichita Beacon calls on Burbank_to invent a self-pulling Dandelion. WHIKERS AND HOSTILITIES Walt Mason throws neutrality to the four winds and boldly asserts that there would have been no war in Europe if Franz Josef hadn't persisted in wearing sidewishers in his problem-solving that sidewishers are a greater drawback to civilization and national felicity than the other forms of hirsute decoration, but there is no use placing all the blame on a poor old emperor whose burnishes are being used by the nation say. Assuming, as neutrality demands, that no one nation was responsible for the far-flung disturbance, it is still difficult for whiskers of sorts to prove an alibi as a cause of hostilities. While the sidewishers of the dual monarch meet in France, the vaney beards of George and Nick and the ferocious mustache of the kaiser must also be taken into consideration, not to mention the tendency to facial spinach in democratic France among those in high places. The resemblance of George's beard to the casual observer, but there is evidence enough to the close student, and we need only to refer you to our Civil War period, when most men let 'em grow wild as evidence of this contention. The truth is that George was discard the dove and adopt the safety razor as its emblem.—Atchison Globe. The day before election every candidate swore he was sure of election. And the day, following most of them swore on general principles—they are only human, after all—Nocurad Dispatch. Kansas whipped Jack Johnson, downed old John Barleycorn, captured Aguinaldo, broke the wheat record and still has made a smaller success in the United States. A fighter makes powerful enemies.-Atchison Globe. Where Thev Meet Please report any errors in this list to K. U. $2. 7:00 o'clock, Fraser Hall. Botany Bay, 7:00 o'clock, Wednes. of each day, 7:00 m. p. ouck, farter run Bobany between each month, 7.190 p.m. snow, if any Athens home - Mr. can Band - Wed evening Cafe - Friday, Hall Cerule Francaise—Wednesdays. 4:30 p. m., room 206, Fraser. Chancellor's' open office hours—For students, Mondays, 3 to 4 p. m.; for teachers, Wednesdays. Chemical Engineering Society-Alternate Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. m; Chemest College Faculty - Third Thursday of each month. 430 p.m.; lecture College Administrative Committee- First Monday of each month, 4:30 p m m.; Fraser 318. m.; Patterson 324. Faculty - Last Tuesday of each month, 4:30 p.m. on call; lecture room. Chemistry Building. m. Fraser 102. Deutsche Verein—Mondays, 4:30 p. Stuttgart 89. Entomological Club - Every Tuesday afternoon, 2 p. m.; room 202. Museum Building Greek Symposium—First Thursday in each month, 7:30 p. m.; at the homes MARY IN HER English Journal Club—Once a month, or any day. Girls' Glee Club - Mondays and Wednesday. S, p. 12, Northgate. E. Glee Club - Mondays and Wednesday. S, p. 12, Northgate. **Geology** *Jub.* Second, ~140th, and fourth bearth, ~3.40 p. room, *m.* room 203 Haworth. Home Economics Club—Last Wednes- day of each month, 4 p.m. ; m. room Graduate Cb# - Objects *a* and *b* Graduate School Faculty - Second Graduate School Faculty - Second juniper evidence Club—Every third Wednesday evening, at 8. Building Quill Club—Every other Tuesday, 7:30 Snow Zoology Club—Second and Third Floor, Snow Zoology p. m.; Library Biological, Snow Hall. Student Volunteer Meeting—Wednesdays, 7 p. m.; Mcrs Hall. University Post Office—Tuesday of each month, 4:30 p. m.; room 110. University Post Office—Every day except Sunday, 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. University of Kansas First and Facilities not listed—Meet on call. Geology — Second — Seventh — 8:30 p.m. — 4:30 p.m. Kentucky City休庭区 One month, One month, Kansas City and Lawrence. The Museum Building. Faculties not listed—Meet on call. U. B. Branch of the American Business School in Chicago, to confer other Monday night, at 7:39, room 100. Mandolin Club—Wednesdays, 7:30 p. m. Fraser Mathematica! 1. Club—Second and Third Floor, room 103. B. pl., in; room 105, Administration Floor, room 106. Meen's Student Council-Every Tuesday. ULL n. m. Student Union. Mining Journal--Meets first and third Wednesday, each month, 120 p.m. m; room 302, Haworth Hall Orchestra—Tuesday, 7:50 p. m.; Fra- manthus 1209 Oread. For all women For all men. Moved. SET TIME: Pharmaceutical Society—Once a week third Thursday of each month, 4:30 p. m.; 307 Marvin Hall. University, 7:38 p. m.; room 106, Fraser Days, 7:38 p. Women's Student Government Association—Thursday, 430 p. m.; Y. M. C. A.—Regular meeting, Sunnail p. m.; M. Hall, Ferry Hall. Second Semester - Opponent Monday, Feb. 14, 2013; 4:30 p.m.; Myra Hall. For sessions, 4:30 p.m. Y. M. C. A. Board of Directors - Second Monday, each month, 7:30 p.m. Myrna P. Myrna Y. W. C. A. "At Home"—Second, third and fourth Sundays, 4 to 6 p.m. Y. W, C. A. 2. Answer Cabinet—Tuesdays, 7 p. m; 1390 Oread. ADVANCING Board - Second Monday, each month. 8:39 p. m. 1234 Louisiana **master Recess — Friday and Monday** April 2 and 5, 1916. Next Commencement — Wednesday, June 9, 1915. June 9, 1910. Next Summer Session—Opens Thurs. The Pleasure of School Life is Doubled If you are acquainted with the current happenings "on the hill". The cheapest and easiest way to get acquainted is through the columns of the University Daily Kansan SUBSCRIBE NOW. $1.00 for the rest of the year The High School Student who feels an interest in such a vocation as Mechanical Engineering should be encouraged in knowing that the growth of industry, and the modern striving after efficiency, open a broad way of opportunity to the able mechanical engineer. He is always in demand. His position is often one of large responsibility. He is well paid. A four-year course in mechanical engineering with the advantages of fully equipped shops and laboratories, prepares the student to enter this broad field under the best conditions. VOCATION EDITOR University Daily Kansan Lawrence, Kansas UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FINAL TRYOUT TOMORROW Track Men to Compete for Places in Team to Be Entered in Meet PARK LANDING A final tryout to determine the men who will represent the University of Kansas at the Drake Relay Carnival on Saturday, December 10, will be told tomorrow afternoon. Coach Hamilton has entered the Crismon and Blue sunside in four reylays, the mile, half-mile, two-male and four-mile events and at least three of them will be run. Finally, faculty is in selecting men able to repeat in two or three races. This is a necessity because of the fact that only eight men will be taken and they will be allowed two miles, two-miles and mile relays. Whether the mile relay will be run is doubtful as it would probably require an extra squad of four men for this race alone as few two-twenty men would be able to run the longer distance. JAMES VISITED THACKERAY A Spring Favorite: Marvin Grove As a Youngster, Henry's Jacket In terrested English Novelist From the N. Y. Times Henry James in A Small Boy and Emily in *A Little Prince*, his memory of Mr. Thackeray became bound up with the memory of a daguerreotype. "I repaired with my father on an August day to the great Broadway establishment of Mr. Brady," he says, "supreme in that then beautiful art, and it is my impression—the only point vague with me—that though we had read her poetry for the purpose, we were to keep the affair secret, till the charming consequence should break, at home, upon my mother." He goes on to say that "still another remembrance" steals upon him which proves that the adventure was improvised. Sharp assuages the reader not by being adequately dressed as I should have taken thought for had I foresee my exposure; though the resources of my wardrobe as well as constituent could be afforded. "The main resource of a small New York boy in this line at that time was the little sheathlike jacket, tight to the skin; it also covered her in front with a single row of brass buttons—a garment of scant grace, assuredly, and compromised to my consciousness, above all, to allow light from an unforgotten source. "I twas but a short time before those days that the great Mr. Thackeray had come to America to lecture on "The English Humorists," and proceeding from my father's library, in which some glimpse of me hovering, at an opening of the door, in passage or on staircase, prompted him to the armidable words, "Come be boy! Be boy! Meet me your extraordinary jacket!" "My sense of my jacket became from that hour a heavy one—further enriched as my vision is by my shy appearance, but I am celebrated visitor, who struck me, in the sunny light of the animated room, as enormously big, and who though he laid on my shoulders the day before, would have hung the spectacles of wonder. "I was to know later on why he had been so amused, and why, after asking me if this were the common uniform of my age and class, he remarked that I should go there. I should be addressed as 'Battons.' It had been revealed to me thus in a flash that we were somehow 'queer,' and though never exactly crushed by it I became aware that I at least knew him in Mr. Brady's visse. Beautiful most decidedly the loet art of the dauerreotype." MEREDITH ON HIS OWN WORK From the Boston Transcript The letters of George Meredith open many an intimate glimpse into his literary purposes. We find him writing a memoir, D. Conway about "Benjamin's Career." Conway had evidence approached him in regard to an American edition, and Meredith resplies: Tells What He Tried to Do in "Beauchamp's Career" I rest bound to warn you of the nature of my work. It is not likely to please the greater number of readers. Mr. George Smith will take it for the Cormhill Magazine. It is philosophical—political, with no powerful stream of adventure; an attempt to show the forces round a young man of the present day, in England, who was born fairly solid, though it is seen in the end that he does not altogether fail, has not lived quite in vain. Of course, his life was a difficult one. A certain drama of self-conquest is gone through, for the hero is not perfect. He is born of the upper class, and is scarcely believed in by any man. In his youth, he is mistreated and it is then to be hated. At the same time the mild spirit of a prosperous middle class, that is not extremely alarmed, is shown to be above persecuting him. He is in danger of being thought dull save by those who enter his idea of the advancement of Humanity and his passion for it. In this he is a type. And I think his History a picture of a conflict, an action, and material ease and indifference, to be a necessary element of the picture." Onite Different A prison missionary was insisting to one of the guards that there is some good in everybody. To prove it, she sought out the prison demon and found him stroking a huge tomcat. "There," said the woman, "a man who will pet a cat certainly has some love in his heart." "Do you love that cat?" the woman asked the demon. “Yes,” he replied, still stroking the animal, “you bet I did anybody who hurts that cat will do it over him.” He hit the bit the warden this morning. The Woman—Oh, yes, dear! I tell everybody that. The Man—Of course, you understand, dear. that our engagement was just a thought. Secret Father—My son, I worked my way through college. 17—Maybe you don't call it work to have to wash my runabout before I can take it out every Saturday afternoon. —Pelican. The Christian Science Society announces a Free Lecture on Christian Science to be given by DR. FRANCIS J.FLUNO.C.S.D. of San Francisco, California, in the Chapel in Fraser Hall, on Friday, April 16, 1915, at 4:30 in the afternoon. Dr. Fluno is a member of the Board of Lectureship of the Mother Church, the First Church of Christ Scientist in Boston, Mass. Students—Answer that back correspondence--HisMaj- esty. Linen Paper, 25c lb. Hoadley's Env.to match,3pkgs.25c BASEBALL GOODS KENNEDY & ERNST CARTER CYCLE CO. THE NEW REPAIR SHOP Everything for the Bicycle or Motorcycle 13 W. 9th St. Bell 56 Announcing the Arrival of New Golf Clubs, Balls and Caddy Bags Two distinct lines, SPALDING and McGREGOR, to choose from. CARROLL'S Subscribe for the DAILY KANSAN T O - D A Y BOWERSOCK A Five-Reel Paramount Feature Rite Jolivet, the French Actress IN TheUnafraid Ladies and Gents Imperial Shining Parlor and Hat Works Setting in Austria-Hungary and Montenegro T O- DAY We clean and reblock all kinds of kinds, Ladies and Gents Panamas Especially. 737 Mass. St. ALL SHINES, Sc. Some Cottage "Could you be satisfied with love in a cottage, dearest?" sighed the young man. "Certainly I could," responded the girl, who really loved him; "but there must be a breakfast room, a music bar, a cafe and a marble fireplace in the front hall." RADNOR RADNOR THE NEW ARROW COLLAR Professional Cards J. F. BROOK, Optometrist and Speech Assoc. 825 Mass. St. Bell Phone 655, 825 Mass. St. Bell Phone 655. RAIRY HUDING M. D. Eve, say, say, HUDING M. D. Eve, say, say, U. Bldg. Phones, Bed 331, Home Room 331, U. Bldg. J. R. BCBETHLI, M. D. D. O. $22 BBCHELT, Both phones office and residence G. W. JONDS, A. M. M. D. Disease of Saint Martin, B. C. Residence 126, B. Both phone, Residence 128 DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires studio. Both phones. A. J. ANDERSON, M. D., Office 715 VL, St. Phone 124. DR. PETER D. FAILS, Osteopath, Office and residence, 7½ East 7th St. General practice. Both phones 561; Hours to 12,39; 2 to 5, and 7 to 8 by phone. DR. N. HAYES, 223 Mass. St. General. Also treats the eye and flat glass. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eya ear and G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eya ear and Guaranteed. Dick Bldg. Classified cust. W. PARISONS, Engraver, Watch- chief, Jewelry, Bell Phone 711, 717, Mass Jewelry, Bell Phone 711, 717, Mass Jewelry Jewelers Plumbers PHONE KENNEYD PLUMING CO. for gas, gasolio & Mazzura lamps. Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK, 913 Maas Insurance PIRE INSURANCE LOANS, and abstracts BANK B. 155; HISPANIC HOME 2022. FRANK E. BANKS Ins., and abstracts of Title Room 2. F. A. U. Building. FRANK E. BANKS, Ins., and abstracts of Title. Room 2, F. A. U. Building. Want Ads LOST—Mesh bag containing dollar in or between Fraser and Admin offices. Mesh bag containing dollar and return bag to Maude Coverdale, 1245 La. phone B. 1244. WANTED—To buy a second hand canoe in good condition. Address Daily Kansan, state price. PROTSCH "The Tailor" SPRING SUITING Box Stationery All Grades-All Prices McColloch's DrugStore SNAPPY SPRING SUITINGS Schulz 913 MASS. ST. BURT WADHAM'S "College Inn Barber Shop" B LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas, Largest and best equipped building in Lawrence 2 floors Lawrence Bank building. We teach SWENP and STEM education. We sample of Stenotype notes and a catalog WATKINS' WATKINS' NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depository. FRANK KOCH FRANK ROCK "THE TAILOR" Full Line of Spring Sutlage STUDENT HEADQUARTERS TUDENTS' SHOE SHOP R. O. BURGERT, Prop. 1107 Mass. St. Satisfaction Guaranteed THEIS BINDING Engraved and Printed Cards. Sheaffer's Self-fitting Fountain Pens. 744, Mass. Street. A. G. ALRICH 744 Mass. Street. The University of Chicago HOME in addition to resident camera by cooperative STUDY For detailed information 22nd Year U. of C., Div, H. Chicago, IL. Send the Daily Kansan home. "THE MAN FROM HOME," Wednesday, April 14 Real Chinese and Real Baseball Players Season Tickets Admit Special Offer—Baseball Season Ticket Good for Ten Home Games, $2.00 BASEBALL-OPENING GAME UNIV. OF HAWAII vs. K.U. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, APRIL 15th AND 16th GAMES CALLED 4:30 O'CLOCK EVERYBODY OUT Single Admissions, 50c Grand Stand Cushions, 15c Extra Tickets at Gate, Manager's Office and Carroll's UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WITH A SPLASH, HASH HOUSE LEAGUE STARTS Muddy Fields Send Teams to Golf Links for First Round of Season Hash House League Scores Lee's 8; Franklin 1. Willis 21; Hays 1. Martin 16; Neal 9. Kenney Club 21; K. K. 5. Los Amigos 21; Oread 7. Daniels 3; Y. M. 2. Ulrich 5; Co-op 3. Gvhebvelh 197; 1358 Gill 12. Dunakn Co 10; College Campus 6. Moody forfeited to Track Training Table. Dad's and Custer did not play on account of wet grounds. With the grand opening of the Hash House league Saturday morning and twelve games scheduled to be played during the day, the passers of "86" found playing conditions best, with the best results in the national pastime. The two Hamilton fields were sloughs of mud and water, so that all the games scheduled to be played there, had to be arranged closely together, and the games had heavily constructed, and the games run off as near schedule as possible. One diamond on the west hillside of the golf links, was so irregular that it took a home-run smash to get to first base. So crowded were the fields that six teams were trying to住 at Woodland Park at the same time. Notwithstanding adverse conditions, the opening was successful. More than a hundred students were togged out in as many kinds of uniforms, to play their best for the club. Several close contest titles staged. Chancellor Frank Strong came out to watch Lee's beat the Franklin and the Los Amigos club was spurred on to victory over the Oversea Cafe team by the cheers of the fair members of the boarding club. List of Players Y. M. house, 941 ind. Blincoe Thomann, Kingsbrough, Ireland, Payne, Haincare, Austin, Milton, Cilson, Lyons, Zelow- sk, Palkouny. Track Training Table, 1339 Kj: Niles, Frederick, Fink, J, Dean, James, Wood, Lindsey, Hilton. Conferencing Smith, Hilton, Crabbe, Thore, Bond. Hayes, 1237 Oread; phone 2181W Roll: Hope, 941 Ala. B. 2336; Bost, mgr, Tucker, Jones, Cook, Chandler, Harms, Weidlein, Hogapple, Weible, Gearhart, Ruth. Midway, 1042 O. , 2325B, Weltmert, capt., German, Webster, Liarer, Barger, Bennett, Frisch, Paul, Wadell, Baldwin. Elswick (incomplete) Co-op, 1345 Ky, 1116; J o. D. Ber- wick, capt., McLaughlin, Wyman Culin, King, Raemer, Fairchild, Mc cullough, Dryden, Wald, Ferrie Subelkrup, Bowers, Pearson, Huntsman, Blair, Kitchen, Bayles. Martin, 912. *I27 B.* Irwr, mgr. Folt, Sorensen, Swanson, Russell, Patterson, Farley, Bell, Thompson, Templin, Livingood, Kel- Custer; Washburn, capt., 1026B Harden, mgr., 1223W B, Pierce, Harding, Deaver, Cook, Rogers, Cummins, Burns, Nixon, Didge, Young, Williams, DeRoin, Kabler, Coover, Mittmann, Shanton, Threve. Dunakin Co-op, 1304 Mass; Street, capt., Shelly,媚轩, 2180W B, Dar- kert, Temple, 1304 Mass. Dad's Club, 1313 Vt: Larrimore, MacGregor, Long, Hill, Peterson, Major, Fitzgerald, J., Fitzgerald, A, Eaton, Obscene, Corbone, Schmitter, Wilson, Stueve, Slade, Beil, Manning, Stortz, Mathers. Daniels, 2129 B.; Arnold, mgr, Schoenfeldt, Buchanan, Madden, Mitchell, Brown, Cooper, Hutton, Ford, Hill. Bowersock. 1328 O, 1641J B: Graham, mgr, Glaso, Pritz, Naylen, Young, Bell, capt., Cooper, Robertson, Palmer, Frost. Campbell. Stevenson; Messick, Kubic, Sperry, Jones, Mather, Teasley, Calpino, Terry, Pickering, Reed, Jeter, Robinson, Murphy. Lee's: Gear, Wyatt, Joliffe, O'Bryan, Clark, Smith, Fuller, Bowman, Huey, Young, McCorkle, Morgan, McCamon, Rogers, Champlin, Cox, Weible, Frost, McVey, Nixon, Degen, merg. The Neel Club, 17 W. 14th: Swatek, Crow, Weiters, Martin, Crowley, Steinhauer, Melia, Reed, Thee, Merrill, Nystrom, Yokum. Los Amigos: Parker, mgr. Koestee, Henry, McIlhenny, Buenaskin,aughn, Jones, O'Bryan, Swartz,Benil, Bent, Ritter, Ferguson, Moss. K. K., 1225 Oread Ave., 2418 B. C. Richter, T. Richter, Davidson, Knifte, Pratt, Cullivan, Robbins, Anderson, Woolsey, Monahan, Monahan, Appel, Wentworth. Dunakin Co-op Club, 1304 Mass. St.: Street, captain, O. Darby, Shel-manager, DanMets, Spencer, M. manager, John Smith, Cheney, Johnson, Hilton Zinc. 1038 Tennessee Club: Hugh Brown, Frank Miller, Harry Curtman, Geo. Ball, Art Thomas, Paeul, Orin Ruth; Victor Hunt, outside; Winton Smith, outside; Lee Smith, outside; T. Newton; Carl Newton, Beatsia; V. T. Newton, manager, B. 12773, 113恩ennessee street. Ulrich: Hite, manager, Stiller Saker, Gear, Terrent, Chandler Vebb, Thomas, Carter, Tucker, Jarioe. College Campus: M. Ruble, Alford, Travis, R. Ruble, Bressen, Fletcher, Schmutz, Hemphill, Tillotson, Miller, Filley, Dolecek, Hartley, Custer Club, Gibbons, Deaver, McGraw, Dale, Coover, omax Nixon, Washburn Franklinis: Cooley, Lamb. Taylor. Timmons, Winters, Wheeler, Smith. Scriner, O'Brien, Whitehead, Carter, Jones, Glovey. Girls to Sing Soon The Girls' Glee Club will hold its annual spring concert in Fraser Hall April 21, was the announcement given out by their manager Mary Stanwaity. Prof. William B. Downing, director of the club, says the girls are showing unusual interest in the preparation of the program, which will consist of solo and chorus selections. MEDALS HERE FOR HIGH SCHOOL TRACK WINNERS Alpha Chi Sigma, chemical fraternity, member of Rowland College, clark of St. Joseph. One Hundred and Thirty-six Gold, Silver and Bronze Prizes Arrive One hundred and thirty-six medals, gold, silver and bronze have been received by Manager W. O. Hamilton for the winners in the twelfth annual high school track meet to be held May 1 on McCook Field. The annual interscholastic tennis tournament will be held on Friday, April 30. The medals differ from those usually offered for competition in that they contain some real metal and the most hard hearted pawnbroker will allow at least a quarter on them. The meet is divided into two classes, A and B according to the enrollment of the schools. Last year nearly fifty Kansas high schools participated in transport track competition the meet and about seventy high schools are expected to be represented this year. Coach Hamilton is planning either the annual inter-class meet or a Varsity meet with the K. C. A. C., on the preceding day. Because the meet may have a chance to see a sample of intercollegiate track athletics. Scholarships for Women "I should think you would get tired of being a bachelor. The Christmas turkey at a boarding house is usually tough, and" ___ Not Usually "Not at my boarding house." "No?" "Nope; at my boarding house it is unusually tough." "Going to be a dull season at the beach—no bathing!" "outrush." "Oh, the girls will find their bathing dresses too dreadfully oppressive to wear," she said. Applications for these seven scholarships open to women of the University will be received until an 15th by Professors Galgo, Hyde and Driver; Marcelia Howland Memorial, Mackenzie; W. B. G. A., $100, freshmen women for use during sophomore year; Eliza Matheson Innes Memorial, $100, all women of College and Graduate School 'above' freshman women for sophomore year; Lucinda Smith Memorial, $25, women of Graduate School and College above freshman year; Kansas branch of the Association of the Collegiate Alumni, $50, women of Graduate School and College above freshman year; Lucinda Smith Buchanan Memorial, $200 loan for two years without interest, to women of junior and senior classes of College; Daughters of the American Revolution, $100 interest for three years after graduation to women of the senior class. Faculty to Luncheon Rev. William B. Lampie will be the speaker at the faculty luncheon tomorrow at 12:30 o'clock. Faculty members who expects to attend are invited. At M. office not later than noon so that luncheon may be prepared for them. ORIENTALS TO PLAY K. U. Send the Daily Kansan home. Celestials Come to Lawrence to Play American Game With Varsity Failure to secure a practice game with William Jewell to take the place of the cancelled series with the Topeka Chipmunks Chinese University of Hawaii team as the opening attraction on the K. U. 1915 baseball schedule. The Orientalists will come to Lawrence for a two game game or a Thursday and Friday of this week. Judging from their record against other university teams on this year's invasion, the Crimean and Blue ball tossing aggregation is up against a hard proposition in this opening series. The University of California, the pick of the fast coast college teams, was only able to get an even break with the Asiatics. Last year's Valley championship of the Missouri Valley was defeated by the Hawaiians. Coach McCarty will probably use his full squad of twenty men in the series and the four teams in the tournament. He'll lead in the Missouri Valley championship pennant race. All of the five men on the hurling staff will be given a chance to show their wares. The twirling corps now consists of Sproull, Craig, Stiller, Fischer, and Moss. ROF, HESSER WORKS IN NEODEASH THEESE WEEKS Prof. F. R. Hesser, of the School of Engineering returned Saturday from Neodesha where he has been working with a plant for destroying some of the waste from the oil refineries. The plant was designed to house a sanitary engineering and constructed by the Standard Oil company. Professor Hesser says the experiments were encouraging and he will make his final report on the matter in a few days. It will probably be for him to make several more trips to the field in finishing his work. investigate Water Works Prof. Joseph E. Welker, of the department of sanitary engineering, is in Cawker City, investigating the water works plant there. Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE 12 W. Ninth Lawrence Pantatorium Phones 506 Sampeck Clothes— for the young man, clothes with class that you'll like the first time you take a peep at them and ever afterwards. PRICED $15 UPWARD Johnson & Carl THE GOLFING GROUP 1915 1915 APRIL 1915 Sunday Monday Tuesday WEDNESDAY Thursday Friday Saturday 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Make Your Plans For A Good Time The Date for The Man From Home Booth Tarkington and Harry Leon Wilson's four-act comedy to be presented by the K. U. Dramatic Club Cast at the Bowersock, Wednesday Seats now selling fast at the Round Corner Drug Store Prices: 25c, 50c and 75c MEASUREMENT FOR SENIOR CAPS AND GOWNS AT CHECK STAND in Fraser from Monday 12 to Friday 16. $1 Deposit with Measure. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII. WOMEN VOTE ON POINT SYSTEM HERE THURSDAY Will Accept or Reject New Idea at Their Regular Election HAVE SCHEDULE OF HONORS NUMBER 129. Adherents Say Plan Will Keep Students From Playing Politics and Neglecting Work The regular election of officers of the W. S. G. A. will be held Thursday of this week, April 15, from 8:30 to 4:30 o'clock in the Museum. In addition to the election of officers, all women will be given an opportunity to vote on the point system. This system applies to the women only, and has nothing whatever to do with that proposed by the Men's Council. The schedule limits the number of points in extra-curriculum activity which any-woman may be carrying at any one time and different activities count for different numbers of points, according to the amount of labor and time required to carry on the work properly. No. points allowed; senior 40, junior 40, sophomore 30, freshman 20 The schedule follows: Points for various activities: W S. G. A.: president, 35; vice-president, 25; secretary, 25; treasurer, 25; junior and senior representatives, 20; freshman and sophomore representatives, 15. Y. W. C. A.; president, 35; vicepresident, 30; secretary, 20; treasurer, 25; cabinet members, 25; members of committees, 5. Chairman of standing committees departmental, and committees of hon- or. District chairmen, 5. House chairmen, 5. Class officers: junior and senior 10: freshmen and sophomore, 5. Publications: Kansan editor, 30 Kansan board member, 15; Oread edit tor, 20; Oread staff, 5; Annual edi- tor, 30; Annual board member, 10. Departmental Clubs; president, 10 other officers, 5. Dramatics: senior play: leads, 10 seconds, 5 Junior or sophomore play. W. A. A.: president, 10; other of ficers, 5. Glee Club: manager, 15; members. 5. Orchestra members 5. STUDENTS DUCKED IN KAW The following officers are to be voted on: president, Blanche Mullen, Nationally Simpson; vice-president, from the School of Nursing; vice-president, Corey; vice-president from the School of Fine Arts, Ada Harper; secretary, Maureen McKernan; treasurer, Cora Shim, Bertha Smith. The time for voting on nominations for officers expired last night. The Gym club would probably be without the services of a crack tumbler and pyramid man, John Fast, sophomore Engineer, had not two river fishermen rescued the three students who were set adrift in the eddy when their canoe overturned below the slim deck the bridge late yesterday afternoon. Fast, William Kinkel, freshman College and his room-mate, Harold Roberts also a freshman, rented the beat and, not content with paddling the canoe over the north dam and approached the waterfall from below. The boat was sucked towards the falling water by the eddy in the stream and went completely under the water, where he used for themselves. Fast swam to the shoal a few feet away and carried Roberts with him. Kinkel, however, was carried in another direction and finally pulled ashore by the fishermen. Other than a great scare and the ruining of some clothes, the three students had nothing to show for the accident. All attended classes on the Hill this morning. Flat lost a pocket and Kinkel several dollars in bills. Haworth Lectures The Geology Club meets in Room 203, Haworth Hall, Wednesday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock. Prof. Erasmus Haworth will give the last of his series of three lectures on the geology of Kansas. Dames to Meet The K. U. Dames will meet toor w afore afternoon at 2 o'clock with Mrs. A. L. Fletcher Cadmus Improves Walter Cadmus, junior Engineer, who has been confined in the hospital with an attack of scarlet fever, is reported as improved. AUTHOR IN CONVOCATION Josiah Strong, Clergman and Writer Talks Monday at 4:30 o'clock Josiah Strong, clergyman and author of national reputation, has been obtained by the convocation committee to lecture here next Monday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock. Classes will not be dismissed but owing to an arrangement that has been made, students from their classes all who wish to hear the celebrated lecturer who appears in chapel. Mr. Strong has announced "After the War What?" as his subject. He has gleaned much material for such a lecture in his recent travels and a chance for hearing such a celebrated man should not be neglected declared as a hero. Mr. Strong will extend the extension division, and chairman of the committee on convocations. The convocation committee has been working for several days in an effort to arrange a convocation for a class of young students present time it appears more than likely that such a convocation will be held at 11:30 o'clock. Thursday morning, April 29, but Channeellor Strong noted given his necessary consent as yet. NOT ALL IS GLORY IN UNIVERSITY DRAMATICS Long, Dull Rehearsals are Tol Amateur Thespians Pay for Honors Appearing in a college play, having one's friends and relatives there to see and to commend, and getting one's picture in the Jayhawker for being "The斯佩" aren't the only things to be amused by an amateur dramatic production here on the Hill. The would-be actor must also go through long hours of rehearsal—training that is as essential to success" as the diet of an athlete. The movie's creator, Mr. From Home" has been doing for the past two months: undergoing a steady "diet" of tri-weekly rehearsals in preparation for the presentation of their play at the Bowersock Wednesday evening. Their "training table" has been the little theater recently instructed in the basement of Green Hall. The Amateur Interviewer obtruded himself into the theater the other night while a rehearsal was in progress. It was his first experience there—and he came away impressed. He saw a business like looking stage, a kind of an office with remarkable scenery and plenty of stage furniture; he saw lights of red, and white, and green operated in succession to produce the correct "atmosphere;" and he saw a group of earnest amateurs working diligently under the direction of Prof. Arthur MacMurray, head of the department of public speaking, of which he was one. There was no noise, no unnecessary confusion, and no hilariousness. There was nothing but business—stern, efficient business. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 13, 1915. Student members of the Choral Union are reminded that this is rehearsal night, and that the date of the concert, April 28, is drawing near. A good deal of "finishing" and polishing remains to be done, and so it is desirable that every member of the chorus attend the remaining rehearsals. STUDENTS PRACTICE FOR CHORAL UNION CONCERT If the concert turns out as well as present indications promise, it will probably be the first of a series of popular concerts similar to those given in Kansas City by a similar organization. In that case, new members will be received and work will go on steadily. No new singers can be given until the orchestra but if the 142 already enrolled do their part, a first class musical event may be expected. Rehearsal begins at 7:30 o'clock. Prof. Merle Thorpe will go to St. Joseph Sunday where he will speak to the Press Club on "Tomorrow With the newspaper." Professor Thorpe to Speak At Morning Prayers Speaker: Rev. William B. Lampa First Presbyterian Church, Winfield Wednesday: "Survival of the Fit test." Friday: "The Choice Part of Education." Thursday: "Fair Weight in Lab oratory and Life." Students desiring to confer with Reverend Lampie will find him at Myers Hall Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday from 2:30 until 5 o'clock. At other times he can be seen by appointment through Con Hoffmann. DEBATERS TALK SINGLE TAX ON LAND AT K. U Oklahoma Comes to Lawrence to Defend the Negative Side Against K. U. Thursday, April 15, is to be the date when the Kansas Jayhawk gets a chance at the Oklahoma Sooners on the debating platform, according to posters placed on campus bulletin boards this morning. The talk-fest will occur in Fraser Hall, Thursday evening, of this week, beginning at 10 a.m., with a partner of correspondence study, will act as chairman of the debate. H. Burns, W. H. Dodds, and H. A. Shim are the Kansas speakers. "Resolved: That the single tax on land should be substituted for all other forms of state and local axiation" is the question to be argued. The debate against Oklahoma. The judges have not yet been announced. Following the debate Thursday evening, a supper will be given at the Oread Cafe in Oklahoma City and members of the local debating council, the chairman of the debate, and the Oklahoma visitors. The Oklahoma debate is to be the only home contest of the season. Student tickets add $25. The general admission is 35 cents. The Kansas-Oklaima contest is a part of the Oklahoma-Kansas-Colorado triangular debate, the other two contests of which will occur at Norman and at Boulder on the same night. Kansas will send C. E. Williamson, Ed. Kaufman, and Harold will argue the negative side of the single tax question against Colorado. Colorado will send a team to Norman to defend the negative of the same question against the Sooners. Thus there are three debates to take place on the same night. Any school securing two decisions wins the contest. Should each school win, the winner will be declared a draw. This has rarely happened, however. Each speaker in the contest is to be allowed a twelve-minute speech and a five-minute rebuttal. The debate at Boulder will be formal. The Kansas team will leave Lawrence Wednesday morning on the Union Pacific, arriving in Boulder the following noon. Coach Howard T. Hill and coach Bill Mason. The Cole radio team debates Missouri on Friday evening of this week and the Kansas representatives have been invited to remain over for the event. According to Coach Hill, they will accept the invitation. DOMESTIC SCIENCE LECTURE Miss Anna Barrows, of Columbia University, Wilt Discuss Home Life Miss Anna Barrows, secretary of the National Home Economics Association will come to the University the latter part of this week to help the department of domestic science smooth out some of the rough places in home life. Besides being an instructor in the school of practical arts, the faculty is involved in university and director in the school of domestic science at Chatauva, N. Y., Miss Barrows is a skillful lecturer and demonstrator. Grads of '95 to Come Back The class of '95 is making plans for a new engagement week. They will have their headquarters in Westminster Hall under the direction of Rev. Stanton Olinger and the secretary of the class, Miss Edith M. Clarke, cataloguer, in Spooner Library. All the classes of '95 are still eligible to have large special effort to have large delegations here. Miss Barrows will give a lecture in Fraser Hall Wednesday. Thursday and Friday afternoon which will be open to the public. Wednesday afternoon she will speak on "Feeding the Multitudes," Thursday on "The Cost of War," Friday on "Do We Want to Reduce it?" and Friday on "The Business of Living." Special demonstrations will be given each day in the new laboratory kitchen of the department. Following the lecture Thursday a reception will be given in the women's corner, Rooms 114 and 116 Fraser. The sophomore electrical Engineers will hold a mass meeting in the chapel room in Marvin Hall tomorrow morning at 11:30 o'clock to discuss plans for their part in the Engineers' parade on Engineers' Day, April 23. Grads of '95 to Come Back Soph Electricals Meet Painters quar学校 Carl Painting Senior engineer on the Hill has accepted a position as a highway engineer for a road that is to be built in Louisiana. Painter Quits School Prof. E. H. S. Bailey returned to Washington, D.C., and other eastern polities. ACCOUNT BOOKS MUST BE IN BY THURSDAY Lardner Comes Friday Morn ing to Inspect Management of Student Funds "Thursday night is positively the last date for the student account books to be turned in," said Registrar George O. Foster, "the morning. "We want them all here at that time so there will be no delay when Mr. Lardner comes to audit them Friday morning." James T. Lardner, secretary of the Board of Administration, is coming Friday to straighten out the account books. His visit is to be an annual investigation of irregularities in the management of student funds will be investigated. Last semester each student organization was requested to call at the Registrar's office and get one of the nished them. Some organizations account books which has been furious with books. A great many others did not. In fact Registrar Foster was able to dispose of only twenty-three of the books. Thirty-seven of the student records were printed, and writing them at the registrar's office. Mr. Lardner will be here only one day, according to Registrar Foster, and he urges all student organizers to return books to return them before Friday. In a canvass of members of the University faculty the majority wish to wear caps and gowns in the commencement process next June. Some in opposing the idea say that it would cost too much money, but inquiries show that gowns can be cheaply and many of the professors have their own robes. For Caps and Gowns Here is what they say: Prof. P. B. Daines: "Of course the faculty's caps and gowns add to the appearance of the commencement occasion. An academic procession is not very imposing with professors struggling along in any clothes that they happen to be wearing. Yes, I think the custom would be a good one." Registrar George O. Foster: "It would add immensely to the dignity of the commencement. If it were once there, I would be able to trouble about continuation." Helen R. Hoopes: "I think it is a very good thing. At the first commencement I ever saw the faculty wore them." Prof. R. M. Ogden: "If all the pomp and circumstance are to be omitted from ceremonial, why have a ceremonial? Why not mail the diplomas you obtained. Some people think that capaes matter. Some people criticize; for that matter, there are some who think that evening dress is undemocratic. But most university men regard the academic costume as university tradition. I have never been in a university before where they did suit it for all ceremonial occasions." W. W. Hawkins: "I think it is a good thing. I have seen it at Missouri. It lends dignity to the occasion." Prof. W. A. Whitaker: "I am heartily in favor of it, and can speak without prejudice, because I have no long string of degrees to exhibit. It adds a level of authority, and I am in commencement week. I think if you made a complete round of the faculty you would find nine-times of them for it." E. D. Cressman: "I am in favor of the plan as a whole. I would like to see a little dignity added to the exer- Prof. Arthur Mitchell: "It would give just what Americans, and the western states particularly, lack. I think that these makes for correctness. We have too little sense of the dignity of degrees. The faculty appearing in capps and gowns at commencement add to the prestige of the University." Prof. H. F. Harrington: "It is a fine custom to have the faculty wear their powns. It adds beauty and dignity to them, and is a compliment to the graduates." Dean F. W. Blackmar: "I do not care especially to wear cap and cap, but if a majority of the faculty wish it I will do so." Prof. E. M. Briggs: "I believe the wearing of caps and gowns by the faculty during commencement week will be much more impressive and the parade of the faculty would be much more impressive and the goal to be obtained would be better impressed upon students. I would like to see this feature of commencement week or at least one day "EXCUSED, BUT DON'T LET IT HAPPEN AGAIN" Said Professor to Student Who Cut Jerry Risley took a somewhat ex tended Easter vacation. When he returned to his classes in Green Hall last week he was wreathed in smiles. You might have thought he was giving a demonstration to the boys of "How to be Happy. Though Married." For Jerry, it will be remembered, brought a wife back with him to sum- mer school last June. Their honeymo- moon was spent on the sunny slopes of Oread while the head of the house saw lying Contrasts and Domestic Relations This morning while Uncle Jimmy was setting forth the Law of Evidence, Jerry slipped out of class. Before the close of the hour, however, he was back, with a box of cigars under each arm. As the boys gathered round to share the provisions, the Prosecutor spoke as follows: "It's a boy." PLAN ARCHERY COURSE FORWOMEN ON CAMPUS Archey, the sturdy old sport of the days of Ivanhoe, is to be revived by the women of the University this spring. Before long the campus in front of Fowler schools will probably be sprinkled with women, laughing while singing as they art the image of the women of Merritt England. A course will be laid out just north of Fowler Shops if present plans are carried out, and the junior and senior students will practice there every day. The course is to be fifty yards in length and there the women will draw their bows taut and sim toward big red and white targets four feet in diameter. If Plans are Completed Ground Will be Arranged Near Fowler Shops "It it isn't a strenuous exercise," says Dr. Goetz, "and the girls may practice without changing into a gym suit. Archery tends to give Nobbs and arrows have arrived for the use of the contestants." The archers, with leather finger tips to protect delicate hands from the snap of the bow-string, will draw back the bow and then the hum of the vibrating string will be followed by the dull chug as the arrow plows into the big straw-stuffed tar ret. "MONKEYS" WILL ENTERTAIN Soph Farce for Hop not Menagerie But as Funny "A Box of Monkeys" will entertain the seekers after fun at the Sophomore Hop, April 30. That feature is certain to be a part of the program, according to Laurence Miller, president and those who will take part in the farce, for "A Box of Monkeys" is to be a farce and not a department from a menagerie. They are: Henry McCurdy, Alton Bumbler, Helen Clark, Dora Lockett, and Itasca Hillsman. The selection of the cast was made possible by the first noon and the first rehearsal was held today in Green Hall. "There will be another feature, in connection with the first part of the program, but that," is a secret," said the sophomore president, "and it has not yet been finally decided who will part in this part of the entertainment. In accordance with the custom of previous years the Hop is to be absolutely informal. Cabs and flowers are not only taboured but they would appear in uniform, implying an absolute lack of good food, according to the Hop managers. "The Hop will start at 7 o'clock and the dancing will continue until 2 or thereabouts. The committee which has been appointed to attend to the details has started on its work endeavors and that spells a successful party." of the week become an annual affair." Miss Lalia Walling, of the department of physiology; "I am for the faculty wearing caps and gowns during commencement week. I believe it would add dignity to the occasion and give the entire week a more impressive character." David W. Cornelius: "If we are to be a university, do things the way a university should, we ought to wear the caps and gowns. While such customs alone will not make a university, they will also do to the making of a real university." E. F. Stimpson: "Personally I do not care, but if everybody is willing to wear them, I am. I think it is simply a matter of style anyway and of course if we are to keep up with the style we should wear them." ABOLISH FREE LIST REDUCE PRICE--DAVIS 1915 Junior Prom Manager * Would Have All Pay $2.50 for Tickets "PARTY NOT TOO ELABORATE" Says School of This Size Ought to Support One Big Annual Event, —But Must Charge All Complete abolition of the free list, a universal charge of $2.50 per person for admittance, the institution of a scheme by which all women attending would be required to pay their own dues, and setting the final date before which tickets could be purchased at least three weeks before the party, are the reform suggested by Bryan L. Davis, co-manager of the Proms firm for making future Proms financial support. After seeing this year's Prom fail to turn by some fifty dollars, Davis feels that reforms are necessary if future parties are to leave a balance on the credit side of the books. "I don't want people to think that 'm sore because we lost money, though," said Davis this morning. "But there are a great many things we can do, which the Prom is now operated, and my suggestions for changes are entirely friendly. I don't want people o think that the Prom management is insecure. We are at outs with anybody because of the financial ailure of the party. Charge All $2.50 "The first reform would be that absolutely no deadheads should attend—that the free list, to faculty, seniors, and all other persons should be absolutely suspended. Then, if a universal charge of $2.50 per person were made, the affair would pay out every time." Would Divide Expense A second suggestion by Davis is that the final date before which tickets could be purchased should be placed three or four weeks in advance of the From itself. The management of people exactly how many people were going to leave and could arrange to spend only as much money as the attendance justified. "Some sort of a scheme should be adopted by which every girl could be forced to pay her own dues: for instance, if the management would refuse to accept such dues if paid by a boy. That's not a reflection on the girls who attended this year's Prom, but it is simply a plan that is worthy of the future managers. Merely because they wants to take a girl to the Prom is no reason why he should have to pay her class dues. Prom Not To do Elaborate "I do not think that the party we gave this year was too elaborate or too expensive; a school of this size can be able to support a more expensive business. We have given had we had the necessary financial support. It is the manner in which the Prom is staged, particularly in regard to the number of free participants. The elaborateness of the party itself is responsible for the financial loss." "ACCURACY SHOULD BE CRYSTALIZED IN LIFE" "Accuracy should be crystallized in life," said the Rev. William P. Lamp, of the First Presbyterian church of Winfield, at morning prayers this week. "The student does not get very far until he learns that he must be accurate. "In the classroom, in the laboratory, he must make sure that every step in an exercise or experiment is exact that the result may be right. Often when a result is wanted a laboratory experiment can be dishonestly manipulated to get this result without any accuracy in the process. But no matter how you want something you must not get it by dishonest means." Rev, William B. Lampe of Winfield, chapel speaker for this week, was in his 90s. "The game of football," he says, "is analogous with the game of life. The result of the game depends upon the accuracy and sureness of each step taken." Rifflemen Elect The Lawrence Rifle Association, a branch of the National Rifle Association, will hold its annual election of officers at 7 c'clock tonight in Robin-berry. Any new members desiring to join the club will be taken in at that time. Cady Reads Paper Prof. H. P. Cady read a paper before the Kansas City section of the American Chemical Society, Saturday night, on Radio Activity. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF John M. Henry Raymond M. Manage- ing Editor Helen Hayes. Associate Editor William Cady. Exchange Editor BUSINESS RTAFF BUSINESS MANAGER J. W. Dycke...Business Manager C. Sturtaveur...Advertising Mgr REPORTORIAL STAL REPORTORIAL STAFF Loon Lee AIMER, Hogres Bilbert Clayton JON Muller Guy Scriverner J. OW Muller Dana Grosz DEMETT Eirend Armert CAROLyn Mnutt Emery Durrant CAROLyn Mnutt Louis Puckett HARRY Morgan Glendon C. A Ritter Patterson PATTERSON Subscription price $2.50 per year in advance; one term, $1.50. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office 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. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the university of Kansas; to go further than merely printing the text on paper of Kansas; to go further than merely printing the text on paper of the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be carefree; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads, in all, to help students to identify the students of the University. Fair Flay and Accuracy Bureau Prof. H. T. Hill...Faculty Member Jon Dosoph...Student Member John M. Hewey...Senior Secretary and a mistake in statement or impression in any of the columns of the Daly Kansan, report it to the Director, the Daly Kansan. He will instruct you as to further procedure. TUESDAY, APRIL 13, 1915 EDUCATION On one occasion Aristotle was asked how much educated men were superior to those uneducated. "As much," he replied "as the living are to the dead. While the eminent philosopher may have been correct in this assumption, it is certain that such an attitude has hampered more than one young college graduate as he sauntered out into the world, proudly displaying a sheepskin on his back. If there are any who leave the college campus without this understanding, holding knowledge to be but an ornament, they will undoubtedly remain too narrow to recognize it as a refuge in adversity. It is considerable of a "come-down" when the sophomore's academic illusion, that a college degree in itself is assurance of worldly success, bursts and grows into a realization that William James treated the matter most forcibly when he said, "the best thing an education can hope to accomplish for you is that it should help you know a good man when you see him." But it is the man who understands the situation in its entirety, who realizes that an education is but a stepping stone to higher service and who enters 'be active life with confidence that his industry will be augmented by this college training, that will eventually reap to the fullest extent. OUR SUGGESTION Acting on the Student Council's wish that any suggested changes in the point system schedule be made through the columns of this paper the Kansan submits the following schedule of point for the offices of the publication: Editor-in-chief. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Managing-manager. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Business-manager. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Circulation-manager. . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Advertising-manager. . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Board members. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 This schedule is recommended by a majority of the Daily Kansai Board. "SASSIETY" AT K. U. Ordinarily the social life of our University is distinguished by a most democratic simplicity and a wholesome lack of ostentatiousness and pretence. Of course every week-end has its quota of parties, of varying degrees of informality, and what with five movie shows and an amusement park, the socially inclined never have to complain of being "all dressed up and no place to go." But on only two occasions we burst forth into pomp and circumstance. Needless to say, we refer to the Junior Prom and the Sophomore Hop. The one has just irradiated the surrounding landscape with its customary blaze of glory. The other is about to furnish an anti-climax more effective than such things usually are. For weeks, nay, months, we have heard and read of little save decorations, music, eats, distinguished guests, fares, and petitions in bankruptcy. The worst is now over, but not until after April 30 will we enjoy perfect peace. Since a time when the memory of man runeth not to the contrary, the Prom has held first place in the list of University social functions. On the eventful date the Gym is transformed into a regular second act grand opera setting; the girls blossom into elaborately beautiful girl bows; and the men—most splendid sight of all the magnificent spectacle—array themselves in formal attire for the admiration of the populace. A benevolent ruling declares cabs taboos, making possible the pre-Prom parade that gives Lawrence an idea of the board walk at Atlantic City on Easter. As for the Prom itself—we refer you to the news columns. A description of it is beyond the power of a mere editorial writer. The Hop is of more recent origin, but is coming to hold an important place in the short and simple annals of the poor stude. It is not quite so stupendous, not so overpoweringly gorgeous, but it is no scrub party, either. Indeed in the minds of a few individuals the Hop is about as big for its size as the Prom is for its. The principal difference, at least of those visible to the naked eye of the innocent bystander, is that the men wear blue coats and white trousers, and the estimated financial loss to the promoters is not so large. (No, we don't mean that there is any connection.) If there be anyone—which Heaven forbid!—so unappreciative of real value as to ask the use and reason of these two events, we would say that the social training received here is not the smallest part of a college education, and that a formal party furnishes an education in "How to behave and why," not to be found anywhere else. Men and women going out into the modern world without such training are at a disadvantage. Their education is not quite complete. For this and for other more personal reasons, within the comprehension of every student, we say "On with the Prom! Nine rafs on the Hop!" WHEATON'S SPIRIT One of the greatest things Jack Wheaton brought to McCook was the spirit which did away with pro-fanility in athletics. The hash house games should go on with the same spirit. Of course one feels there is provocation for an oath when the ball goes, out for a homer when the bases are full, but the Kansas Varsity football team practiced and played for the honor of the school all last fall, without profanity and the other athletic squads are carrying on the work. There is no reason why a hash house player should not be as much a gentleman. Mayor-elect Thompson, of Chicago, threatens to give every person in Chicago a job. Don't we envy him? seniors that graduate this year! Let us be thankful that our starry perspective these beautiful nights contains no Zeppelins. Chasing the Glooms Billy Sunday says he has taken a census of hell. Checking up on the things that happen to him, No, roomie, that big whack you beard Saturday was the crack of the wheel. The war will please wait while we glance at the sport page. Shots at Half-Cock Pandora's Box WOULDN'T YOU? Or Foolishment in Verse Or a Peanut Eclair with a drop of tar? Or even a chicken dressed up as a peanut. And put on the menu as Breast of Neck. I'd trade every wish and a live raconte. For moonlight nights from 'n till the sunrise. If a wish were a Smooth or a Yorshey THAT NEWSPAPER KISS A daring theft was wrought last night On darling little Rose: He stole something he wanted right Beneath her heart ——Philadelphia Press Tis to be hoped that if fair Rose Returned the blissful smack, Jack didn't overlook a bet But turned and kissed her back. ——Houston Post That may be as they do the job Down in the sunny South But if Jack lived here in the North, He'd kiss her on the mouth. ——The Commoner. Yet Jack perhaps had little glee, Though on the mouth he kissed her We have as yet no proof, you see, That Rose was not his soul. ——The Commoner. Times. If she was as he has guessed, Jack's sweet mottled little sister, The thing that worries us the most Is that the Globe man missed her. ——Kansas City Gibe. But if it was a Kansas girl, She'd use cold cream, dear, And when Hook went to kiss her lips He'd skid and kiss her ear. ——University Daily Kansan. A K. U. man may like, 'tis true, A kiss upon the ear; But had Jack been a Winfield boy, He would have learned to steer. Winfield H. S. Oracle. The Winfield had never need to steer To kiss his little eye. But had Jack been in Atchison, Irse would have steered herself. ——The Optimist. If in our own Crumbine's Hygiene Our Jack had been well versed, He would have kissed her on the chee And thus used "Say Yeah, Breast." —Mead Tattler. If she were a Fort Hays girl Oh! Tattler's cautious Jack. Antiseptic rouge upon her lips You'd get your safety smack! ——Fort Hays Leader. But if she were a student In the School of Libera Art. The K. U. man would kiss her 'Cause it would ease her achin heart. Then if she were a student In the School of Engineering A kiss he would dare to take Because of them they're leaving But if he were a student In the noble School of Laws He'd then and there remove his pipe And kiss her—why?—oh, because. Student Opinion LET'S QUIT IT I am very much interested in the stand you have taken in the matter of the defacement of the University property. I wish to congratulate you, and state that there now is a champion, the chair, table tops, walls and approaches to University buildings. When I first came to K. U., I was shocked, to put it mildly, at the artistic (?) carvings on the approach to Fraser Hall. By the time I had wandered through a dozen or more classrooms my sensibility felt that benamed by the wonderful markings I found on chairs and tables. By looking at our floors, one would think that our students spill gallons of water. S seriously, fellow students, let's quit this habit of whitting chairs with our jack knives and marking chain arms, not the backpacks. When you penilc it. It looks too childish. And if the nervous members of our faculty do the same we should not feel compelled to follow such examples any more than we do the way they play cards. Yours for the protection of state property. Speaking the Kansas Language H. R. Brown Running a newspaper is just like running a hotel, only different. When a man goes into a hotel and finds something on the table which does not match his taste, he easily withs the landlord and tell him to stop his old hotel. Well hardly. He sets that dish to one side and wades into the many dishes that suit him. It is different with some newspaper readers, who do not suit themselves, that does not suit them exactly and without stopping to think it may please hundreds of other readers, make a grandstand play and tell the editor how the paper should be put into it. But such people are becoming fewer every year.-Wilson World. RUNNING A NEWSPAPER "Kansas always wins. She grew the champion wheat crop of all the world last year. She produced the champion race horse, the champion cow, the champion alpaca, the alpaca crop. She has produced the champion baseball pitcher, chess player and checker player, and now she has added to the list the champion prizefighter. I presume the liquor interests will be now owned by Kansas to prove that prohibition is a failure in Kansas." -Salina Journal. Kansas Weather At first it rained, and then it blew. And then it friz and then it thew, And then it snew, and rained;—and then It blew, and snew, and threw again. —Balance Sheet. Pure sparkling soda in clean glasses at Barber's Drug Store.—Adv. Hyball Ginger Ale. The best by test, McChiln. Phone 192–Adv. Professor of Chemistry—If anything should go wrong in this experiment, we and the laboratory with us might be blown sky high. Come gentlemen, so that you may be better able to follow me—Balance Sheet. Encouraging A. D. S. Peroxide Cream, the original peroxide cream, at Barber's Drug Store.—Adv. Somebody Else The Gent—Lo, Mike, goin' to see your friend in them dirty cords? The Ruf—My friend ain't in them cords; that's me—Chaparral. Paint, varnish, floor finishes, floor and wall brushes at Barber's Drug Store.—Adv. Young Men Take Notice McNish's aerated distilled water is the best protection for the health. Adv. YOU'LL never see anything better to wear, for style, for color effect, for snappy looks than one of our Hart Schaffner & MarxVarsity Fifty Five sacks Peckham's The home of Hart Schaffner and Marx good clothes See what $25.00 will accomplish in value getting here. made in the new stripes. These new fabrics come from foreign and American weavers; they're always all-wool, in these clothes; and we offer you a fit and fashion that can't be equaled anywhere else in the world. TIGHT JACKETS. Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx The Pleasure of School Life is Doubled If you are acquainted with the current happenings "on the hill'". The cheapest and easiest way to get acquainted is through the columns of the University Daily Kansan SUBSCRIBE NOW $1.00 for the rest of the year UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN RETURN ATHLETIC GOODS OR PAY, HAMILTON SAYS Students Failing to Turn in Equipment to be Charged With Cost With Cost Students holding out athletic paraphernalia belonging to the K, U. athletic association will be charged for the same unless a decided change in the attitude of the undergraduates is soon apparent. Manager W. O. Hamilton this morning said: "I am very much disappointed at the attitude of the students. They sign a pledge to return all laundry checked on, on demand day," he said. "Every week it is a month alien since I called for indoor equipment and hardly any of it is in." "Do not know what I will do about it unless I proceed as a business proposition and try to collect. I hate to send in a bill through the registrar and have it held up against a fellow's graduation, but the finances of the association make it necessary to be as economical as possible." ramitilon thinks the students are taking advantage of his laxity in giving out the man's card, and aren't 'playing fair with me,' is the aren't he puts it. ALL WERE ATHLETES THEN In Ancient Greece. Every Man Trained to Defend His Country The recent fight between Jess Willard and Jack Johnson brings out the contrast between modern athleticies and professional athletes in ancient times, the Greeks trained to defend their country in war. Every man took daily exercise from his boyhood and lived ways prepared to answer a call to war. Every Greek had to be ready to take the field at a moment's notice in defence of hearth and home, and under the conditions of ancient warfare his physical fitness his life and libra. Today the men want to train unless they want to and the training is then very different from the ancients. but this is not the idea now. The modern idea is to make records and be victorious. The first of these ideas never entered the head of the Greek war, but records were brought by individuals, or kept. But no doubt if there had of been the athletes of today would have to set a fast pace to equal the records of the ancients. The Greeks and the barbarian of the ancient time was that the Greek's body was trained and the barbarian's was not. Today the distinction comes in the trained and untrained athlete in the ancient war. It is made a form of hero worship the trainee athlete is the worshipper. PLEAD FOR SWISW DEMOCRACY Patriot Fears That War Will Break Down Theory of Government Science Monitor Geneva, Switzerland—In an article appearing in the Journal de Geneve, the strong necessity on the part of the Swiss people for fidelity to their democratic theories is insisted upon. It may seem difficult, however, says the writer, that such an infunction should be needful. But though, since the triumph of democratic policies in 1848, no direct attacks have been made by any political party on the government, yet discounted. In contrast, simmering, it has been presented to the careful observer than at the present time. The European war has produced great unrest in neutral countries, and Switzerland, by her geographical situation and by her intimate connection with two of the principal adversaries, has been profoundly stirred. The desire among the people for unity remains, the question is asked that it which binds us to another? neither language nor religion, nor even the grandeur of the Alps. In none of these is the binding element to be found, but in the democratic tradition, the abstract idea of liberty and equality which has spread in so many parts of the world since the French revolution. In Switzerland this ideal has taken on essentially Swiss characteristics; it is marked by a love of simplicity and hard work, and the dislike of all mere outward superiority. Switzerland, continues the writer of this article, should be faithful to this love of liberty and equality, for it is an essential to a united national existence. The Switzerland of the twentieth century will either be a democratic state, or it will cease to exist. Turning to the great republic of the west, the writer points to the bond of union between the two countries formed by their devotion to democratic policies. To this great nation alone can Switzerland look for support, both efficacious and disinterested, in the present crisis. MORE FREEDOM FOR FRESHIE Head of Tufts College Would Remove Requirements of First Year Hermon C. Bumpus, newly-elected president of Tufts College, Medford, Mass., and formerly business manager of the University, has taken a stand for more liberal college entrance requirements and much wider range of subjects to be covered in the freshman year in college. He is the student himself his latent talents. He is preparing to put into practice at Tufts his views that a larger percentage of the 200,000 or more students attending the institution should be able to secure the privileges of collegiate instruction for those of them who mustsuchets not attending an educational The work of the freshman year in college should be planned so as to receive those who may have promise of attainments in directions not now embraced within the entrance requirements. The student should have the freshman year the student should have unfolded to him a wide range of subjects substantial in quantity and sufficient in kind to discover and develop his latent talents. "In order to bring this about we should endeavor to have during the freshman year the best and most progressive teaching staff that the institution can afford. A year of work upon such a large array of subjects and of association with such poses; 'First, the student would discover his natural tendencies; "Second, he would have a year of instruction of basic value; "Third, the several professors would discover the men who were especially fitted for their several subjects, and "Fourth, the student would be prepared to pursue the remaining three years in college with a fixed purpose." Different Tem—Do you like the Boston hop? Chem—Naw, 1 takes Chinese dope for mine every time—Chaparral. CASTLE ROLL Front 2 1/4 in. Back 1 1/4 in. 2 FOR 25¢ BARKERCO BRAND 2 FOR 25¢ MANUFACTURERS: WILLIAM BARKER CO., TROY, N.Y. CASTLE ROLL Front 2 3/4 in. Back 1 3/4 in. BARRERCO BRAND 2 FOR 25¢ 2 FOR 25¢ MANUFACTURERS: 903-674-8111 N.Y.C. Only at Peckhams CAPITAL MAY BIND COUNTRIES KODAKS STATIONERY PERFUMES Evans Drug Store Successor to Raymonds' 819 Mass. St. Berlin, Germany—The Vorwärts recently reminded its readers that no small amount of German capital was invested in France with a view to the exploitation of the iron-ore industry, so important to Germany, and that close economic relations between the two countries might develop therefrom, particularly as Germany could deliver advanced nuclear technology indispensable product of which the latter was in need namely, coal. Proceeding to illustrate its argument, the Vorwärts showed that Germany's importation of iron ore was steadily on the increase, for example, it accounted to 8,000,000 tons, it had risen by 1911 to 11,000,000 tons. From the New York Post. Germany and France Have Heavy Relationships. German capital, the Vorwärts continued, is employed in two directions in France. In the first place, German iron manufacturers share French iron mines with French, Belgian or Luxemburg companies. These mines are all situated in French iron-producing countries and German investment has taken a new form of the independent procuring of iron ore, chiefly in the newly opened up iron field of Normandy, where various large German firm have acquired 'important possessions. German capital has, however, not been invested in iron mines alone, but large industrial concerns in France are also in German hands. A capital of €,575,000, the Vorwaerts concluded, is invested in these undertakings, and since they passed into German hands the production has increased by 26 per cent. It will be seen from these slight indications what important economic relations exist between France and Germany. The Scotch minister rose and cleared his throat, but remained silent, while the congregation awaited news in an unhazed expectancy. At last he spoke: Begin What? “There’s a laddle awa’ there in the gallery a kissle’ a lasseie’ he said. “When he’s done abl’ll begin.”—Balance Sheet. Fond Mother (who has just seen her son, a very youthful subaltern, off to the front)—I got him away from his father for a moment and told him: "Darling, don't go too near the firing line, will you?" The Temptations of a Soldier Willey—Mr. greatgrandfather went to the Boston Tea Party. New History JUST RECEIVED Billie--That's nothing. My sister to a tangerine tea party every afternoon. Allegratti's Famous Chocolate Creams Here Only CARROLL'S 709 Mass. Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE 12 W. Ninth Lawrence Pantatorium Phones 506 THE FLOWER SHOP Those party flowers are always appreciated when they come from and we are always pleased to fill your orders and we are always pleased to fill your orders. $825^{1}$ Mass. Phones 621 GUARANTEED SILK HOSIERY We want you to come to our Hosiery Department and let us show and tell you about Honest Dollar Silk Hose. Every pair is guaranteed to be 100 per cent pure silk and to give you the most satisfactory wear. Do you know this is the only silk hose made today? that the U. S. government will allow the maker to say is 100 per cent pure silk? This means a whole lot to the wearer. TO- DAY WEAVER'S All shades—a pair $1.00 FISCHERS' SHOES ARE GOOD SHOES = We're Ready for your spring footwear buying. You then owe it to yourselves to at least look at the new style Hurley Oxfords that are here now. They have a distinction totally different from the usual kind at BOWERSOCK FISCHER'S $5 T O- D A Y Rite Jolivet, the French Actress Setting in Austria-Hungary and Montenegro TheUnafraid A Five-Reel Paramount Feature The Christian Science Society announces a Free Lecture on Christian Science to be given by DR. FRANCIS J. FLUNO, C. S. D. of San Francisco, California, in the Chapel in Fraser Hall, on Friday, April 16, 1915, at 4:30 in the afternoon. Dr. Fluno is a member of the Board of Lectureship of the Mother Church, the First Church of Christ Scientist in Boston, Mass. c lived on C—Give me, it? T—On milk. C—Where did he get it? C—the officer the sheriff's goat- ennon and Black. no doubt if there had of been the in- T.-A a sheriff chased a man into a cave, and couldn't get him for a month, now, what do you suppose Subscribe for the DAILY KANSAN Pretentious He—I just dote on Greek. ... . . . . Literary She-Who are your favorite authors? Pretenientus He—O—A—Well, lilie Blid and Avon, the best, things Chaparral. Professional Cards J. F. BRIOCK, Optometrist and Spo- torian of Massey St. Tel Landi 695, Massey St. Tel Landi 695. J. R. BICCITELT, M. D. D. O. 823 and residence, both phones, office and residence RUARYI HERDING M. D. Eye, ear, nosp. M. D. Eye, ear, nosp. B. Uldg, Phones, B12, H94, H94, Phones, B12, H94. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D., Diseases or surgery, and gynecology, Suite 1, F. A. U. Bldg, Residence 1201 Ohio St. Both phones, 35. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Nuplacus studios. Both phones. DIL. N. BAYES, 229 Maas. St., Genera. Also treats the eye and Ear. A. J. ANDERSON, M. D., Office 715 Vt. Fax 1243, Phone 1243. DR. PETER D. PAULS, Osteopath, Office and residence, 7½, East 7th St. General practice. Each process requires 2, 3 to 4, and 7 to 8 by appointment. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Bye, car and Sarah Guardian. Dick Bldg. Guaranteed. Dick Bldg. Classified Jewelers ED. W. PAISONS, Engraver, Watch- ware, Jewelry, Phone Bell 711-717. Mass Plumbers PHONE KENNEDY PLIMING CO2 phone house 106, Mazda lamps. 195, phone house 234, Mazda lamps. 195 Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK, 913 Mass. Insurance FIGURE INSURANCE LOANS, and ab- 建 Building. Dlst 135; Home 2092. FRIANK E. BANKS, Ins., and abstracts of Title. Room 2, F. A. U. Building. Want Ads LOST - Mesh "bag containing dollar in or between Fraser and Administration Building. Finder keep deliware from being lost. Coverdale, 1245 La. phone B. 1244. WANTED—To buy a second hand canoe in good condition. Address Daily Kansan, state price. RADNOR RADNOR THE NEW ARROW COLLAR PROTSCH "The Tailor" SPRING SUITING Box Stationery All Grades-All Prices McColloch's DrugStore LAWRENCE BURT WADHAM'S "College Inn Barber Shop" LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas Larsen and best equipped business college *Kansas*, School occupies 2 floors Law- ary, Building C. Bookshop TYPE or shortcase by machine. Write for sample of *Stenotype* noteand a catalog. WATKINS' NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depository. FRANK KOCH "THE TAILOR" Full Line of Spring Suitings STUDENT HEADQUARTERS STUDENTS' SHOE SHOP R. O. BURGERT, Prop. 1107 Mass. St. Satisfaction Guaranteed THESIS BINDING Engraved and Printed Cards. Sheaffer's Self-filling Fountain Pens. A. G. ALRICH 744 Mass. Street. SENIORS A picture of yourself in Cap and Gown is almost the same as a degree as it shows you are a College Grad. SOUIRES' STUDIO Real Chinese and Real Baseball Players Season Tickets Admit Special Offer—Baseball Season Ticket Good for Ten Home Games, $2.00 BASEBALL-OPENING GAME UNIV. OF HAWAII vs. K.U. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, APRIL 15th AND 16th GAMES CALLED 4:30 O'CLOCK EVERYBODY OUT Single Admissions, 50c Grand Stand Cushions, 15c Extra Tickets at Gate, Manager's Office and Carroll's UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TO HOLD HIGH SCHOOL TRACK MEET ON MAY 1 The twelfth annual interscholastic track meet to be held on McCook May 1, will be larger than that of any previous year. Announcements have been sent to the captains of track teams in every high school in the states and Manager Hamilton expects fifty teams to enter before April 26. The number of the teams will provided as far as possible by the Athletic Association with help on the part of the students of the University. The various schools are to be classified into three groups as they have been in previous years so that athletes of any school may compete with men of their own class. Silver winning teams in each class and gold, silver and bronze medals will be given to winners of first, second and fourth places in each event. Also, the individual who scores the highest score in each game is given a cup. Each contestant entered in the meet is given a souvenir button. At the same time, except beginning April 30,$n$ the eighth annual tennis tournament will be held on the nine courts adjacent to McCook which will be in first-class shape and available for play. Cups will be given to the winners and the runners up in both the winners and doubles. Manager Hamilton Expects Fifty Teams Here for Interscholastic Meet An additional feature in the entertainment of the visitors will be the Varsity track meet on April 30 to which all contestants are to be admitted. The Kansas City Athletic Club is scheduled to meet the K, U, truck team on that day but the contestants from interclass meet will be postponed from April 24 to April 30 so that the visitors may see the Varsity in action. TYROS DEFEAT THE VARSITY Weidlein's Freshmen Win Over McCarty's Baseball Squad in Practice Bill Weidlein's hefty freshman ball tossers have at last attained their ambition. They have put defeat over on Coach McCarty's Varsity athletes. The affair took place yesterday afternoon on McCook Field. The game ended with a score of some but because of the excitement at seeing the tyros win, the exact count was lost. Likewise the score, all over even on the Varsity admitted the defeat. Despite their beating the Varsity showed up well, for the work of Sproull and Craig who did the heaviness was nothing to cause anxiety about the pitching situation for the 1915 campaign. Craig took the mound first and worked about seven or eight innings. Although most of the runs made by the 1918 nine came during this time it was no particular reason why they were played by a conspiracy among most of the Varsity regulars as to which one could pull the prize weird play of the afternoon's performance. Another practice game will be played this afternoon at 4 o'clock as a final preparation for the University of North Carolina's Chinese invasion on Thursday. Smith a six footer and Bell a younger student with a fancy uniform and a fast ball worked for Weidlein and showed up good. The Varsity lineup will probably be the same as used in yesterday afternoon's disaster; Wood, ss.; Wandel, cf.; Chinney, 1f.; Delongy, 2b.; Lindsay, 1b.; King and Russell, 3b.; Weihe, 4b.; Harrell, c.; Craig and Sproul, p. Once more has K. U. lost one of its students to matrimony, and this time it is a freshman who has done the deed. Lawrence M. Green, freshman College, from Junction City and Miss Alberta Wilson from Lawrence cloped last Friday morning from Lawrence and were married early Saturday in Newton by Judge McAdams. Since they had taken the train from Wichita to Kansas City, they thought that they were going to Wichita to be married and would afterwards make their home there. A non-conference game with Tarkio College, of Tarkio, Mo., has been added to the K. U. baseball schedule with Iowa University with Iowa University on that date. VARSITY TO PLAY GAME WITH TARKIO COLLEGE Another non-conference game with William Jewell College of Liberty, Mo., will also be scheduled by Manager Hamilton. LAWRENCE GREEN AND ALBERTA WILSON ELOPE Waiting on Mr. Hoch waiting The Board of Administration is not meeting today on account of the sickness of former-governor E. W. Hoch. All other members of the Board are here however and probably will convene tomorrow morning. Send the Daily Kansan home. CHOOSES ALL VALLEY FIVE Coach Hamilton Names Four K. U. Basketeers on All Star Team At the request of E. C. Qiqley the St. Mary's conch, manager W. O. Hamilton has selected two All-Star 1915 Missouri Valley Basketball teams. With the exception of Jones the speedy guard of the Kansas Aggies, the coach gave his own proteges a first team lineup follows; Sporrell and Sorenem, forwards; Weaver, center; Dunmire and Jones, guards. On the second team there was a little more variety although three Crimson and Blue players landed places. The lineup is as follows: Rutherford, Nebraska, and Williams Missouri, forward; Kaiser, K. U., center; and Appel and Folks of Kansas, guards. To Read From Hugo Scholarships for Women Jeanne Kirkendall will read Victor Hugo's poem, Apres La Bataille, at the meeting of the Cercle Française tomorrow afternoon at 4:30 o'clock in Fraser, 306. Vera weatherb哥 will tell the story of Chanson de Roland. Applications for these seven scholarships open to women of the University will be received until April 15th by Professors Galloo, Hyde and Silver; Marcella Howland Memorial, $100; William Brown Memorial, $100; W. S. G. A., $100; freshmen women for use during sophomore year; Eliza Matheson Innes Memorial, $100; all women of College and Graduate School above freshman women for sophomore year; Lucinda Smith Buchan Memorial, $25; women of Graduate School and College above freshman year; Kansas branch of the Association of the Collegiate Alumni, $50, women of Graduate School and College above freshman year; Lucinda Smith Buchan Memorial, $200 loan for two years without interest, to women of junior and senior classes of College; Daughters of the American Revolution, $100 interest for three years after graduation to women of the junior class. Send the Daily Kansan home. Gymnasium Team Takes Part in Annual Show Last Year's Gym Team BROOKLYN, NY - The acrobatics team of the Brooklyn Ballet are performing a routine that combines balancing, flexibility, and strength. The team consists of four performers, each wearing a tight-fitting costume with a high neckline and sleeves. They are performing a vertical handstand, with their hands gripping the floor tightly. The other three performers are positioned in a horizontal line, holding the ball between their legs. The performer in the middle is standing on the ground, while the other three are supporting him from above. The performance is taking place in the outdoor arena of the Brooklyn Ballet. Wood Lytle' Lindsay Dyche Babb McGillon J. E. B. Miller The most popular pattern for Spring 1915. Glen Urquhart Plaids Grays, Blues and Multi-colored New young men's models just received today. Glad to show you tomorrow. $17 to $30 THE STYLE OF THE 1920S WAS A PASSION FOR ELECTROSTATIC FEATHERS AND PLATES, WHICH REFERRED TO THE INCREASED USE OF TELEPHONES. THE STYLE WAS CATERED TO THE CHICAGO BOSTON NEW YORK CINEMA FASHION HOUSE. IT MAY BE DISTINGUISHED FROM OTHER STyles By The Use Of A SUPERFINE FEATHERED COAT WITH A FLORAL DESIGN. IT IS A TRENCH STYLE THAT WAS PART OF THE 1920S FASHION SUPPLEMENT. Ober's HEAD TO FOST OUTFITTERS New fiber silk shirts $2.50 and $3.50 "Ober's Special" $5.00 oxford are better 1915 APRIL 1915 Sunday Monday Tuesday WEDNESDAY Thursday Friday Saturday 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Make Your Plans For A Good Time The Date for The Man From Home Booth Tarkington and Harry Leon Wilson's four-act comedy to be presented by the K. U. Dramatic Club Cast at the Bowersock, Wednesday Seats now selling fast at the Round Corner Drug Store Prices: 25c, 50c and 75c UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII. NUMBER 130. KANSAS VERSUS HAWAII TO OPEN 1915 SEASON Games With Fast Chinese Team on McCook Field Thursday and Friday RED CRAIG TO PITCH OPENER With Strong Battery and Fast Infield McCarty's Jayhawkers Begin Season at Home Prof, E. W. Murray, chairman of the eligibility committee on athletics, said at noon today that he thought every player would be eligible for tomorrow's games. Tomorrow afternoon on McCook Field the 1915 Joyhawker baseball team will make its formal debut in the annual game with the fast Chinese team from the University of Hawaii. This game is always one of the hardest of the season, and the way the Chinese have been winning on their tour of the States this year shows that the Varsity will have its hands on the game. We will visit a 64-year history for a two game series, and a victory over this aggregation would be an auspicious beginning of the season. In the last few days the Varsity has shown unusual interest in practice and the team that will line up for the game tomorrow will be in the best condition. A satisfactory battery seems to have been found, and with the amount of material which McCarty has had to work with, the team looks good for a successful season. Players in Good Condition The first game of the two with the Orientals will see Craig doing the hurling for Kansas with Captain DeLongon on the receiving end of the battery. Craig has shown up wonderfully in the practice games and has the speed and control of a vet, but he is slated to pitch in Friday's game while Fischer, Moss and Stiller will be waiting on the bench ready to get into either game if needed. The changing of DeLongon from second to catcher places the position behind the bat in a much more dependable aspect than it has been in practice games and it has been used at second until a catcher can be used at relieve DeLongon who wants his old berth back again. Infield Looks Good UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 14, 1915 The initial sack will be covered by Spruell when he is not on the mound, while Lindsey will be used as substitute in this position. Wood will take care of short stop with King in charge of the third sack. "We have at last lost an infeld that is showing some class," said McCarty yesterday during practice. "The men are showing more speed today than I have seen in them this season. DeLongy will do the catching for us and the whole situation looks good to me. "The outfield has been such that it could be depended upon all the time, for with Chinnery and Wandel back in their positions the only place left to fill in the gardens was right field, and Wieble has filled that. Beside we have Hewlett and Moor in case we can be judged. The team will be to balance now and the only way we can judge them is to wait and see them in action." As an extra inducement to interest students in baseball, Manager Hamilton today placed season tickets that admit to the ten games of the home series on sale for two dollars. Tickets for each game will be fifty cents. Tomorrow's game will be called at 4:30 o'clock. The line up of the team as they will start the game tomorrow will be: Sproull, 1b; Russell, 2b; Wood, ss; Seabrook, 3b; Heywood, 4b; Wieble, 5b; Delongy, 6b; C craig, 8. CADY WANTS WHITE CROSS PLEDGES PAID Prof, H. P. Cady, chairman of the White Cross committee at the University, asks that everyone who has been an inearrent and is in arrears to pay at once. At the present time $1,500 remains to be collected. The committee is charge wishes to make good the wages of its institution pledges for Belgian relief. Becomes Honorary Society The Home Economics Club by unanimous vote of its members became an honorary society at their meeting yesterday. Members hereafter will be elective and selected from among them. The club formerly took anyone who was interested in the work. CONCEIT LIKE PRIDE GOES BEFORE THE FALL Tennis Net Causes Disaster He was a long, lean, and remarkably spry youth down on the tennis court, and while he waited for his partner, he put in his time by showing off before a couple of women, and then trying to wield the racket. He chased their wildly soaring balls, plucking them from the atmosphere, digging them from ditches and fishing them from mud paddles, all the time addressing the audience about the weather, the crops, and the appropriateness of red hair ribbons to tennis women. When they rested, he entertained them by marvelous stunts with his rocket spinning it, tossing it and balancing it on his nose and in many ways showing cones what a remarkable youth he was. Suddenly the ball, propelled by a muscular feminine arm, smiled to the far end of the court away from the smart young man. With a light and graceful bound he was on the court in pursuit. The net was no barrier for him. He gathered himself together and prepared to bound lightly over it. Alas, he had miscalculated. With a rending of net and a creaking of posts he descended to earth and knocked at the racket so proudly was ground deeply into the bosom of old mother nature. The curtain of charity descends on the scene at this point, but not before the two tennis maids are heeded to giggle unsympathetically. WILL STAGE DRAMATIC CLUB PLAY TONIGHT Gives"The Man From Home' in Bowersock Theater at 8:15 o'Clock The newly organized Dramatic Club of the University of Kansas will make its initial bow before a student audience tonight when it presents The Man Prose, an exhibition in four of the Bowersock Theater. A cast of fourteen, selected in competitive tryouts from the members of the Club, has been rehearsing steadily for the last two months in preparation for the annual tournament. Neither trouble nor expense has retarded the efforts of the players in producing the show. "Everything gives promise of a very credible performance," said Prof. Arthur MacKinnon, the show's running manager, and I feel sure that the show will "go over it as should." Following is the cast: Ethel Granger-Simpson, Janet Thomson. Daniel Voorhies Pike, Pate Crowell, Grand Duke Vasilij Vasilivitch, O. O. Earl of Hawasteil, Challiss. Hon, Almeric St. Aubyn, Elmner Cl Ivanhoff, Frank McFarland. Horace Granger-Simpson. G. E. Mills Moliere, Marion Moliere, Hoon Gambiner, Michele, Hoyt Nelson, Carabinier, Harry Harlan. Comtesse de Champagne, Dorothy Lady Creech, Lucile Anstroming: "TheMan From Home." by Harry Wilson and Booth Terrace, is a drama in play, and has been featured extensively by leading players during the past two years. Only a little over a year ago, William K. Hodge appeared in it at the Shubert Theater in Kansas City, the play at that time being on what is known as "big time." This season it is being used by prominent stock companies throughout the United States; the company at the theater writing it not less than as city stars in the movie. That it will make good in college circles there is not the least doubt. The curtain rises at 8:15 o'clock. Date rule off. Dean Blackman a Delegate Dr. E. W. Blackman a Graduate Student appointed one of the delegates to the annual meeting of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, which will held at Philadelphia April 30 and May Dean Blackmar a Delegate WOMEN WILL ELECT OFFICERS TOMORROW At Morning Prayers Friday: "The Choice Part of Education." Speaker: Rev. William B. Lamps, First Presbyterian Church, Winfield Thursday: "Fair Weight in Lab Students desiring to confer with Reverend Lampe will find him at Myers Hall Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday from 2:30 to 1:05 o'clock. At other times he can be seen by appointment through Con Hoffmann. President, Two Vice-Presidents, Secretary, and Treasurer to Be Chosen POINT SYSTEM UP FOR VOTE POINT SYSTEM UP FOR VOTE Selection of Officers Two Weeks Earlier Because of New Amendment Adopted The elections of the officers of the Woman's Student Government Association will be held tomorrow in the first floor of the Museum, from 8 in the morning until 4:30 o'clock. At the same time and upon the same ballots will be the opportunity for women to advocate for women against the adoption of the point system that has been drawn up by the present women's council. the candidates for office are as follows: Blanch Maulen, junior College; Naomi Simpson, junior College; Lauren Dillen, junior College; Luella Cory, junior College; for vice-president. Ada Harper, junior from the School of Fine Arts, vice-president, for Fine Arts; Maureen McKernan, junior college; and Jennifer Sophonore College; Bertha Smith, junior College, treasurer. The elections will be in charge of Eunice Pleasant, Agnes Moses, Ethie Uhrich, and Hazel Carson. The elections are being held two weeks earlier this year than usual, owing to the recent unity constitution recently put into effect. The retiring officers are: Dorothea Hackbusch, president; Naomi Simpson, vice-president from the College, and Agnes Moses, vice-president of the University. Ruth Pleasant, secretary; Stela Rubbs, treasurer. PI U'S ANNEX NOTHER Sigma Phis the Victims in a Close Battle, Marked by Wear, Hitting. The "fatal sixth" was too much for 'Cozy' Cazier, the Sigma Pi twirler and when the smoke had cleared away he found that the Pi U.s had forged ahead of his mates and that the game had faded away. Steady pitching by Stockton and the "circus" catch by Harsh saved the game for the seventh and today another game has gone into their W column in the league standings. The final score was 3 to 2. The Sigma Phis started with a rush, before Stockton could locate the platter, but when he got going he had them eating out of his hand. Weak hitting and numerous errors marked the playing but it was a "nerve-wracker" from the spectators' point of view. FACULTY'S TO HAVE CHICKEN PIE SUPPER Hon. E. T. Hackney and Mrs. Cora G. Lewis attended the game. Inter-Fraternity League Standings | Teams | W | L | Per Cent | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Pi Upsilon | 2 | 0 | 1000 | | Phi Pi Upsilon | 1 | 0 | 1000 | | Alpha Pi Sigma | 0 | 1 | 000 | | Sigma Pi Sigma | 0 | 2 | 000 | | Alpha Pi Delta | 0 | 0 | 000 | The Pharmics will hold their annual dance Friday night in Eagles Hall. Owen and Wilson will furnish the music. Pharmies to Dance Sigma Nu will give a dancing party at Ekee's Friday evening. First Mixer for Men and Women Instructors in Gymnasium, April 26 PROF. BURDICK TO PRESIDE What's the Matter With the American University," Initial Subject for Discussion The chicken pie feed of the faculty at Robinson Gymnastium, Monday, April 26, at 6 o'clock marks a new annual manual and customs of the University. For the first time in the history of the institution, all members of the faculty, both men and women, will meet on an equality to discuss problems now before university men and women throughout the world. The chicken pie will be served at cost, fifty cents per plate. The general topic for the first discussion is "What's the matter with the American University, and how can we meet that opening talk on the subject, followed by Prof. A. T. Walker. After that the discussion will be thrown open for the reminder of the event when you are expected to chip in with an idea or two. Arrangements have been made with University women to appear in May Day Fete costumes to wait on the table and later to furnish some exhibition folk dances and minuets. The girls of the group. These women are all members of Dr. Alice Goetz's class. Prof. W, L. Burdick will preside at the gathering. LARDNER HERE TOMORROW But Two of Twenty-Three Books Checked Out Have Been Turned in M. Lordner's audit takes the place of the one formerly made by Edward E. Brown, whose office was abolished. This year for the first time uniform books and instructions were provided free from the state printery. Registrar Foster has several times made announcement of Mr. Lardner's wishes in the matter, but the organizations have not responded. Out of a total of 65 coming under Mr. Lardner's inspection, but 23 have ever checked out books. What course the secretary will pursue is not known. He has told us that regularities in accounts will be carefully investigated. It is probable that he will call for an accounting from each of the secretaries. When James T. Lardner, financial secretary of the Board of Administration, comes to Lawrence from Bangalore, he organizes organization account books issued by Registrar Foster under his direction, he will find two of the 23 sets of books issued ready for his collection, and theophone class and the Jayhawker. Bug Men go to Vinland Professors and students in the department of entomology will go to Vinland, April 24, on the annual field trip to Europe for studying orchard and forest life. The summer field excursion has not yet been planned. The Entomology Club took a trip to the woods east of Lawn- Saturday night for a wniece roast. Berg Takes Position W. I. Berg, a graduate student in the department of entomology, has accepted a position in entomology in the Kansas Agricultural College. PROBABILITY CURVES NOT ALWAYS PROBABLE Can't Read Profs' Minds A mathematics student took a quiz the other day and, to find out how much he got, consulted the apparatus showing the probability curve. This is an example of a vertical position and standing in a horizontal position. A large mass of very small balls about the size of small shot are dropped from the top, striking projections as they descend, thus throwing them back and forth. They finally fall into a trough parallel to each other at the bottom, forming columns of different lengths. "Now if this column is the largest, as it usually is," said the stude, pointing to the middle one, "I'm going to get a I plus in that quiz." The balls started dropping. The middle column was largest: Then the one next to it caught up and just barely edged ahead. "There goes my I, 1 bet that prof, doesn't know how to grade those papers," the math stude uttered. He has put it. But suddenly he saw the middle column of balls nudge ahead again with a sprint. His face brightened. There was still hone. But the column could not keep up the pace, and it fell behind again. "Oh heck! I don't believe in those old probability curves anyway," he muttered, as he slammed the paper on the floor. CHANCELLOR TO SING AT OLD SONG SERVICE Will Take Part in Convocation for Rendering of Old Ballads Everybody out to hear Chancellor Strong sing one of his favorite old time songs in a convocation for the rendering of old ballads which is to be held at 11:30 o'clock Friday, April 29 Chancellor Strong's favorites are: "Rocks of Ages," "Comin' Thru the Rye," "Old Kentucky Home," "Massa's In the Cold, Cold Ground," and "Asplee in the Deep." Just one of these he will sing at the concerts has been announced if it is likely that if his first rendition is applauded sufficiently he will come back stronger with his encore number. The convocation committee is arranging a program for the entertainment and besides having the head of the University as one of the songsters she may seek a feminine subject. She may sing with Chancellor Strong. root, F. R. Hamilton has suggested that students become familiar with the once popular and now never-to-be-forgotten airs so that at the convocation the chapel will echo and reecho with tunes that undoubtedly will remind us of the older professors' classes will be dismissed at that Classes will be dismat- sors of their younger days. hours the professors are trying to make this the largest convocation of the year. Gets Position Madeline Ashton, senior College, has accepted a position as instructor in German in the Manhattan high school. Y. M. Men Dine The old and new cabinets and the old and new boards of the Y. M. C. A. will meet for dinner at 5:30 o'clock tomorrow evening in Myers Hall. Dramatic Club in "The Man From Home" WALKING ON THE ROADS Left to right: Alton Gumbiner, Elmer Clark, Hoyt Johnson, Frank McCarla and, Harold Crowell, M. C. Reid, Dorothy McKown, O. H. Dittner, Harris y Harian, Nelson Thompson, Frank Miller, Jack Challiss. TO HAVE STUDENT LOAN FUND GOING NEXT YEAR? Board Believes It Can Obtain $25,000 for Helping Under-Graduates at K. U. MEN WANT TO CONTRIBUTE President Hackney Says Large Amount of Money Could be Secured Which Student Might Borrow at Low Interest If the Board of Administration succeeds in carrying out its plans, a student loan fund will be in operation here next year that will enable students to complete their four years by the means of borrowed money. Seniors Forced to Quit At a luncheon held yesterday in Myers Hall, professors and members of the Board discussed the proposition thoroughly and it was favorably received from every angle. Prof. E, F. Engel, who is secretary of the system now used in the system now used is good as far as it goes. But there is only about $226 in the treasury now, however, and only small loans can be made. According to a report that was made by Registrar George O. Foster, several students, some of them senior, attended an online semester on account of the lack of funds to carry them over until they would be able to obtain work. One hundred dollars has been the limit, when a student has borrowed from a lender, for cases that has been insufficient. Con Hoffmann, who is at the head of the employment bureau, also showed the necessity of having a fund that could be extended necessary credit to students in order that they finish school. Will Push Question President Hackney of the Board of Administration declared that he believed it would be possible to obtain a fund of at least $25,000 for the proposed purpose. "There are men in the state who are interested in sending money to the school," it is more than likely that they would contribute funds to a loan board if the board was conducted on a business basis", he says. Members of the Board of Administration expect to work on the question and push it with all their might and considering the fact that the faculty are in favor of the movement it is more than likely that next year a student may apply to the Board and by paying a very small rate of interest, funds may be borrowed for from one to four years and this way comprise his education. ANNOUNCE DEBATE JUDGES Two Washburn and One Aggie Man to Decide Contest Prof. R. H. Kirkpatrick and Dr. Arthur May Hyde, of Washburn, and Prof. Edwin Lee Burton of K. S. A. c are to be the judges at the Kansas-Oklahoma debate in Fraser Hall tomorrow night. Announcement of the contest was made by the department of public speaking this morning. The Kansas team which is to debate Colorado at Boulder left today at noon on the Union Pacific. Prof. Howard T. Hill, University debating coach, accompanied them. During Professor Hill's absence, Avery Olney, a senior in the Kansas and a former assistant debater, manage the Kansas team which remains in Lawrence to oppose Oklahoma. C. H. Armstrong, one of the Oklahoma speakers, arrived in Lawrence this morning, and spent the day on campus, team-mates will arrive this evening. IRENE JONANI TO SING HERE Lyric Soprano Will Take Part in Choral Union Concert Irene Jonani, lyric, soprano, and a member of the Chicago-Philadelphia Grand Opera Company, will appear as soloist in the concert to be given April 28 under the auspices of the moral Union in Robinson Gymnasium. Miss Jonani is probably the most prominent member of the company, although she is young, her work is well and favorably known. She will sing the obligatos to several of the chorus numbers, and will render two groups of solos. Tickets are now on sale. All those wishing to try out for the Varsity tennis team are requested to meet Friday at 5 o'clock in Room 161. Tryouts will be held next week. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the Univer- EDITORIAL STAFF John M. Henry Editor-in-Chief Raymond Clapper Managing Editor Helen Hayes Associate Editor William Cady Exchange Editor BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS BLAZZ J. W. Dewey C. Sturartie - Advertising Mgr S. Sturartie - Advertising Mgr REPORTORIAL STAFF Leon Harsh Ames Rogers Gilbert Clayton John M. Gleisner Leon Harsh T. M. Foster Charles Sweet Don Davis Elmer Arndt Carolyn McNutt Rex Miller Paul Brindel Lennifer Hall Eric Hancock Glendon Allvine C. A. Ritter Cheater Patterson Fred Bowens Subscription price $2.50 per year in advance; one term, $1.50. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office 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. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone, Bell K. U. 35. The Daily Kansan aims to pick out the best students of University of Kansas; to go further than merely printing the names of students at the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courteous; to solve problems to wiser heads, in all, and to ensure that university students of the University. Fair Play and Accuracy Bureau Prof. H, T. Hill...Faculty Member Don Joseph...Student Member John M. Henry...Secretary music or impression in any of the columns of the Daily Kansan, report it to the secretary at the Daily Kansan office, instruct you as to further procedure. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14, 1915 HE WILL REMEMBER When the student leaves the school he will remember the feeds and football games, proms and hops, parties and receptions, all the lighter more joyous side of the life. But he will also take with him a bit of the serious man and woman-making phases of the school, the courses, exams, especially the chapel exercises, when for a few minutes before the day's work begins he stops for reflection on the reasons why. Morning prayers are as essential to the life of the student, and will be appreciated, as much as any athletic contest that ever thundered on McCook. Those twenty-fives, five mornings a week will come to the student more times, we daresay, than the old Missouri game. He may not reminisce with friends about it, but when he is alone, and thinking the things that determine him, the 'old morning prayers will come up. HEALTH AND HABITS How often we hear the expression, "He would have been a great man but cutting the candle finally got him." Men, born to be protagonists in art, in literature, in military circles, or even in the world of sport, have passed away, disappointed at their failure to produce that which they were capable of, all because of physical negligence. And in most cases it has been the failure to form right habits that has placed them in this dilemma. The older we grow, the more set our methods, hence it is the more essential that we form right habits. Aristotle recognized this trism in the Rhetorica when he wrote, "That to which we have been accustomed becomes, as it were, a part of our nature." Although the average college man believes Locke when he says, "A sound Mind in a sound Body, is a short but full description of a happy State in this World," there are few who put the knowledge into practice. Many of us are at times prone to spend the better part of the night at the dance. An even greater number have no regard for our diet, except that it be temporarily pleasing, and sacrifice our well being to satisfy that desire. But the greatest harm from wrong habits that befalls the college man—and this applies to the woman too,—during the four years of residence on a university campus is that resultant from the prevalent practice of idling away the best working hours of the day and then laboring far into the right and "we sma" hours of the morning in paying for the pleasure. It is the student who tries to make up this loss, that will eventually suffer. He who idles away the day and sleeps that part of the night not taken up with revelling or small things, will soon enough be consigned to innocuous desuetude by the world. WILLIAM R. NELSON The passing of Col. W. R. Nelson leaves a place in the ranks of newspaper men that will not easily be filled. For thirty-five years the sturdy figure has been prominent in the forefront of every battle waged against the forces of evil. In all that time Col. Nelson or The Star—the names are practically synonymous in the general mind—has been fighting away like a veritable Light Brigade, undaunted by the number and strength of the enemy, by the long chances of success, by any consideration whatever apart from the attainment of the end in view. For years The Star has covered Kansas and Missouri like a blanket and has undoubtedly influenced more people than any other one paper in this section. It has never lacked enemies, but for the most part they were causes for self-gratulation on the part of the editor. He felt, and rightly, that the opposition of certain interests was the best possible recommendation in the minds of all good people. There have not been lacking among Colone! Nelson's friends many who deplored his judgment and some of his views at the same time that they accorded his warm heart and patriotic spirit the fullest measure of admiration. The very zealousness that animated him sometimes contrived to lead him into error. But never was a lost cause defended by a more gallant champion; and never was there a better loser. Whatever anyone might think of the Star's policies and Nelson's politics, no one would attempt to deny his absolute and unfaltering honesty; his indomitable energy; his public spirit and broad vision; and the lofty ideal of service that justified his life. The loss to Kansas City and to this entire section is mitigated only by the fact that many men have consciously imitated him, have caught a part of his vision, and are ready to take up the fight where he laid it down. SOPHOMORES SHOULD CHANGE The adoption of some plan for the Junior Prom as outlined by Bryan Davis, co-manager of the event this year, should be made by the sophomore class before the year is ended. If the present plan is retained, and class after class goes in the hole on the event, the time is not far when the managers will begin cutting down on the money spent on the Prom to make expenses. Then the Prom will cease to be one of the big social affairs of the Hill. The sophomore officers of this year could give no greater service to the class than arrange, before the end of the year, for the submission of a plan similar to that of Davis, to the students. Tango has become too barbarous for refined Euvepo, and Paris will soon do away with it. The mobilization of water wagons now will be considered the equivalent of a declaration of war. The Chicago News says Kansas is the most optimistic state in the Union. It pours or two acre it. It was growing about as fast, a few months ago its snowstorm. To prove that Kansas is the mother of Jesse Willard—"Who ever heard the saga?" EVER IMAGINE THIS? The Heroine Muses: Chasing the Glooms Shots at Half-Cock Or Foolishment in Verse The Heroine Musses: It wouldn't be bad to in the pen. Or have a name like Some Chi ken; Or I could endure to flunk a few, Or I could endure to flunk a few, Or join a frat like Mew Cat Mew; It wouldn't kill me to break some FACULTY CAPS AND GOWNS Editor Kansas; 1095 or draw a Coke made out of dregs, But I would go and flip the flips. If I should lose my Rose Bud Lips Student Opinion I should like to add my little mite to the agitation for the wearing of caps and gowns on Commencement Day by the faculty. I am sure I voice the sentiment of many other seniors as well in saying that the class would highly appreciate this action of the faculty to make a commitment a success. The class this year has begun early to plan for Commencement exercises, and anticipates a week far better than those of recent years, at least, in interest and general participation. Picture the long line of faculty members marching over to the Gym, clad in the black uniform, carrying the diplomas of seniors, and consider how much dignity and interest this feature would add. A Senior It is said that a few members of the faculty have objected, on the ground that they do not wish to do anything that sets them apart from the ordinance of the state of the world of business. Surely, the wearing of this costume for two hours or so, one day of the year, to help make the Commencement exercises dignified and impressive, would not be sufficient to the fellow men." It would bring them CLOSER to their fellow citizens of the graduating class. Flames From the Bush PROFESSORUS HUMANUS Do you think that all professors are a kind of unapproachable, inhuman collection of being who also can prove to you that they are not only good sports but real friends. PROFESSORUS HUMANUS The other night I met a woman who is a member of the faculty at the University. "I'm glad to know you, Miss Jones," she said in a very unflattering tone. "I am amazed of your sorority sisters in my classes and I have heard them speak of you as 'Peg' so much that to meet you as 'Miss Jones' seems queer." Do you wonder why I want to get a class from who those who takes that much interest in us?" Then the other night at the Junior Prom one supposedly dignified professor said after he had shaken hands with me, "I like your dress. That shade of pink is very becoming." Who wouldn't like him? But this is my crowning example. I was going down Massachusetts street the other day, all dressed up in a white shirt and a tall skirt when I passed a man I considered my best human professor. He spoke and then after I had passed he called after me with a phone and a button on the back of your cost." I'd do anything for that man! SPELLING AS A FINE ART The dean of the faculty of arts and sciences of Harvard University, in his latest official report on the work being done in the department, deals with problems of literacy among undergraduate and teachers; and his frankness and humor make college officials use better English in their lectures, formal discourses and reports, will they really be in a safe position to challenge the lack of student mastery of English that is "correct, coherent and idiomatic." Livermore has many a professional, in theory at least, is in no position to throw stones. But of course a department of English in a college or university is bound to face, meet and conquer any defects of its own methods in developing a literate body of students out of the graduates of the preparatory schools and the youths that comprise our nation's intellectual horizon. Hence Dean Le Baron R. Briggs in his report resolutely grapples with the momentous fact that the "proportion of intellectual persons who cannot spell appears to have increased." And this, too, when the number of persons who can read is so much larger relatively than it used to be. Undoubtedly new methods of reading, spoken, and spoken, do account in part for the increase of undergraduates at Harvard who write "niques" for "eggs" and who, in their examination papers, refer to Portia as a "wethey aeris". But that cannot account for the Harvard professor—one of the world's greatest scholars, so Dean Briggs who prepares them for teaching. He was educated when spelling was taught with disciplinary effect and not left to "impressionism," and yet he errs. Fortunately for the Harvard youth that are instructive "bad spellers," the teachers of English at the university know that a thesis man is good at writing national misspelled words. There is food for thought in Dean Briggs's statement that "Many persons, who write better than the most critical of us, spell worse, and the most打印机 to spell for them." He might have added "and the ateo-earrorer." Two practical aspects of the matter of correct spelling of English will occur to a reflective person. One is the need of standardization among persons who use the language, for British and American usage are not the same; and just in proportion as periodicals and books gain international circulation within the empire and the republic is there the need of concert of custom in spelling words some of which even writers with the smallest vocabularies must use. At satisfactory conditions are far from satisfactory. Yet again, it should be noted that many educators are coming to believe that the schools exaggerate the number of students they need to know how to spell correctly. Boston, for instance, at the present time is radically lowering its standards in this respect. Throughness within a limited but useful field is now sought for, rather than superficiality in the larger one. Youth and maturity are to be trusted to teach ambitious and cultured readers and writers the spelling of words that children and average adults seldom use in correspondence, and even less frequently in their talk—C. S. Mon- First Dame—What does "Prom" mean, Vera? Second Dame—I heard say it meant starvation for a month.—Froth. Pure sparkling soda in clean glasses at Barber's Drug Store.-Adv. Going to put away your furs? Meeting with Dr. Avery at Wilton's Drug Store...-Adv The Pleasure of School Life is Doubled If you are acquainted with the current happenings "on the hill''. The cheapest and easiest way to get acquainted is through the columns of the University Daily Kansan SUBSCRIBE NOW $1.00 for the rest of the year The High School Student who feels an interest in such a vocation as Mechanical Engineering should be encouraged in knowing that the growth of industry, and the modern striving after efficiency, open a broad way of opportunity to the able mechanical engineer. He is always in demand. His position is often one of large responsibility. He is well paid. A four-year course in mechanical engineering with the advantages of fully equipped shops and laboratories, prepares the student to enter this broad field under the best conditions. VOCATION EDITOR University Daily Kansan Lawrence, Kansas UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SENATE WILL DECIDE FATE OF COLLEGE DAY Governing Body Will Hold Special Meeting to Consider Allowing Holiday A special meeting of the University Senate is to be held at 4:30 o'clock Friday of this week to render definite action on the proposal for a College Day. The plans that are being made for celebration of the holiday being, rushed ahead too fast until definite action is taken by the Senate. The Senate was not forced to take any definite action on the matter last year, and was somewhat relieved when the students themselves defeated the proposition by their indifference. This year the demand is so obvious that a special meeting will be added to take care of the proposition. The Laws have already celebrated their day and the Engineers are making elaborate preparation for their big day the latter part of this month. The enrollment in the School of Law is 185,000, and the enrollment is 299. The number that are enrolled in the College totals at the present time more than 1500. Ogden Jones, president of the College, has been working on the plans for some months. He says: "We have the largest enrollment in the University and it is only right that we should have a holiday. We need such an event to get the College student engaged with each other." College has the reputation of not having any life or pep, but before we are through this year, the remainder of the student body will change its mind about us. GRADE DETERMINES DOWRY --in regard to state legislation to lower interest rates, "I do not think that the state should go farther than to remove some present state laws that prevent the land from raising the rate of interest," writes Professor Putnam. In India Size of Wedding Dowry Deends on Ability as Student The place of the student in India in social life is markedly dependent upon on the stamp which his examinations leave upon him. For example, a graduate of the preparatory or secondary school who upon graduation holds a good certificate can command from his prospective employer as well as be forthcoming for the uncertified youth. So definite is this matter, economically speaking, that in a certain part of India, the teachers give the information that a regular scale of dowries is in vogue. Five hundred rupees is exacted from the prospective father for a secondary school certificated husband. His present position is 1000 rupees demanded by the youth who has an academic M. A. The patriarchal custom of the head of the family being responsible for the various relatives so far as their support is concerned is also a matter that must be seriously considered upon his eyes upon his study and his tests for the sake of their practical value. It is not unusual for a student, even in his first year after college, to find himself saddled with the enormous burdens of a large circle of relatives who are free to work or in part dependent upon his efforts. When it is considered furthermore that even where such obligations as these do not exist, in nine cases out of ten they have been fulfilled of the father, and that he is just now coming into a period when prices for living have increased twofold it does not appear so remarkable that the Inventors dwell upon its economic future. There must be a reason why so many students drop into Wilson's Drug Store for their refreshments. They try to please everybody.—Adv. Hyball Ginger Ale. The best by test. McNish. Phone 192—Adv. A. D. S. Peroxide Cream, the original peroxide cream, at Barber's Drug Store.-Adv. MOTHER BUNNIE ATE HER BABIES Wouldn't Sacrifice Them to Science Black crepe hangs on the door of the immunity class room in Snow Hall. Mrs. Peter Bannie, one of the rabbits used in immunity experiments, the other morning became the mother of six. At supper time last month Mrs. Bannie and ate every one of them—only a few wipes of dragged baby fur remain. The cannibalistic mother is a mystery to the zoology people. "They were the tiniest things I ever saw," said Elizabeth Fleeson, nurse official, when she returned to the lab and found that she had happened during her absence. "Their actor acted as if she was ashamed of them, but I never dreamed that she was so devoid of maternal love." Mrs. Peter Bunnie refuses to be interviewed; and so no one will ever know just what thought came to her mind. Perhaps she was ashamed of the sorry appearance of her children; probably she dreaded dedicating them to science; it may be that her mother heart was so wrung with the thought that her babies would never see the green grass; perhaps that the nearest field would come to green fields would be next to the box of alfalfa hay near the cage; or maybe she is just naturally a cannibal, is Mrs. Peter Bunnie. TRADITIONS BIND INDIA Customs of 3000 Years Hold Individuality in Check Among Students The student of India has also a system tending against individuality. For 3000 years orientalism in theory and practise has tended to suppress personal possibilities in favor of despotism. In the present Indian systems, India has been beried with collectivism both in family and in state. The present Indian student is, like his father, a slave to social and ancestral systems whose first tendency is to deindividualize him and to make him a mere cop in a great social context. This emphasis upon conformity of type has produced a fixity and conservatism which differentiates the Indian student from the westerner in a most emphatic way. It is one of the most impregnable walls through which the civilization of Europe has had to penetrate. India has gloried in her exclusiveness and in her annihilation of public spirit, in her allegiance to the duty of lot or the laws of the fathers, defying all sudden transformation. New India has inherited a traditional conservatism. Whether one inquires of teachers, officials, business men or missionaries, the need to talk before the conversation is over he will usually employ the phase, "the lack of initiative." The Indian student never has time for creative resources. Whether this deficiency is due to the long servitude of the race which has naturally involved the checking of initiative and compelled service other than those self-asserting and reliant characteristics of a ruling and accomplishing people, to the fact that the ruling race has taken for granted this natural right to act native indian and has not tried especially to develop the Indian student, may be quite generally regarded as an open question. There must be a reason why so many students drop into Wilson's Drug Store for their refreshments. They try to please everybody.—Adv It is everywhere evident, however, that India has not been prolife in great leadership. Even a few great men, a Cromwell or a John Knox to "see life steadily and to see it whole" and then with practical aggressive power to build up united unity and progressive development—even one such man would have been notable by his uniqueness in Indian history. Paint, varnish, floor finishes, floor and wall brushes at Barber's Drug Store.—Adv. WRITES ON FARM CREDITS Prof. G, E. Putnam Has' Article in March American Economic Review Prof. George E. Putnam, of the department of economics, has an article in the March number of the Americas in which he discusses a subject of "Farm. Credit in Kansas." Because of the idea over the state that our present credit system is prejudicial to the interests of the farm, we must work with the department of economics, has made a careful investigation of the conditions and has sent out questionaires to every county of the state. We are unable to uncover the result of this investigation. In answer to the question as to whether interest rates are too high, forty-five farmers expressed satisfaction with the present rate. Seven In answer to the question as to whether interest rates are too high, forty-three farmers expressed satisfaction with the present rate. Seven-one regarded the rates as too high for profitable farming. In response to every five farmers expressed dissatisfaction with the present rate. Concerning the possibilities of cooperative credit as a remedial agent for high interest rate Professor Putnam finds that the Kansas farmer, like the K. U. student is a strong individualist. Living a life of comparative isolation he has become accustomed to looking for assistance from others; and it is seldom that he will brook interference. IRRIGATION IN 400 B. C. Herdotus Found Assyria and Babylon With Watering Systems From the Springfield Republic. Herodotus, who wrote in the fifth century, B. C., says: "The land of Assyria is little but watered, and that little nearishes the root of milk up, and the grain comes to maturity by being irrigated from the river, not, as in Egypt, by the river overflowing the fields, but it is irrigated by the hand and by engines. For the Babylonian territory, like Egypt, is intersected by canals, and the largest of these is navigable, stretching in the direction of the river into the Euphrates to another river, the river Tigris, on which the city of Nineveh stood. "This is, of all lands with which we are acquainted, by far the best for the growth of corn; but it does not carry any show of producing trees of any kind, nor the olive, yet it is so fruitful in the produce of corn, that it yields continually two hundred-fold, and when it produces its best, it yields even three hundred-fold. The blades of wheat and barley grow there to four ferns in inches; to what height will mullet and sesame grow, I shall not mention it; for I am well assured that, to those who have never been in the Babylonian country, what has been said concerning its production will appear to be greater than such as is drawn from sesame. They have palm trees growing all over the plain; most of these bear fruit." FOUNDS SIX UNIVERSITIES Chinese Government Establishes Higher School in Republic The new ministry of education of the Chinese republic is planning for six great national universities located in six sections of the country. The minister of education, Tang Jieguo, has announced that he will be forthcoming immediately and the actual work for the establishment of these institutions, intended to have such vital relation to the nation, will be started at once. It is expected that within the next year or two the system will be in complete operation. Going to to put away your furs Making sure that your furries at Wil s don’t drug Store—Adv From the New York Sun It is hoped that ample preparation will be made in these new universities for the education of Chinese students, who are actually every eastern country today, are beginning to look forward to having a share in the intelligent minds of their daughters, as well as exerting their influence upon the whole nation. Send the Daily Kansan home. CASTLE ROLL Front 2 1/2 in. Back 1 1/4 in. 2 FOR 25¢ 2 FOR 25¢ MANUFACTURERS: WILLIAM BARKER CO., TROY, N.Y. Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE 12 W. Ninth Lawrence Pantatorium Phones 508 Evans Drug Store Successor to Raymonds' 819 Mass. St. KODAKS STATIONERY PERFUMES Only at Peckhams RADNOR RADNOR THE NEW ARROW COLLAR Ladies and Gents Imperial Shining Parlor and Hat Works BASEBALL GOODS We clean and reblock all kinds of hats, Ladies and Gents Panamas Especially. 737 Mass. St. All SHINES, 5c. and Hat Works KENNEDY & ERNST -AT- REMBRANDT HATED LATIN Parents Released Him From School and Allowed Him to Paint From the N. Y. Times. In his book, "Art and Common Sense," Royal Courtzino* gives us an insight into the details of Rembrant and his surroundings. The story of his life is not an affair of aloofness from the world, "of technique enveloped in an hermetically closed studio, but of prosaic effort." The home of this miller's son was a comfortable house on the ramparts of Leyden. "His parents were in England, and they have been kindly, sympathetic folk, quick to understand the ambition which their son disclosed at an early age. He experienced none of the maladies he had made his choice of a career. "The muller and his wife saw no teason why lady Latin when his heart Those party flowers are always appreciated when they come from THE FLOWER SHOP 825$^{\frac{1}{2}}$ Mass. Phones 621 Professional Cards J. F BIOCK, Optometrist and Spo- nitor 802 suite, St. Bell Phone 695. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires studio. Both phones. J. R. SECHTELT, M. D. D. O. 832 Bob receives both phones, office and roadside calls of San Francisco, California, in the Chapel in Fraser Hall. on Friday, April 16, 1915, at 4:30 in the afternoon. Dr. Fluno is a member of the Board of Lectureship of the Mother Church, the First Church of Christ Scientist in Boston, Mass. HARRY MEDING, M. D Eye, ear nose, and throat. Glasses fitted. Office, F. A, U. I. Phones, Bell 513, Home 512. DIL, N. HAYES, $29 Muss. St. Generali. Also treats the eye and Eyelid. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diseases of the stomach, surgery and gynecology Suite 1, F. A. U. Bldg. Residence 120 Ohio St. Both phones. 35. DR. PETER D. FAULS, Osteopathe, Office and residence. 7½ East 7th St, General practice. Holm phones 641; hours to 12:30, 2 to 5, and 7 to 8 by mail. Jewelers G, A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, car ear G. Classified Plumbers ED, W. PAISONS, Engraver, Watch- and Jewelry, Belle Phone 711, 717 Madison DR. FRANCIS J. FLUNO, C. S. D. The Christian Science Society announces a Free Lecture on Christian Science to be given by PHONE KINNEDY PLUMBING CO. MASSAGE MASSAGE 283.958 lmps. 184. MASSAGE MASSAGE 283.958 lmps. 184. Barber Shops "He chose for his master Pieter Lastman, who had visited Rome and had brought back with him a Dutchman's version of the classical tradition, which is to say, a man who has lived in a missionary context in his contemporaries than it is to us, Rembrandt, a man in advance of his time, was not long in exhausting all that his fashionable master had to teach him. By the time he was eighteen, he would have been there, in the words one of his biographers, 'to study and practise painting alone, in his own fashion.' Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK, 613 Moe Insurance was set on handling the brush. They released him from school when he was still in his teens, to enter the studio of Swanebureh, and after three years under that mediocre painter of Biblical and historical compositions they were content to let him leave their home and proceed to Amsterdam, where better instruction was available. FIRE INSURANCE, LOANS, and abstracts. Banking. Bell 145; Home 2592. FRANK E. BANKS, Ins., and abstracts of Title. Room 2. F. A. U. Building. Want Ads LOST-Mesh bag containing dollar in or between Fraser and Administration Building. Finder keep dollar in or between Covey, 1246 La. phone B, 1244. WANTED - To buy a second hand daily canaan. State price FOR RENT-A modern house of twelve rooms, in a very desirable location. Bell phone 1823. PROTSCH "The Tailor" SPRING SUITING Box Stationery All Grades-All Prices McColloch's DrugStore BURT WADHAM'S BURT WADHAM'S "College Inn Barber Shop" LAWRENCE Business College LAWFREES, Kansas. Largest school in Kansas. School occupies 2 floors Law Kansas. School occupies 2 floors Law TYPE or shortened by maddie. Write for sample of Stemotype note and a catalog. WATKINS' NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depository. FRANK KOCH FRANK KOCH "THE TAILOR" Full Line of Spring Sutlitsa STUDENT HEADQUARTERS STUDENTS' SHOE SHOP R. O. BURGERT, Prop 1107 Mass. St. Satisfaction Guaranteed THEIS BINDING Engraved and Printed Cards. Sheaffer's Self-filling Fountain Pens. 744, Mass. Street. A. G. ALRICH 744 Mass. Street. T T University Vaudeville in the Robinson Gymnasium Thursday, April 20, at 8:15 Real Chinese and Real Baseball Players GENERAL ADMISSION 25 CENTS RESERVED SEATS 35 CENTS Special Offer—Baseball Season Ticket Good for Ten Home Games, $2.00 Season Tickets Admit BASEBALL-OPENING GAME UNIV. OF HAWAII vs. K.U. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, APRIL 15th AND 16th GAMES CALLED 4:30 O'CLOCK EVERYBODY OUT Single Admissions, 50c Grand Stand Cushions, 15c Extra Tickets at Gate, Manager's Office and Carroll's UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NINE RUNNERS CHOSEN FOR DRAKE EXHIBITION Tryouts Last Night Showed Class of Jayhawkers—Heriott and Rodkey Best The personnel of the relay teams that are to represent K. U. at the Drake Relay Games at Des Moines Saturday was announced this morning. To make the trip are: Captain Edwards, Rodkey, Harriott, Grady, Fiske, Creighton, C. Sprowl, Poos and Ellwick. There is a chance also that he will run in the half mile relay with two men who are entered in other events. YEARS SHOW CHANGE IN AHTELIC METHODS They Used to Take Oil Baths What would people think of us if they should see us eat a big piece of meat with our fingers, wipe the greasy fingers on a piece of bread, and calmly throw the bread under the table? They would call us barbarians. Who would be more grateful to pose we ate our meals lying down. They would say we were sick; and probably there would be something wrong with us. Yet old Sophocles, Euripides, Eratosthenes, and all the lords and statesmen of ancient Greece inhabited; and people called Greece the cultured nation of the world. What if our athletes had to bathe themselves with oil, as the Athenian youth did, every time they worked out. It is doubtful if many K. U. men would go out for athletics in the first place if oil baths were a prerequisite; and then just think what a time that would have afforded them trying to wash it off with Lawrence city water. It makes us wonder if the Greeks used lawn soap. Funny what a change a few centuries can make in opinions. HASH HOUSE LEAGUERS TO TALK ABOUT DIAONDAMS The chief matter for discussion is that of grounds. Last week the two north diamonds were unfit for use, and Hamilton Field was not available, so considerable confusion remained between diamonds may have to be provided, since they have not been put in condition. Representatives of the Hash House League teams will meet tomorrow night in the Daily Kansan office at 10 a.m. The team will have arisen out of the first series of games last week. The business will not require a great deal of time, but is important. Following the general progress of the series, protests and questions of eligibility. WEIGHTS AND MEASURES ARE NEVER ACCURATE "No measure is absolutely correct," says Prof. E. F. Stimpson, of the department of physics and state inspector of weights and measures. "We always test the accuracy of all measures used in important experiments." Just lately some glass pipettes and burettes have been purchased for the department of physics to test the strength of glass pipettes and burettes are small glass measures that will contain a known amount. Engineers Mass Meeting A mass meeting of the freshman Engineers has been called for 10:30 o'clock tomorrow morning in the Marvin Hall chapel for the purpose of making arrangements for a freshman Engineer in the Engineers' Parade, Friday, April 23. Student Has Appendicitis Elmer C. Roswurm, a senior in the College, was taken to a hospital in Kansas City Tuesday where he will undergo an operation for appendicitis. Roswurm's home is in St John. Miss Helen Trent will talk on maple trees at the meeting of the Botany Club in Snow Hall this evening. No Board Meeting The Delegation will no will hold it meeting tonight an usual. K. U. Men Who Debate Tomorrow JOHN BROTHERS Dodds Burns Shi nn SOPHOMORE WOMEN PLAY FIRST HOCKEY Initial Game of New Inter Collegiate Sport Won by Miss Adams' Class Women's hockey started out with a vim yesterday afternoon, when Dr Alice Goetz's 11:30 sophomore gym class went down to inlegible defeat under Miss Sylvin Adams' 3:30 sophomore women. The score, which was a mere matter of 1 to 0 does not suggest the victory they earned into the game. It was the first time that the women had played on the outdoor court back of the Gym, and they had many trials and tribulations locating the elusive little ball, and pursuing it frantically over bumps and hillocks and swatting it frantically to get it untangled from the long grass, only to see it puffered and then their noses by ennemy, and sent spinning down the field in the opposite direction. Play was very ragged, to say the least, and the睡眠 horse gazing peacefully near the field opened his eyes in amazement at the sight of so many young ladies engaged in pounding one innocent little pellet, and brandishing warlike clubs, at each brandished tongue, and brandishing a loud horse laugh, but the statement could not be verified this morning. "The person who succeeds in life learns to triumph during his college days," said William B. Lampe in his talk on the subject "The Survival of the Fittest" at morning prayers in Fraser chapel this morning. "A college diploma is the most worthless thing a man ever spent five dollars for if that is all he gets from school. But he will succeed in the man who takes the hard courses and reads the hard books. He will triumph where others fail. He learns to overcome difficult problems, himself fit and worthy to survive." “Never you mind,” said Miss Adams cheerfully, “Just as soon as we learn that the object of the game is not for everybody to jump on the ball at once we will have a wonderful team.” "This is just a beginner," said Dr. Goetz. "We probably won't do anything about a school team this year, because the women don't know enough about the game; but we want all the women to come out and play, and by the practice obtained we hope to get a fine junior team next fall." There will be more inter-class games. Friday two freshman teams winning the win and next week the winning sophomore and play the winning freshman gym class. PERSON WHO SUCCEEDS TRIUMPHS IN COLLEGE Tomorrow morning Rovered Lampe will soak on "Sanitation and Mum" ** Spring Publications by American Authors are Announced BOOKS NEWS FOR READERS A second edition of Prof. Brander Matthews' "Oxford Book of American Essays" has been called for. James Whitcomb Riley is about issuing another volume of the Greenfield edition of his poems, which will have much new verse. The state historical library at the University of Wisconsin has just acquired a complete set of autographs of the Declaration of Independence. Amelia Josephine Burr, whose reputation hitherto has rested on her verse, is out with her first novel, "A Dealer in Empire." Following the reasonable fashion of the season, and combining pleasure and professional education, the American Library Association meets in June this year at Berkeley, Cal., night unto the exposition at San Francisco. Tennyson's play, "Harold," will be given by the Yale University Dramatic Association during commencement week, next June. Professor Phelps of the department of literature claims that will be the first rendering ever given. Charles H. Sherrill, who first gave eminence to the post of ambassador from the United States to the Argentine Republic, for some years has had as his hobby the collection of material shedding light on French public opinion concerning eighteenth century America. Seribriner's Magazine is running a series of articles based on his research. R. M. Johnston, assistant professor of history at Harvard University and in authority on Napoleonic history und on military strategy, will send *orth soon a book on "Arms and the War"* with his lecture sets of the present war in Europe und the special problems it creates or the United States. Residents of the United States who may happen to have letters or interesting reminiscences of the late Sir John Hennick Heaton are invited by him to communicate with his heater Heaton to communicate with her at 6 St. James court, London. The first interpretation of H. G. Wells by an American citizen to find book form and take on the dimensions of "an appreciation" is by Van Wyk et al. in New York journalist and author a study of John Addington Symonds. "Camp Craft," by Warren H. Miller, editor of "Field and Stream." is a serviceable book of its kind. Another sport book, meeting the needs of another constituency, is Messrs. Clarke and Dawson's book on "Baseball." Professionally with letters have made the book especially for school and college ball players to study as they would geometry or calculus. A baby may not know much, but you will notice that it never cries for its father when it is hungry—Purple Cow. Miss—Does Mr. Stout do the modern dances? Mr—No. He's too much of a *a*ut to be a good dipper—Chapparal. McNish's aerated distilled water is the best protection for the health. Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR ARROW COLLARS Benjamin Correct Clothes BENJAMIN— skeletonized summer suits. The only lining in the Benjamin summer suit is in the sleeve, and it's silk, even the vest is unlined. The ideal garment for summer wear—a little more style, a much better fit and of course a little more money than a Palm Beach—but they're worth it. $ 20 to $ 25 PALM BEACH—A less expensive suit, in a great many new patterns, and four distinct models. $8.50 to $15. Johnson & Carl EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR INDESTRUGTO TRUNKS Special Prices on Tortoise Shell Goods For Golfing and Automobiling, with Plain or Amber Colored Lenses - - - $3.00 Fitted with your Prescription, $5.00 to $6.50. Torics $7.50. Come in and see these goods. Very comfortable and up-to-date. For out of town: Send me your prescription and the style you prefer and I'll do the rest. Satisfaction guaranteed always or money refunded. Gustafson YE SHOP OF FINE QUALITY "THE MAN FROM HOME" at the Bowersock Tonight UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII. NUMBER 131. STUDENTS GREET "MAN FROM HOME" WARMLY Snubbed by Dukes and Counts, Pat Gets Glad Hand From K. U. DRAMATIC CLUB PLAY A HIT Four-Act Comedy Staged Last Night Had Punch and "Boncheads" Were Taboo Unquestionably, the role of the evening was the "Daniel Voonhies Pike" of Harold Crowell. We might forget the play bye and bye—we might; but "Pat" Crowell's natural, quiet, self-contained interpretation of "The Man" will serve to keep it alive. Janet Thompson in Hard Role Janet Thompson in Hard Role Janet Thompson, as "Ethel Granger-Simpson," a spoiled, abjected woman; she also played a difficult role; her interpretation was neither too bold nor too timid; had just the right balance in these spots where too much stress on the women would have spoiled everything. The "Ivanhoff" of Frank McFarland stands out as another of the well-played parts. To rant for minutes at a stretch; to cough and choke and roll one eye wildly in his mouth, he will still and merely act in a big climax is difficult work—yet MacFarland found himself encased in just such a role. That every person in the audience sympathized with "Ivanhoff's" pligil is ample proof that he achieved the goods in playing the role. Grand Duke Dittmer, Sir! Other characterizations that got over most successfully were those of the "Grand Duke Vasili Vasilivitch," by Otto Dittmer; the "Earl of Haw-castle," by Jack Challiss; and Frank Miller's "Horace Granger-Simpson." Dittmer was notably a military well poised, despite his handicap in having to hide his face behind three inches of Russian whiskers. Meere spinach could not keep the sturdy Duke down, however, and he Vasilivitched successfully for all purposes: he could wore his mustache, that way he wore his jacket, that he was a double distilled devil. Challiss carried the part well, regardless of a pale make-up in the first act. "Horace Granger-Simpson" was just young enough to be boyish, and you boyish enough to polish. He had to be about apologizing to "The Man," however, that one couldn't help liking him. Then there are Elmer Clark's "Almeric St. Aubyn" and Alton Gumbiner's "Mariano." Both had all the opportunity in the world for light comedy, and they came up to the occasion beautifully. Plays French Ladyship Dorothy McKown, as the "Comte de Champigny," carried with ease the 10th of a vivacious, designing French adventures; her costume added a touch of adding appreciably to her impersonation. Lucile Armstrong, in the part of Lady Creech, an elderly Englishwoman of doubtful auditory accomplishments, drew more than one hundred less requests not to "mumble the words." There were other capable assistants. Hoyt Nelson "doubled" as "Michele" and as an Italian soldier, and did both well; Marion Reid played both "Ribiere" and the Valet de Chambre, and filled each position with credit; and Harry Harlan, the second member of the gang, helped by the way in which he wore his costume. In fact, there was not a wolf spot in the cast. to the director of the play, Prof. Arthur MacMurray, as much as to the actors themselves, should go a credit for a successful performance. D. D. Freshman Called Home Freshman Called Home Edward Haney, a freshman in the School of Engineering, has been called the teacher of City Mo., on account of the serious illness of his mother. Little hope is held out for her recovery. Lamar Goes Kappa Sig Guy M. Lamar, middle Law, of Cottonwood Falls, has pledged Kappa Sigma. Send the Daily Kansan home WHAT! ANNUAL OUT IN APRIL? Manager Sweeps Jayhawker Will be Distributed This Month The 1915 Jayhawker will be put in circulation before the close of the present month, according to a statement made recently by the business manager, E. Blair Hackett. Over the last two years it is finished and off the presses. All of the half-tone and zinc etching cuts, which will illustrate the new Jayhawker have been made up, and are now in the hands of the publishers. Only a few of the original wood assembling and binding must now be done before the volume is complete. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 15, 1915 The Annuals will be sold for $2.50 to all those who order them before the 25th of April, and the people who wait until after the Annual is out, before they purchase, will have to pay $2.75 for them. Manager Hackney wishes to accompany these orders that are sent in before the 25th, and that the students will not have to deliver the money until they receive the Jayhawker. "We are simply offering the students a quarter if they will let us know that they are expecting to buy one of their school annuals that may be delivered to the business manager, "we don't expect to have many more published than we have orders for, so a number of those people who wait until the last minute, may be disappointed this year." The cost of the Jayhawker this year is lower than it has been for most of the years, but those who are responsible for its success are trusting its circulation will be larger than it ever has been. "LE MEDECIN MALGRE LUI" Arrangements are completed for he French play "Le Medicin Malgré lui," to be given in the basement of breen Hall Saturday, April 17. *tercle Francais Will Give Annual Play Saturday Night in Green In the past the department has been limited in its productions by poor costuming but according to Miss Elise Neuschwander, associate professor of Romance Languages, the cast will be well provided this year. The play to be produced Saturday evening was recently played successfully by the Cercle Francais of the University of Illinois. It is a comedy in three acts, written by Moliere, in the seventeenth century, and the first classical play to be given by the Cercle of the University of Kansas. The cast of the play is **$30 title** Siganaruela Lewis M. Miller. Louisine Imus. Robert - D. E. Joly. Valere - Bruce Shomber Lucas - Harold C. Miller Geronte - Raymer McQuiston Jacqueline - Barbara Abel Lucade - Certrude Abel Horman H. O'Leary. Tibbaut - Born H. Kriegh. Perrin - andladies to Meet to Discuss Advis- ability of Such a Plan RENT ROOMS ON CONTRACT? To discuss the advisability of a written contract between landlady and student boarders, the landlads of Lawrence are meeting this afternoon. Mrs. Bustan Brown, advisor of women, is presiding at the meeting. Dean F. W., Blackmar, Dr. W. L Burdick, Registrar George O. Foster, and Conrad Hoffmann, Y. M. C. A. secretary, will talk on the proposed plan. The plan is to draw up a blank contract setting forth what shall be required of the landlord and what she is to expect of the roomer. "If you cast your eyes on a senior, send him around," said a member of the cap and gown committee this morning, as he leaned back in his chair as he leaned back in Fraser. He complained of having been swollen and had only taken two orders for the long black robes and the tasseled caps. OMMITTEE RECEIVES ORDERS FOR GOWNS All keepers of rooming houses and those expecting to take roomers next year have been invited to attend the discussion. His eyes lost their mediocre brightness as he was informed that he probably would be treated as all other committeemen who have invitations, programs, magazines and other college necessities and who camp in the check stand in hope that the "loyal ones" will come to 3cm and order. At Morning Prayers Speaker: Rev, William B. Lampae First Presbyterian Church, Winfield Friday; "The Choice Part of Education." Students desiring to confer with Reverend Lampie will find him at Myers Hall Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday from 2:30 to 1 o'clock. At other times he can be seen by appointment through Con Hoffmann. K. U. MUST TALK FASTTONIGHT,OLNEY THINKS Former Debater Says Okla homa Has Good Squad to Assail Single Tax Kansas will battle with two states tonight in the annual Kansas-Oklahoma-Colorado triangular debate. The Oklahoma team is already here and will contest for supremacy with O. H. Burns, H. W. Dodds, and H. A. Shim the Kansas队 in Fraser Hall tonight at 8 o'clock. The Oklahoma team comprised of W. J. Mackey, Charles B. Steele, and Eugene McMahan. They will have the negative of the question, "Resolved: That a single tax on land should be substituted for all other forms of taxation." C. H. Talbot, of the department of University extension, will preside The judges will be Prof. J. E. Kirkpatrick and Dr. Arthur May Hyde of Washburn and Prod. Edwin Lee Burton, of K. S. A. C. C. H. Talbot Presides Each man is allowed twenty minutes speech and five minutes' rebuttal The school securing two decisions wins the contest. Should each school lose one and gain one, it is considered a draw. "Will be a Hard Scrap" the Colorado team made up of C. E. Williamson, Ed. Kaufman and Harold Mattoon, accompanied by Howard T. Hill, University dept. of history, to defend the enemy's territory. They will uphold the negative of the same question. No Y, M-Y, W. Party "The debate in Fraser tonight will be the only home contest of the season," said Avery F. Oiney of last year's batting squad, "and it will no doubt be a hard fight." The Sooner team is no mean opponent and if Kansas wins the debate then the U.K. team is in good condition however, said Oliney and I see no reason why we should not win. The joint farewell party to have been given by the Y. M, and Y. W. tomorrow night has been called off. The week was so crowded with other events was the reason given for postponing it. Prof. C. A. Shuil's class in plant genetics planted a number of foreign poplars and willows yesterday around his soil to test their growth in this soil. HAVE CHECK STAND FOR PROM FLOWERS----HILL Professor of Public Speaking Says That's the Way to Stop Splurge Prof. Howard T. Hill, one of the younger members of the faculty, and a man who was a student himself not so many years ago, thinks that the solution of the Prom problem lies in better enforcement of the cab and flower rule, as well as in the suggestions made by Davis and Creighton. "A great many fellows cannot afford to send flowers and go in a cab, because they paying a big sum for admission to the party," said Professor Hill, "but they think that they should do it just to be sports. Many of them, consequently, stay away rather than attend and not send their girl flowers. "My suggestion would be that in the future the management require that all persons bringing flowers to the Prom should deposit them at a cheek stand until the dance was over. This plan has been used successfully in other schools, and would dispose of the flower problem satisfactorily. The question of cabs still remains unsolved, but unless the weather was exceedingly bad, as it was this year it may be that the city department voluntarily taboo them if they knew the management wished it." Hearty approval of the Junior Prom reforms suggested yesterday by Bryan Davis, co-manager of the 1915 affair, was expressed this morning by Alex Creighton, who helped Davis stage the Prom last Friday. "K. U. certainly should be able to support one big social event each year," said Creighton, "and I believe they are doing that." Davis were put into operation that future Proms could be made to pay out. The suggestion in regard to girls paying their own dues and the fees for prom services seems to be especially advisable. ORCHESTRA APPEARS IN CONCERT TUESDAY APRIL 27 The University Orchestra concert will be held in Fraser Hall Tuesday evening, April 27, at 8:15 o'clock. The best selection of the year appear on the program and solos and duets have been provided for. Ward Middle Teachers Demands for high school teachers are still coming in, according to Prof W. H. Johnson. Want More Teachers PIED PIPER CALLS BACK WANDERING STUDES Class Decides to Cut, but Doesn't For 11 hours, I attended a seminar of the Pied Piper of Hamlin the other morning when he lured his 11:30 o'clock newspaper class back to the imprisonment of 102 Ad., after said class had resolved to take a pleasant morning at the professor's desk and the professor to show up. The class had decided that the day was much too fine to be spent indoors even listening to Mr. Harrington. "Let's all cut" suggested one inspired maiden, and the idea spread "We'll simply walk away, and if we happen to meet him on the way, we must all refuse to come back to class," went on the leader, and every one agreed. So they started out. Just in front of them a man followed him into Mr. Harrington, strolling along in the general direction of the classroom. Did the blid spirits continue to walk? Did they speak up and say, "Mr. Harrington, we have decided not to attend your class this morning?" They did not. They stood and giggled foolishly, and the bold leader piped up weakly with, "Mr. Harrington. Don't you think a vaca——" "No," said Mr. Harrington gently but firmly, "I fear that I shall need you all in class this morning. Come along." And the class faced about without a murmur, and came meekly. An innocent bystander told him that Mr. Harrington was taking his Sunday school class for an airing. CAN REGISTRARS BE HUMAN? Flexibility of University Officers and Systems to be Discussed Registrar George O. Foster, president of the American Association of Collegiate Registrals, expects a big attendance at the annual meeting of the organization at Ann Arbor, April 20, 21 and 22. Mr. Foster will be accompanied by Miss Emily Swick, assistant registrar. The meetings will deal with problems connected with the registrar's office—and there are several of them. By sending out queries, Mr. Foster has compiled a list of suggested topics covering four typewritten sheets. One question to be discussed, which Mr. Foster considered emphasizing the registrar's office, of how to deal with the individual student in relation to his individual needs, and not as an atom of the mass. Announcement The department of journalism will publish the Daily Kansan tomorrow Glimpses at May Fetes of Other Days + + STAGE VAUDEVILLE SHOW IN GYMNASIUM TUESDAY Singing, Tumbling, Acrobatic Work, and Alleged Comedy to be the Headliners WOMEN TO GET THE MONEY As Usual, the Men Lose Out on the Finances, But It'll be a Good Show Anyway, Lorenz Says The annual K. U. vaudeville show —worthy successor to the Indoor Circus of former years—is to be staged in Robinson Gymnasium on Tuesday, April 20. Singing, dancing, tumbling and physical devile are to be the attractions offered. "We have so much good material," said Prof. H. A. Lorenz, director this morning, "that I don't see how we will be able to find room for it all on one program." The entertainment is being staged at the G. S. G. A., the proceeds to go to the We women's roaming house fund. A squad of twenty-five acrobats has been training for the past month in preparation for the show. Their work will be one of the big features work will be one of the big features of the entertainment, and every sort of acrobatic work, from ground hummingbirds to pyramid building and aerial acts, will be executed. The performers include the best talent on the Hill. A "Clevah" Sketch Phi Alpha Tau, K. U.s newly instituted dramatic fraternity, will offer a bit of concentration and earnestness in honest-to-gooodness vaudeville skit; Pat Crowell, leading man in "The Man From Home" is to appear as the principal in a "clevan" musical; the ensemble "those melody men" will preside of fascinating harmony. exhibition dances—group and solo—that will make the terpischoran efforts of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Castle resemble the amateurist cavortor of Sergio Coppola staged. One squad of dancers will present a Russian dance combining aesthetic, aerobic, and athletic principles; another will give a "Yum-Yum Dance" arranged and directed by J. B. McNaught. Mr. Lorenz will perform "cool jazz!" and Mr. McNaught, by special request, is to repeat the "Sword Dance" which made such a hit at last year's show. To Sell Peanuts and Popcorn James Butin, who whistles, has consented to dispense a few jubilant blasts for the entertainment and edification of students at McFarlane, "these dialoguing dopersters" will scatter, patter and chatter; and the W. S. G. A. girls will offer a bit of real excitement by sell-out ants and popcorn in the audience. Tickets for the entertainment are being sold in the form of yellow tags; the price is twenty-five cents, reserved seats thirty-five. In preparation for the event, a huge stage has been erected on the main playing floor of the Gym, and the acrobats and actors practice there daily. FRASER TO HAVE NEW STEPS Approaches on West to be Replaced By Stone Ones New, stone and concrete entrances are to replace the present west approaches to Fraser Hall. Work will be commenced soon on the south entrance but owing to the heavy daily use of the north entrance this door will not be replaced until after the closing of the Summer Session. The approaches will be somewhat larger than the present wooden affairs, constructed of stone with stone or concrete steps. The new enamels are painted in bright colors but will be so constructed as to eliminate the basement doors. COLLECTION OF PEN SKETCHES GOES SATURDAY The exhibition of cartoons and illustrations that has been on the third floor of the Administration Building will close Saturday evening. In the collection are some of the best cartoons that have been drawn. The pictures number 134 and are by several different authors including Joseph Clement Cellent, W. M. Berger, Will Crawford, James Montgomery and John F. Browne, Dana Gibson, Walter Hale, Wallace Morgan and Harry Townsend. Tennis Tryouts Begin All those wishing to try out for the Varsity tennis team are requested to meet tomorrow at 5 o'clock in Room Trynns. Trynns will be held next week. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDIFICIAL John M. H., Editor-in-Chief Raymond Clapper, Managing Editor Helen Hayes, Associate Editor William Cady, Exchange Editor BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS STAFF J. W. Dyche ... Business Manager | REPORTORS | | :--- | | Leon Hearn Ames Rogers | | Gilbert Clayton John M. Glesner | | Jerry Jeter | | Charles Shaw Don Davis | | Elmer Arndt Matt Nutt | | Brendan Brindle | | Louis Puckett Harry Morgan | | Glenn Hannon C. Gitter | | Fatterson A. Witters | Subscription price $2.50 per year in advance; one term, $1.50. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office 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. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. The Daily Kaanan aims to picture the university more clearly than the University of Kansas; to go further than merely printing the material; and to hold the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be more serious problems to wiser heads, in all, and to satisfy the requirement of the University. Father Play and Accuracy Burcan Prof. H, T. Hill... Faculty Member Don Joseph... Student Member John Jay... Secretary If you find a mistake in statement or impression in any of the columns of the Daily Kansas, report it to the secretary at the Daukee Kansas. If you need assistance you as to further procedure. THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 1915 TOO MUCH RURALITY Rural simplicity and guileless youth are delightful qualities in their place, and we are justly proud of having them attributed to the largest part, numerically speaking, of our University. But, like any good thing, they may be carried to extreme. Now and again come occasions when a little formality and ceremony are as much to be desired as mere simplicity, admirable and democratic as the latter is. Such an occasion is commencement. If there is any time at which dignity is an element worthy of more consideration than it usually receives in this section, it is the last week of the school year, when everything is handed over to the traditional activities that distinguish commencement from every other time. In accordance with this fact, the seniors put on the academic cap and gown which from time immemorial have been associated with scholastic attainments and the conferring of degrees. Not the least beautiful and impressive feature of the whole season is the procession of seniors and faculty across the campus on commencement day. There is nothing quite like it to be seen at any other time. But how much more impressive it might be made by the addition of a single feature! You've guessed it—we mean caps and gowns for the faculty. As they now appear, they form a decided anti-climax, granted for the sake of argument that the anti-climax may precede the real climax. Of course such a distinguished company would be worth looking at any time, but we can't help feeling that they would add largely to their impressiveness and to the harmony of the scene if they would adopt the traditional costume. Cap and gowns won't make the short man tall nor the fat man lithe and graceful, but nevertheless they help the picture wonderfully. We will bet two cents to a chapel ticket that if our professors would doll up for commencement this year, the effect would be so charming that they would never think of going back to the old way. A number of them have already expressed themselves favorably, and if the rest will give the matter a little thought, we have a feeling that they will see it the same way. At any rate they should be willing to try it once. RETURN POWER In another column is printed a communication from the Sachems asking that the student disciplinary power be returned to the Senate by the Student Council. The Sachems base their request and belief on the assumption that the students are dissatisfied with the present form of government and that the attempts of the Council to enforce its rulings have been the cause of a great deal of dissatisfaction. That the students are dissatisfied with the present form of government is right, and that much dissatisfaction is caused by the attempts of the Council to enforce its rulings is right. It may be that the disciplinary power is not the cause of the dissatisfaction, but at present the indications point that way. At least a trial can be made of a Council operating without the disciplining power. There is no doubt that the University authorities have been hampered in the discharge of what they thought was right because they felt the Student Council had the authority in that particular case. The Men's Student Council would do much to eliminate student dissatisfaction and would give all concerned a square deal if it would put to the students at the general election on May 6 the question of the Council returning the disciplinary power to be Senate. The first performance of the K. U. Dramatic Society, last night, showed clearly and forcibly that student activities other than athletics are of lasting benefit to the individual. Such training as that which the embryonic actors and actresses inulged in can not but broaden their prospective and give them a better knowledge of their fellow men. DO SOMETHING WELL. Then too, such participation stimulates interest in literature and tends to develop the originality which critics say is lacking on many university campuses. It will now be but a natural growth until this dramatic organization stages a play written by K. U. undergraduates. At least that has been the sequence in other institutions and there is no reason why the same should not follow at Kansas. There are many other forms of non-athletic activity on the campus which tend to the betterment of the actual participants as well as that large class which gets its recreation, mental as well as physical, by watching others. In fact, every movement which makes men understand one another better, is worth while. Debating, journalism, politics, and the drama are but a few of the many activities which are neglected by the undergraduate, much to his sorrow at a later date, when he learns that book knowledge and a fine physique do not completely make a man. In the words of a homely philosopher, "For the Lord's sake do something and try to do it well." Chasing the Glooms Jack Johnson understands now why a cowboy is called a cow puncher. Soon we shall be demanding eight hour legislation for dancing. Evidently Mexico is proceeding on the maxim that two heads are better than one. Booker T. Washington now takes the place at the head of his race. We'll bet the man who was eulogized in the Traveler as "being a mefber of the Uni-University club, the Abstract Clug, and the Curtis Clug," carried a lot of handkerchiefs and sneezed. Ches—I know it is, but it got me relieved from jury duty once.—Chen Frau—The paper says, "Speed man's life was blotted out yester Wyn…Why do you talk about intelligence? It is bad comp. man Shots at Half-Cock Or Foolishment in Verse Not Wanted THAT SMOTHERING SENSATION Oft on a winter's night. Brow—Yep, 'e raced.—Chaparral, When slumber's chain had bound me We roomy stole the clothes And covers must be alim. I turn—Oh, sweet revenge. My roomy stole the clothes, That nestled warm around me But now that spring has come That needed with bad hairs. But now that spring has come I turn—on, sweet revenge. And pile them all on him. "Oh, yes, come on over early tonight. I haven't seen you for such a long time. And I have just loads to tell you," she said, statistically to you when you call her up. Pandora's Box HE WAITS So you begin to shave early, and do without your Sunday night supper at Lee's, and arrive at the house in seventy-thigh, the light of a good dress in your eyes as you think of that long evening you'll have with her. You are ushered into the library, parlor, sitting room or whatever it is called, and sit expectantly on the edge of your chair. You chat politely but nervously with the house mother or landlady, or other callers in the same fix as you are. But all you do is stand in front of the walls and your lips are forming themselves into that agreeable expression you always reserve for her. Endless light footsteps trip down the stairs. Each time you think you recognize them, and half rise from your chair to greet her. Alas, some of us need to be careful we need must settle back into a position cheerful as you were at first. You wonder what on earth she is doing to keep her so long. Why, she could have dressed herself and all of us together in a dozen coffees, and powdered endless noses! You take out your watch. It is eight o'clock. All the dates have either setdown into differ-ence times for refuge in the swing or stone strolling. You hear steps approaching. But your heart beats no faster. Probably it is some poor girl studying for a quiz tonight and coming down stairs to get a refreshing drink. The person enters the room. You do not look up. At last a sweet apologetic voice greets you. You greet her without enthusiasm or delight, and wearily help her on with her coat. And she wonders not in a good frame of mind tonight. "All things come to him who stands and waita," you tell her sukily. Student Opinion DEFEND ECONOMICS DEPART In a recent issue of the Daily Kansan there appeared among the communications, a letter supposedly written by Mr. Cannon to the department of economics for its lack of practical training. Either the writer was ignorant of the actual work given in this department or he was not aware of the practical merit in the courses given. It is undoubtedly true that a course in business and commercial law is not at present given by this department; the reason being that the course is already fitted with work. This course is listed to be given next year as our senior friend would have been informed if he had inquired of those in authority. Furthermore, if a prospective business man is interested in such a course, he should have hadContracts in the School of Law that cover this subject efficiently. The lack of courses in Advertising, Shop Administration, and Methods of Determining Costs in the present department of economics $\bullet$ is lamented by that faculty as well as our budding follower of Adam Smith. This deficiency is important in that such courses can be obtained in the department of journalism, and the School of Engineering respectively. Now in regard to the practical courses given at present in the department in question. Evidently our vocational critic has overlooked, such practical business courses as Investments, Banking, Money and Credit, Accounting, Statistics, Insurance, Agriculture, Corporation Finance, Labor Problems, etc. Such courses are not theoretical but exceedingly practical as any major in economics who has taken them will gladly testify. Don Joseph Hiram Wentworth Cale Carson. Signed GIVE BACK DISCIPLINE Editor Kansan: The senior society of Sachems after due thought and consideration is of the opinion that the Men's Student Council, which has a history in memory and unable to perform all the duties which it now has. After considering conditions here and in other universities we do not think that it will ever, as it now exists, be able to fulfill the function of teaching the students, owing to fact that. (1) The student opinion and sentiment is not as yet highly enough developed to allow one selected group of undergraduate governors to govern the entire university, even though it almost ostracizing that governing body, either collectively or as a whole. (2) The Council under present conditions is unable to govern because it has not the prestige necessary to enforce its rulings. (3) Politics play too great a part, as in many cases the men are chosen by political pull, and not on account of merit. (4) Due to the low standing of the Council now the most efficient man will not consider the offices, so the prospects for improvement are slight. (5) The attempts to enforce its rule may lead to a backlog in main causes for discontent and dissatisfaction among the students. (6) By its very nature the Student Council must be more or less subservient to the Senate and therefore is not always able to exercise its power in order to represent the student as is expected when the members are elected. Therefore, be it resolved that the Sachems on this 14th day of April, hereby place itself on record as favoring the return of the disciplinary power by the Student Council to the Senate until a more satisfactory form of student government can be adopted. Sachmes committee, Don Joseph Duke Kennedy Russel Gear Send the Daily Kansan home. Whenever you think you'l like a drink—or feel you need one—would know you must have one—make it Coca-Cola It answers all occasions—fits all times and seasons—always delicious, delightful, refreshing and good. Delicious—Refreshing Thirst-Quenching THE COCA-COLA CO. Atlanta, Ga. Whenever you are at Arrow think of Coca-Cola Whenever you see an Arrow shank of Coca-Cola "SAFE!" YOU'LL never be "put out" by shape-losing fabrics in your clothes or poor wear if you'll choose Hart Schaffner & Marx They're made to give you up-and-coming young fellows all the style you want "style that stays stylish;" such clothes as these are sure to score for you. Have us show you Varsity Fifty Five at #25, the most popular young men's suit in America. Peckham's The home of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx The Pleasure of School Life is Doubled If you are acquainted with the current happenings "on the hill". The cheapest and easiest way to get acquainted is through the columns of the University Daily Kansan SUBSCRIBE NOW $1.00 for the rest of the year UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN DANCERS AND STROLLING PLAYERS JOIN MAY FETE Queen to Witness Festivitie of Spring on Mount Oread Green May 14 LITTLE BOY BLUE TO BE THERE And All the Friends of the Nursery Are to Play the Old Game of Merrie England Once More Truly Old English, correct in every detail, is to be the character of the May Fete this year. Friday afternoon, May 14, is the date set. If the weather is bad, however, the Fete will be given Monday following. Down on the north campus, between Potter's lake and McCook Field, is a natural theater. Here the fete will be staged, with a natural setting of grove and stream, while the audience will be seated upon the slope above the stage. The afternoon performer will be seated near the o'clock. At 7 o'clock there is to be a concert, with the night dances and plays starting at 7:30 o'clock. The girls of the senior and junior classes held meetings yesterday afternoon to select the dramatist personae for the May Fete this spring. The senior girls elected a member of their class to be May Queen, and the junior girls elected Robin Hood who will represent them. The facts of both elections are unobtainable, and the girls are keeping the names of the representatives secret until just before May Day. Even the nominations are secret, and the girls voted by ballot, so that the results are known only to the election To Give Torch Ceremony One of the features of the Fete will be the senior Torch ceremony which has never been given in public before, but will be an annual feature of the Fete from now on. The Fete will begin with the freshman, sophomore, and junior women on the stage, and will begin with the hill led by music, and on reaching the stage will give the senior Torch service. The May Queen will be then chosen and crowned. Louise Smith, as Spring, assisted by sprites will give a spring dance, and will drive Winter away from the campus. Louise will be still danced in England by the country people. Sophomore and freshmen women will feature a dance, The Winds of Spring. The sophomores will be dressed as daisies and May flowers, the freshmen as turtles and reals. Helen Clark and J. B. McNaught will the Winds of Spring. To Set Up the May Pole There will follow a frolic by Youths in Lincoln Green, who set up the May pole, and later dance with a number of Milk Maids. The Queen then calls for Robin Hood and the Jesters. The young lady who is to be the Jester refuses to give her name. Target shooting, blind man's buff and a milk bucket, are usually used until the arrival of a band of strolling players, who desire to perform before the Queen. In real life the players are Pi U's, Phi Pis, and Beta's. The Queen delays their performance until night. A dance of Fools and Clowns, really quite clever in the estimation of those who have seen rehearsal led by Marie Buchman, and a Morris Dance, led by Ella Hawkins and Iva Harper follows the entrance of the players. Freshmen as Shepherdes and Shepherdesses, a Little Roy Blue, Mary and her little lamb will all dance. Then Peter Easter will drive in with his family. Helen Topping assisted by several girl's will dance the *dance* of the Dryads. Mildred Spake, Gladys Herries, and Lottie Kreech will be Wood Spirits and their dance is to be one of the prettiest features of the Fete. After supper, the Wandering Players will feature the evening's performance, with a number of torch dances to close the day's festivities. MANY COMING TO K.U. BECAUSE OF NEW LAW So Says Dean Arvin Olin, or Summer Session, Regard-June Enrollment "The fact that several hundred teachers throughout the state must acquire state teachers certificates within the next fifteen months, leads me to believe that the attendance at the Summer Session will be increased greatly," declared Dean Arvin Olf this morning. There were five hundred and seventy enrollment summer students if Dana Reductions project there will be at least seven hundred summer students here this year. According to the law passed by the state legislature last winter every teacher in public high schools must be enrolled in a school or a state certificate, entitleing them to teach. The law will free out many teachers and only by means of attending summer school or other instruction, that they hope to teach after Sept. 1, 1916. A Summer School bulletin was sent out some time ago but no registrations will be received until commencement week. Anatomy and bacteriology have been added to the list of courses taught in Summer School. Heretofore, all courses offered but the subjects were introduced for the purpose of ascertaining if any course in medicine is desirable at the Summer Session. If it is not, the necessary branches probably will be added. CUSTER'S BEAT DAD'S RUNCH IN EAST POSTPONED GAMP The game between the Custer Club and Dad Gregory's Club in the Hash House League series that was postponed Saturday on account of a muddy field was played yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock. The score was 8 to 2, the Custers taking the big end of the load. Playing for Dad's Club were Schmitter, Osborne, Larrime, Fitzgerald, Eaton, Eatue, Stuewe, Jackson, Ellmore and Sherman. Playing for Custer's wee Cook, Citizen, Weaver's Box, Tar- tents, Denman's Box, and Representatives of the Hash House League will meet this evening at 7:30 o'clock in the office of the Daily News, where that grew out of the first series of games last week. Grounds will be the chief topic for consideration, and balls for the season will be distributed. Following the general meeting, commission will be held only eligibility complaints that may be presented. A. D. S. Peroxide Cream, the origina- tional cream, at Barber's Drug Store. Adj. Fancy Parasols You'll say, just as we did, the prettiest parasols you ever saw. Another interesting feature, in most of the new shapes we only bought one of a shade, giving you an exclusive design and shade. The new shades are, Sand, Putty, Battleship Grey, Maise, Helio, Belgian, Tipperary, Cope, Pongee, and Black and White. New shapes; Little Corporal, La Roie, La Belle, Balkan, Foldrite, and Canopy. Prices from $1.50 to $10.00. WEAVER'S Theta Sigma Phi, national honorary journalism sorority, will establish a chapter in the University of Oklahoma, Saturday, April 17. Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes, an instructor in the department of English, will go to Norman to install the new chapter. Following the installation Sigma Phi will host a retreat internally, will entertain the prospective newspaper women at a banquet. The Epsilon chapter announces the pledging of Blanche Simons, Virgil Gordon, Ruth Dyche, Eloise Stevenson and Martha Taylor. TO INSTALL CHAPTER An entomology class in charge of 'rof. S. J. Hunter, took a field trip into the south bottoms Wednesday in search of insects. Hyball Ginger Ale. The best by test. McNish. Phone 192—Adv. Candidates for the University Teachers' Diploma and the State Teachers' Certificate are requested to come to Room 119, Fraser Hall, at their early convenience not later than April 16th, to fill out and sign applications for the same. Hunt Bugs in Bottoms Prospective Teachers Arvin Olin, Dean, School of Educaiton. The vocal-cello recital of Miss Ruth Cady and Mr. Raphk Stevens which was to have been given at the Unitarian church tonight has been indefinitely postponed on account of difficulty. The second unitarian Mrs. Cady is the sister of Prof. H, P. Cady and Mr. Stevens is the son of Prof. W, C. Stevens. There must be a reason why so many students drop into Wilson's Drug Store for their refreshments. They try to please everybody. -Adv. Recital Postponed A Paramount Photo Play Presenting and ALL STAR CAST in T O- D A Y THEATRE VARSITY The Rose of the Rancho Today: Opening Performance-The Return Engagement of the World's Famous Musical Salisbury Family Complete Change of Repertoire Showing 300 Different Scenes in Cal. and N. Mex. TO DAY BOWERSOCK vocal,instrumental and NoveltyEntertainment 3 Shows Daily: Matinee 2:30; Evening 7:30 and 9 Entire Change of Program Each Day Photo Plays Selected for Each Program Tomorrow: William Elliott in "When We Were Twenty-one" MATINEE DAILY 2:45 ALL SEATS 10c "The Genius" Children 10c Today: Klaw & Erlanger 3-Act Biograph Star Cast BASEBALL GOODS --ideal for all 'round service—a big luxurious sweater that will stand four years and more of "roughhousing" on the campus. There's Zip to it, Boys! KENNEDY & ERNST Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE 12 W. Ninth Lawrence Pantatorium Phone 506 10 If your dealer doesn't sell Bradley Sweaters, America's best Shakers, Jumbus, Jerseyes, and the only genuine naviates, write us for the names of dealers who do—it will pay you. BRADLEY KNITTING CO., Delavan, Wisconsin HERE'S the yell master of them all—the campus favorite with college colors in stripes across the breast and sleeves. There never was a more attractive design—never a better made, a better styled, or a better wearing shaker sweater. It's a THE Bradley KNIT WEAR Canoe Paddles $1.60 each Carroll's Ladies and Gents Imperial Shining Parlor and Htt Works We clean and reblock all kinds of hats, Ladies and Gents Panamas Especially. 737 Mass. St. ALL SHINES, Sc. Those party flowers are always appreciated when they come from The Christian Science Society announces a Free Lecture on Christian Science to be given by and we are always pleased to fill your orders THE FLOWER SHOP of San Francisco, California, in the Chapel in Fraser Hall, on Friday, April 16, 1915, at 4:30 in the afternoon. Dr. Fluno is a member of the Board of Lectureship of the Mother Church, the First Church of Christ Scientist in Boston, Mass. DR. FRANCIS J. FLUNO.C. S.D. Subscribe for the DAILY KANSAN and we are always pleased to fill your 621 825⁹ Mass. Phones 621 Professional Cards J. F. BROCK, Optometrist, and Speech Therapist 802 Mass. B5, Bell Phone 695. HARRY LEDING M. D. Eye, ear, nose, nose, throat U. Bidge Phones, Bell 513, Home U. Bidge Phones, Bell 513, Home J. R. HICHEITT, M. D., D. O. 832 Bathroom. Both phones, offices and residence G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diasmos 120 G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diasmos 120 G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diasmos 120 G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diasmos 120 G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diasmos 120 DR. H, L CHAMBERS. Office over Squires' studio. Both phones. A. J. ANDERSON, M. D. Office 715 VL St. Phones 124. DR. PETER D. PAULS, Osteopath, Office and residence. 7½ East 7th St. General practice. Both phones 501, Hours to 12 a.m., 2 to 5, and 7 to 8 by DIL. N. HAYES, 229 Mass. St., Genera- l N. Also treats the eye and Hair. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, ear ar infection Guaranteed. Dick Bldg Classified Plumbers Jewelers ED. W. PAISONS, Engraver, Watch- chain, Jewelry, Cell Phone 711, 714, Mass. PHONE KENNEDY PLUMING CO. Mazda. Phone 658. Mazda lamps. 927. Mazda. Phone 658. Mazda lamps. 927. Barber Shops Insurance Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK. FIRE INSURANCE, LOANS, and abstracts E. J. Hilkley, People's Bank Building F. A. L. U. Building E. BANKES, U. Buildings C. WHITE Room 2 F. A. U. Building Want Ads WANTED—To buy a second hand canoe in good condition. Address Daily Kansan, state price. LOST—Mesh bag containing dollar in or between Fraser and Administration Building. Finder keep dollar in or between Fraser, Coverdale, 1245 La. phone B. 1244. FOR RENT - A modern house of location. Has a very desirable building. Bell phone. PROTSCH "The Tailor" SPRING SUITING Box Stationery All Grades-All Prices McColloch's DrugStore BURT WADHAM'S "College Inn Barber Shop" LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas Layne and business college Kansas, occupy campus lawyer building, teach teach Write for sample of testone note book and a catalog WATKINS' NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depository. FRANK KOCH "THE TAILOR" Full Line of Spring Sultings STUDENT HEADQUARTERS STUDENTS'SHOE SHOP DEDUCTION SHOE SHIRT R. O. BURGERT, Prop. 1107 Mass. St. Satisfaction Guaranteed THESIS BINDING THESIS BINDING Engraved and Printed Cards. Sheafer's Self-filling Fountain Pens. 244 Mess Street. A. G. ALRICH 744 Mass. Street. Real Chinese and Real Baseball Players Season Tickets Admit Special Offer—Baseball Season Ticket Good for Ten Home Games, $2.00 BASEBALL-OPENING GAME UNIV.OF HAWAII vs. K.U. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, APRIL 15th AND 16th GAMES CALLED 4:30 O'CLOCK EVERYBODY OUT Single Admissions, 50c Grand Stand Cushions, 15c Extra Tickets at Gate, Manager's Office and Carroll's UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPRING FOOTBALL WORK SUCCESSFUL,SAYS BOND Thirty Men, Most of Them new, Take Part in Pre- Season Training Spring football practice is a thing of the past. The last practice for the season was held yesterday afternoon on the field west of McCook and participated in by some事业单位 for the 1951 Varsity squad. Unusual interest has been shown by the men in the practices this spring and the gridiron aggregation should show up better next fall because they have learned out the first day and this number soon increased to thirty. The Varsity men of last fall are in a large degree engaged in other interests which leaves the new men to work out in the spring practice. Four of the men will be working out while two are working in the weight events for the track team. "The new men have learned a lot about football in the short practice they have had this spring and they will be able to use it when they meet the regulars next fall," said Jay Bond, after the final practice. "We had no scrimmage for that will be taught next fall but we simply gave the men radiointelligence instruction in the training room, when they learn now, saves time when the real work begins in the fall. We have developed some ten or twelve punters who will tryout in this kicking contest Saturday morning. "Have Learned Football" Kieking Contest Saturday "On the whole the practice have been better than I expected an I can glad to see the student take so much easier to do and be much means much when fall comes. Olecott will take up practice in the fall where we left off today and from the men we have now a cracking good team that is well prepared and easily to talk about prospects though." The only other football feature left on the program for this year is the kicking contest to be held on Saturday morning April 17. About twenty men will probably play this in the good punters but no good punters will be uncovered for next year's squad. MISS BARROWS TALKS BUSINESS OF LIVING Anna Barrows, an instructor in teachers college of Columbia University and secretary of the National Home Economics Association gave a demonstration before the home economics class here this morning. The reception Miss Barrows comes for her afternoon in the women's corner of Frasier Hall. tomorrow morning Miss. Barrow, will talk before the home demonstration class on the "Business of Liv- ing." The conference comes at 2:30 o'clock. NEWSPAPER WRITTER TO TALK PEACE AT K, U The International Polity Club will meet Monday night at 7 o'clock at the Pi Upsilon house to listen to a lecture by Leon Fraser. Mr. Fraser has just returned from Europe where he has been engaged in newspaper correspondence, and is well informed upon the situation there. He is at present traveling for the Carnegie Peace Movement. The mechanical Engineers meet tonight at 7 o'clock at the home of Prof. F. H. Sibley, 1607 Tenn. St. Jo. D.Berwick, senior engineer, will give a presentation to the engineers on disposal in the large cities and Harlan Russell, sophomore engineer will talk on the "Leflax" system of indexing data for engineers. The mechanical arguments for the mechanical part in Engineers' Day will be completed. Prof. Charles A. Shull of the department of botany, went to Hoxie, Kans., last night to act as a judge in a debate between Aitchison high school and Sheridan county high school Thursday night. Going to put away your fun- wing iPad at Wal-Mart's Drug Store—Advertise. Prof. Charles A. Shull has received a large ash tree from Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island, to be planted in the Marvin Grove. Paint, varnish, floor finishes, floo and wall brushes at Barber's Drug Store.-Adv. Scholarships for Women Application for these five scholarships open to women of the University will be received until April 22 by the committee, Professors Gallio, Hydra and Oliver; Marcelo Howay, $90, junior and senior College women; Eizabeth Matheson Innes Memorial, $100, all women of the College above the freshman year and the Graduate School; Caroline Mumford Winston Memorial, $25, all women of the College above the freshman year; Collegiate above the freshman year; Kansas Branch of the Association of Collegiate Alumnae, $50, women of the Graduate School and College above the freshman year; Daughters of the American Revolution for three years after graduation to women of the senior class. Loan of $200 The Lucinda Smith Buchan Memorial scholarship, a loan of $200 for two years without interest, to women of the junior and senior classes of the College. Applications will be received until April 22 by the committee, Mrs. F. H. Smithmeyer, Mrs. W. A. Griffith and Miss Oliver. W. S. G. A., $100 to Freshman The Women's Student Government Association scholarship, $100, open to women of the freshman year for use in their sophomore year. Applicants must have completed 22 by the committee, Professors Galloo, Hyde and Oliver. BOARD GRANTS CREDIT FOR MARINE RESEARCH Work in Prof. Baumgartner's Classes at Puget Sound now Counts Toward Degree The Board of Administration, at its last meeting, adopted a constitution by which the University of Kansas will cooperate with the Puget Sound Marine Station at Washington; and students doing business there will be given credit the same as they are in the summer school here. Prof. W. J. Baumgartner of the department of zoology, will be one of the instructors at the station this year. He and a party of at least twenty-five will leave Kansas City the first of June in a special coach on a sight-seeking trip through the Southwest to ascend as their final destination. Three courses will be offered in zoology: invertebrate morphology—a study of types illustrating the groups from the lowest to the highest; ecology; and Professor Baumgartner will teach a course in invertebrate embryology, a study of the development of the types illustrated by illustrating the types of embryos as far as possible. There will also be one course in botany. Professor Baumgartner is prepare- k for a trip. U, students who will make it trip. Chinks Can Play Ball Kansas University fans are hoping to see the consistent winning of the Chinese baseball team from the University of Hawaii stopped in the two game series to be played here. Bethany College at Lindsburg went down before the Chins Monday to the tune of 9 to 3. St. Mary's went to the bad in the fifth innning Tuesday and came out on the small end of a 6 to 2 score, day afterwards the 0吶th smothered the Angels with an 18 to 6 score. About 400 seniors will receive degrees this spring, according to Registrar Foster. This is about equal to the number of last year's graduates. Postal cards have been sent to all seniors showing deficiencies in their records which must be attended for graduation, permitted, Mr. Foster will be busy for the next three or four weeks going over fourth year records with the candidates. 400 SENIORS GET THEIR HESPEAKS THIS YEAR Leonard Farris, freshman College, is unable to be on the Hill on account of Farris is Ill Going to put away your furs? Meeting the Drugs Crystals at Wilson's Drug Store. There must be a reason why so many students drop into Wilson's Drug Store for their refreshments. They try to please everybody,.Adv. K. U. TO HAVE 3,000 STUDENTS NEXT YEAR? George O. Says We Might as Well get Ready to Celebrate for They're Coming "When the enrollment of the University reaches 3,000 we will have a big celebration," said Registrar Christina their ninth anniversary celebrated when we passed the thomas and mark, and again when we passed 2,000. It is certain that our third celebration will not be far distant—it will be more unlikely than it will be next year. *“ Conditions in Kansas augur well for an unusually large increase in enrollment. Out in the west end of the state, where they raise wheat, conditions are better than they have been for years. Prosperity and optimism abound. The biggest wheat crop is grown for almost undreamed of prices. Plenty of moisture was given the wheat this winter, and its condition is good. All this means more students for K. U. next September. "This year our enrollment has been 2,800, the biggest in the school's history. Two hundred more, or enough to send us up to 3,000, wouldn't be a very remarkable increase. One thing that makes this increase likely, in addition to the fact that Kansas is the most prosperous state CASTLE ROLL Front 2¾ in. Back 1¾ in. 2 FOR 25¢ BARKERCO BRAND FOR 25¢ MANUFACTURERS: WILLIAM BARKER CO., TROY, N.Y. in the most prosperous nation in the world, is the fact that 6,000 students will be graduated from the high schools this spring, where but 4,700 were eligible for entrance to K. U. last year." GEAR ANNOUNCES DATE FOR SPRING ELECTIONS As a result of the combination election system, Russell Gear, secretary of the Men's Student Council announces the following elections for May 6: Student Council, Athletic Board, officers of the College, officers of the Engineering School and the cheer leader. All candidates' petitions must be handed to the president in Stroke School on May 3. The point system will be submitted to a vote and students will be given a chance to say whether they want the suggestion to be turned back to the University Senate. The point system will be given to the various student organizations for their suggestions and then reconsideration before it is submitted at the election. McNish's aerated distilled water is the best protection for the health.— Adv. Pure sparkling soda in clean glasses at Barber's Drug Store.-Adv. Only at Peckhams KNOW HIGH SCHOOL DEBATERS TOMORROW Tomorrow it will be possible to know which two high school debating teams will meet here April 30 for the purpose of competing for the state championship. The Hoxey and the Effingham high schools will meet tonight at Hoxey and the outcome of the argument will determine the champion of the northwest region, which holds the southern championship and Newton will be one of the combatants here April 30. The subject for the state high school championship contest is to be, "Resolved: That the state high school championship form of legislation." The inter-district debates have been attracting attention and there with many students from state high schools in the city when the final contest is held here. Heff Glasser Helen Glasser, enrolled in the College as a sophomore, will be married Friday evening at her home, 1031 Armstrong, Kansas City, Mo., to Lawrence Winslow. Miss Glasser is one of the Kmph women who live at 1218 Mississippi. The women in the house intend to go to Kansas City in a body to attend the wedding. Helen Glascock to be Married The Forty Club will meet tonight at 7:30 o'clock at 1145 Indiana. Duke Kennedy, senior College, was called to Oklahoma City on business today. He will be absent until Monday. First Dame—What does "Prom" mean. Vera? Second Dame—I beard say it must starvation for a month—fear ARROW SHIRTS Johnson & Carl Sold exclusively by Announcement The Soph Hop will be up to standard in every detail. The farce is snappy and the cast is good. Wagstaff will do the catering. Programs are better than any used at the Hops heretofore. New decorations. Haley's orchestra will play. As this is an informal party, white trousers absolutely are not necessary. This affair is open to students of all classes. The above statements are correct. Signed: H. L. MILLER, Pres. GEO. H. YEOKUM, Mgr. This is Styleplus Week! [Illustration of a man in a tailored suit, including a flat cap, vest, and trousers]. The event is national as well as local. Every Styleplus Store from Maine to California is making a special display this week, just as we are. We want every man in town to inspect a suit of Styleplus $17 Clothes "The same price the world over." Better woolens, finer tailoring and the styling of a great designer for only $17, because the makers specialize on this suit of one price everywhere. Did you see the full page advertisement in the Saturday Evening Post? Styleplus is nationally famous. We are exclusive headquarters. Drop in. You will not be urged to buy. Arrow Shirts and Collars Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS Manhattan Shirts 1837 T T University Vaudeville in the Robinson Gymnasium Thursday, April 20, at 8:15 GENERAL ADMISSION 25 CENTS RESERVED SEATS 35 CENTS 213 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII K. U. WINS IN DEBATE NUMBER 132 By 3-0 and 2-1 Votes Jayhawker Triumph Over Oklahoma and Colorado WINNERS ON BOTH SIDES Each Team Successfully Defendi Single Tax Question, Pro and Con Bd Wire To The Daily Kansan. Boulder, Colorado, April 16—A vote of two to one the debaters from Kansas won over the team of the University of Colorado last night. The Jayhawker speakers were in splendid form, and the victory was by team work, backed up by the star orate of Ed. Kaufman in Colorado. The debate was no quibble, but a pure clash on issue, and brought forth the best efforts of the speakers on both sides. The personnel of the Kansa队 team is air follows: Jimmie Johnson, Ed Kidman, and Harrison Gould. The visitors are being royally entertained by the Colorado men. They will remain in Boulder for the Colorado-Missouri debate tonight. They are making a trip in the mountains today. Williamson opened by showing that the present system is sound in principle, because it taxes according to ability to pay. Its defects are merely those of administration, while the single tax is inherently bad because it is based on the premise that society gives value only to land. Mathematics assures our defects in the single tax idea, and Mattonon closed the argument by pointing out, the unjust incidence of the single tax on land. OKLAHOMA DEFEATED, TOO The team debating for Kansas h. Fraerra Hall last night was composed of O. H. Burns, W. H. Dodds, and Henry A. Shinn. In this case the question is whether the firmative side of the question and won the decision by all three votes. Burns led off with an able talk, stating the position of his team and outlining the course of argument to determine if the system is wrong because it is (a) cumbersome and costly; (b) a burden on production, and (c) it is un- He was answered by Charles B. Steele of Oklahoma, who took the position that in order to win Kansas had to show that all other forms of taxation but the single tax on land are wrong. The judges were Prof. J. E. Kirkpatrick, of Topeka; Prof. Edwin Lee Holton, of Manhattan; and Prof. Arthur M. Hyde, of Topeka. Dodds and Eugene McMahan were the second men to talk for the two schools, and the arguments were closed by Shina Jin. The Yuntaub on both Aida was lively and spirited, but it seemed from the spectators point of view that the Kansas men kept their talks better coordinated and more clearly defined than their opponents, who somewhat loose in their presentation. HOXIE VICTOR IN DEBATE The contests won by Kansas speakers last night represent two sides of a three cornered debate between Colorado, Oklahoma, and Kansas, each school defending both sides of the question. Triumpthant Team to Contest With Newton for State Championship By Wire to The Daily Kansar Hoxie, Kansas, April 16—Hoxie won the decision last night over EFingham in upholding the affirmative of the question, "That Kansas should adopt the ui-camera system of legislature." This ended the seminals of the state high schools debating contests. Hoxie will debate the same side of the question against Newton on April 30 at the University for the state championship. That butcher shops handle "dog" is an old story, but a down town store furnishes this new one. "Fresh Meats of all Kinds" is in conspicuous lettering on the window; in the window it features a card which reads, "Horse for Sale." UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 16, 1915 Edith Adriance, senior College, expects Glen Dorsett to visit her Tuesday and Wednesday. Mr. Dorsett is a student at Springfield, Mass Miss Lou Verna Egan and Miss Helen Rideenburg of Kansas City were the guests of Irede Hepler at the Pishe House Saturday and Sunday. Miss Egan and Miss Ridgeway attented Monticello Seminary at Godfrey, Illinois. HOUSE BROKE HIS DATE And Chancellor Strong Had to Fill in With a Solo Jay House, erstwhile paragrapher and sport writer on the Topeka Capital, but now elevated to the dignity of Topeka's chief executive, probably does not know that he was once the source of a hurried impromptu solo on the part of Chancellor Frank Strong of the University of Kansas. It came about in this way. In November 1912, the Topekan was scheduled to address the students at a special conventation in the chapel. He became so absorbed in his musings that he forgot his Lawrence date. The student body took his hand to hear the Chancellor Strong presiding. The Chancellor was not to be stumped by the non-appearance of the Topekan, however, and sent in a hurry up call for Dean Skilton, the musician. Between the two, they kept the audience in a good humor. House has never, never spoken to the students of the University since. OREAD TO HAVE A HOME Training School Wants Frame Building Erected on Edge of K. U. Campus The Board of Control of Oread Training. School has asked the Board of Administration for authority to erect for its use a temporary building on the campus facing Louisiana street, north of the Cancellor's residence. The Board plans to erect a nine room frame building. The cost of the structure will be met from tuition and incident fees which have accumulated. Providing new quarters will be necessary before the use of the present rooms in Myers Hall for Bible study work next year. ENGINEERS INITIATE NINE Tau Beta, Honorary Fraternity, Has Annual Banquet at Eldridge Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity, held its annual banquet and initiation at the Eldridge House last night. The upper one-eighth of the junior engineers is eligible to this election The following men made up the list of initiates: William Francis Price, E. E.; Arthur Leroy Boman, C. E.; Paul Adam Diehl, C. E; Gay Foster Davis, E.; E. George Harlan Fair, C. E.; Harry M. Stevens, E. E.; Jerry Edward Stillwell, M. E.; Edward Wadsworth Tanner, Arch. E.; Arthur Wellington Templin, C. E. PETITIOINS DELTA UPSILON Members of Kanza Club Ask Charter From National Organization The Kanza club, organized in November 1912, has announced itself as a petitioning body to Delta Upsilon. The organization has rented the Coleman house for the remainder of the school year. The club consists of the following members: George Russell Gear, Sidney A. Moss, E. Busenark, Fred, Knoestel, E. Rusher,ALTER father, Matthew Noddle, Rodkey, Edwin Dodge, Watson A. Dodge, Jabez S. Parker, Robert Smith, Clair A. Ritter, Dr. Josiah Strong, who is to speak in Fraser chapel Monday afternoon at 4:30 on "After the War—What?" has been identified with social service work since his graduation from college. He formed the American Institute of Social Service in 1602, and he graduated from 1907 organized the American Museum of Safety Devices and Industrial Hyriene. Professor Goldwin Goldsmith and C. A. Dykstra are members of Delta Upsilon. Professor Goldsmith was president of the executive council we are accepting the professorship of architecture at the University of Kansas. Eminent Social Worker Speaks in Fraser Chapel Monday Afternoon WAR DR. STRONG'S THEME Harry Asher, middle Law, will spend the week-end in Topeka. Dr. Strong is the author of several works on social science, chief of which is "Our Country," published in 1886. Previous to his taking up this work he was chaplain at Cheyenne, Wyoming; chaplain of Western Reserve University; and pastor of Vine Street church, Cincinnati, Ohio. He is probably best known by his book, "The Challenge of the City." Lawrence Landlines Decide on Ful Pay From Students During Vacation Time NO FREE RENT HOLIDAYS COUNTRY AGAINST CITY TO CONTRACT FOR ROOMS First Housekeepers Tea Part Draws up Standard Lease for Roomers Use ... Full rental will be charged students for their rooms throughout the school year about deductions at vacation times. When rooms are rented in advance, a retaining fee not to exceed one-half o the monthly rental rate is to be charged. This amount will be deducted from the first month's rental when the student occupies the room. The student making the deposit fails to move into the room, the deposit is to be forfeited. A parlor or reception hall must be provided for women students for use on Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights. Students must give due notice whenever they expect to have guests overnight. All breakage of furniture or other harm done to the equipment of the room is to be paid by the students involved These are a few of the decisions made at the first Housekeepers' Tea Party yesterday afternoon in Myers Hall. One hundred landlady accusers, including Brown, advisor of women, and Conrad Hoffmann, inspector of rooming houses. Resolutions pertaining to disputes arising in the rental of rooms to students were adopted, and a copy signed by every landlord pres- A standard form of lease is being drawn up, of which one copy will be written to the student, a second by the landlord, and a third will be posted in the room. Dr. W. L. Burdick, Dean F. W. Blackmar, and Registrar George O. Foster spoke. The conference lasted from 2:30 until 5 o'clock. THIS NUMBER REAL JOBS FOR SENIORS of the Daily Kansan is edited by students of the department of journalism through the courtesy of the Daily Kansan Board. Kansas High Schools Hiring Seniors for Teaching Positions The week has brought the following announcements of senior student elected to teaching positions for from Prof. W, H. Johnson's office: Helen Holtzschuze, Fredonia, German; Mabel Faris, Hoisington, normal training; Floyd Nutting, Hoisington, principal; Madeline Askleton, Oakland, German; Bernice Pickard, Abilene, history and English; Florence Shade, Abilene, mathematics; Lucy Hall, Neodesha, mathematics; Tillman Vaughan, Neodesha, science; Mark Ewoldt, Great Bend, history; James Green, Soldier, superintendent; Floyd B. Lee, Hays, principal Militant spirit was rampant at the installation dinner of the Y. M. C. A. at 5:30 last evening in Myers Hall to receive a speech on "The Old Guard," Larry J. Gould, who curtsuits, Prof. F. H. B. Hillings on "The War Budget," Chancellor Frank Strong on "The Allies," Rex Miller on "Reconnaissance," and Con Hoffmann on "The Demands of the Kaiser." His mounting president, acted as toastmaster. Y. M. BECOMES MILITANT Dove of Peace is Not Recognized at Installation Dinner Milton W. Nigg, junior Engineer, has been absent from the Hill this week because of an attack of appendicitis. However, it is proving to be a mild case, and Nigg expects to be able to attend classes Friday. Members of the old and new cabinets and the old and new advisory boards of the Association were present. Hal Coffman was presented with a gold watch fob by the members of the retiring cabinet, in appreciation of his services as president. Place cards and programs in the form of soldier's tents helped carry out their mission. Dayhawkers at Penn Relay Wi Meet Teams With Professional Prep School Coaching Kansas Will Have Hardest Fight Against Cornell's Well Trained Men OLD TRADITION AT STAKE When the five crack Jayhawk distance man, all native Kansasans from whom the K. U. four mile relay team will be chosen, set foot on Eastern soil to compete with the best that has ever been trained in athletic traditions are in danger of obliteration. It will be a battle of the country against the city—of the country high school against the exclusive preparatory school—the products of nature's development on the earth, the best training that money can buy. For the Kansas distance men, who represent the University at Des Moines tomorrow, and who invade the Atlantic slope the following week, are distinctly products of the small town in which they live. Their latent qualities of endurance by plugging several miles to school each day. Des Moines Strong on Sprinters At Des Moines, victory will come to them without much effort, for the long legged plainsmen are far superior to anything in this section of the country. But when they are forced to toe the mark with the crack Cornell four, gathered from the corners of the earth—for while Speden was running East, Vere Wendlagle was running the mile around 4:31 in far off Oregon—it will practically be Kansas against the rest of the country. But the rest of the country will have to run. Hermriot and Rodkey, the best of the Kansans, are capable of much better than 4.30. They will limit the number of players they can limit. Edwards has twice completed the eight furlongs in 4-31 and Grady, the weakest man as well as Poas the alternate, can beat 4-35. So it will be hard for them to win unless they them, though the world's mark is less than ten seconds below that. OBER DISCOVERED MOTT association Man, Who Speaks Sunday, Started Several Leaders C. K. Ober, who discovered John R. Mott as a student in Cornell, and started him in Christian work, will address the men of the University Sunday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock, in Mvers Hall on "A Man's Work." Besides Doctor Mott, Mr. Ober has been instrumental in launching other laboratories such as Fletcher S. Brockman, national secretary for China, and H. W. Stone, who for twenty years, has been secretary of the Portland, Oregon Y. M. C. Stone, a professor at work, Mr. Stone was a professor at the Kansas Agricultural College. LARDNER HERE TO STAY Mr. Ober comes here from the University of Nebraska. Says he Will Not Leave Until Stu dent Account Books are Audited James T. Lardner, financial secretary to the Board of Administration is auditing account books of various student organizations today. When asked how he found the differ- ident accounts Mr. Lardner said: "I have failed to bring me all of the necessary books, with which to make a thorough audit, I expect to find the missing material is turned in." Mr. Lardner will stay until he is satisfied that the accounts of all student organizations are correct in every detail. **home economics in bluescene** or **home economics in bluescene** The class of sixteen members in the fall semester of "Selected and Economic Uses of Foods" under Miss Elizabeth Downey will hold a reunion banquet in the home economics laboratory, tomorrow evening. The affair will be elaborate and the several courses will be arranged and prepared by the different members of the class. Home Economics to Banquet Harold Roberts, one of the three students thrown from a canoe below the dam recently, says that the Kansan was incorrect in stating that Jim Fast helped him from the turbulent waters. P. O. Lanham, advertising manager for the Ober store talked to the advertising class this morning on "Writing Copy." "I am a better swimmer than Fast." said Roberts, "and reached the shoul TWO OF THE K. U. "HOPES" K Fred Rodkey, who starts, and Captain Ray Edwards, who finishes the blue ribbon four mile relay for the Moines at Des Moines tomorrow afternoon. IT'S COST O' HIGH LIVING Miss Anna Barrows Talks to Wom en in Fraser on Simplicity of Cooking "It is not difficult to decrease the cost of living if one wants to do it," declared Miss Anna Barrows, secretary of the American Home Economics Association, in summing up her views on the best of living. Do We Want to Reduce? Before a hundred women in Fraser Hall, yesterday afternoon. "For my part, I don't think many of us wish to make the sacrifice necessary to bring down the expense. If we would use more of the staple foods that are in season we could get a healthful diet at a reasonable cost. It is a point of coming back to more break and milk in our meals. RECEPTION FOR MISS BARROWS A large number of women, who are interested in the work of Miss Anna Barrows along the lines of household art, had the pleasure of meeting her personally, yesterday afternoon, the business offices department held an informal reception for her. Mrs. Brown's rooms in Fraser Hall were prettily decorated with cherry blossoms, and a number of girls served refreshment which they themselves had prepared. The staff said she had been greatly impressed, while visiting the western schools, with the efficient work accomplished. SHOWED HOW TO DO IT "Always be on the alert to see when you can do without," was the advise which Miss Anna Barrows of Teacher's College, Columbia University, wrote. "I will always teach yesterday; 'Science should teach you to use your own judgment as well as to be accurate. I carry a whole kitchen in this suit case, and can cook a meal for a good many people." And Miss Anna Barrows proceeded to make her word good by pulling forth, after the manner of a magician, oil lamps, stew pans, sifter, cutlery, all kinds of spices, and even napkins from one another. "All kinds of pudding, peach, spice and chocolate within the next hour." Geologists on a Hike Prof. W. H. Twenhofel's geology classes are planning an all-day hike tomorrow. They will go to Williams-town on the Union Pacific early in the morning, eat dinner there and come back in the afternoon. Botanists to Lake View The Botany club will take the 9:20 Santa Fe tomorrow morning for Lake View, six miles northwest of town, on an all-day collecting trip. Anyone enrolled in botany courses is invited to go. Pacificists to Hear Fraser Facilites to Hear Fraser Prof. Leo Fraser, of the faculty of political science at Columbia University, will speak before the International Union for Human Rights house Monday night. Professor Fraser will speak promptly at 7 o'clock as he must get an early train to Kansas City. A stranger in a strange land! This is the way it seems to Eusebio Barba, junior Law of Bacnota, Union, Philippine Islands. He afforded a good deal of amusement to the class when he was assigned to attend when he gave the title of his selection as "The Beside by the House of the Road." K. U. NABS THE OPENER Chinese Cracks From Hawaii Downed Four to Three on McCook Diamond GAME ABOUNDS IN MISCUES Both Infields Were Wobbly, But Jayhawker Tossers;Tightened in Pinches But to return to the game which was only the fourth defeat the Chinese have received from an American school team during this week. The other day, locally, Craig being bothered by a little wildness in the opening innings. But in the second, disaster came. Russell dropped an easy pop fly back of second to start the innings. This so disturbed Red that he lowered up a knee and before things had quieted down two runs had gone over the plate. Red Craig's pitching yesterday afternoon did several things besides giving Kansas a 4-3 victory over the Chinese University of Hawaii. It put an awful jolt into the theory that the 1950 B-U, U pitching staff was weak because they told Carson and Blue would be lucky to win a game, this season. K. U. Evens in Third But the next session McCarty's proteges came right back getting three runs on a walk, and a mixture of errors with a couple of scratch nits. The winning Crimson and Blue run came in the eighth when Sproul got his second consecutive walk and was pushed around for a score on a sacrifice, and out and a scratch hit. The first half of the ninth found the visitors making desperate efforts to win. The first two men were easy out by the King-Sprowl route and just for good luck Red whiffed the last one. Kansas Ab. R. H. Po. A. E. Wood, ss. 2 0 0 3 1 Wood, ff. 3 1 1 0 1 Chinney, If. 3 1 1 0 1 Delongy, f. 3 1 2 6 1 Lindsay, rf. 3 0 2 1 0 King, 3b. 4 0 0 1 0 Rassel, 2b. 4 0 0 1 0 Sproull, 1b. 1 1 0 12 1 Craig, p. 1 0 1 0 1 4 26 4 6 27 14 5 Chinese Ab. R. H. Po. A. 5 J. Chin, 2b. 3 0 0 2 5 0 Ayau, ss. 5 0 2 5 2 Lai, 3b. 5 0 1 2 2 2 Mark, c. 3 1 0 6 4 0 Yilu, f. 3 1 0 6 4 0 Yap, 1b. 4 0 0 10 0 Lee, lf. 4 0 2 1 0 0 Let, cf. 3 0 1 1 0 1 Bo, p. 3 1 0 0 1 1 33 3 6 24 12 6 Score by innings: R. H. E. Chinese: .020 000 100—3 46 English: .020 000 100—3 46 The summary: Stobber, base, Lai Sacrifice hits, Craig, Wandell, Lindsay, Let. Struck out; by Craig 6; by Bo. 5. Base on balls: by Bo 5; by Craig, 5. Time of game 1:45. Umpire, Hicks. Notes on the Game Though the day was warm, Coach McCarty had his men properly accounted and on the field fully an hour before the game was called. The Hawaiians also did considerable warming up, the heat affecting them but little, as they have been raised in a semi-torrid zone. Were it not for the fact that Mark is at times inclined to loaf, he would be classed as one of the best catchers in the game today. He has an arm of steel and a good reach in addition to batting well, but does not appear to have much hint. Longy's failure to touch a runner and the resultant squabble was the only thing which seemed to rouse him into aggressiveness. Mark. the visitors' big backstop, showed that his arm was not to be taken lightly, by throwing out Chinmery several feet on an attempted purloin of the keystone sack. He knocked Cubs very much in his actions behind the bat, but does not show the initiative of the National leaguer. At the last moment, McCarty decided to use Lindsay in the outfield and his judgment was not misplaced for Lindsay pulled one out of the clouds that seemed sure to go into the bleachers for a two sacker. Lindsay was caught mapping off first once though. The Chinese and the Hawaiians generally addressed one another in English but occasionally got excited and shouted instructions in their native tongue. Such an aggregation needs few signals. And Hicks was the umpire's name. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN JOSEPH NAMES SENIORS 1915 Commencement to Have All Modern Improvements and Orthodox Ceremonials Don Joseph, president of the senior class, has announced the following committees for Commencement: Ass Day Committee— Jack Green street, chairman, Gretwain Householder Glenn Somers H. A. Lorenz Lefty Sproull Buster Brown Orrin Potter Frances Powes Cerwin Powell Walker Madeline Nachmann Elizabeth Morrow Class Breakfast Committee—Dorothea Hackbusch, Chm, Marie Hedrick McCanniel, Vivian Hammond Alberta Cady Edna Ingels Plans for the festivities attendant upon the commencement season are going ahead rapidly, and are nearly complete. What more can being carefully worked out, and the class intends to hold the most successful commencement ever celebrated at Kansas. Many of our guests will be the last ones, will add to the enjoyment of the week. The class breakfast will begin a 8 o'clock Tuesday, June 8, Class Day; the class memorial will be presented to the University on the same day, and we will be doing a meal to make the day one of complete enjoyment for the seniors. The committee is trying to arrange a faculty-alumni ball game for Class Day, as is done at Stanford. On Friday, the committee will play a game with St. Marxs. Two or three hundred pipes will be ordered for the ceremony of smoking the calmet. Each pipe will be decorated with a K and the class numeral. Buzz Wagons at Trams Automatic tram trains, for the convenience of the returning alumni. Each machine will carry the banner of some class, and the grades will be taken wherever appropriate carrying the banner of their class, without charge. MOVIE CAYUSE TAKES WINGS AND FLIES And Ward Hatcher Gets a Spill. Heartless men are these movie directors, is the opinion of Ward Hatcher, well known in K. U. dramatic circles as the man who can make a film like "The Walrus" Walter Hawkevort, sophomore College. These men base their opinion on a meeting they had last summer wheg they struck Romaine Fielding, director of the Lubin Film Producing company in Colorado Springs for a job. Havekorat never had had any experience in riding and decided his Injury Report. "What can you do?" was the first thing Romaine asked the two K. U. men. Hatcher didn't know they were putting on an Indian picture and so answered anything. Indian, make-up given a spotted pony, told to go to the top of a hill, ride down as fast as he could, and fall off when he reached a certain place. The job-hunter shivered but did as bidden. The pony laid down, flew down the hill. Hatcher fell off and tuckily no bones were broken. "I held that job for one week," Havekorten says, "despite the fact that the sun burned blisters on my body, which was barely protected by a thin coat of red paint. The next week I appeared in the pioneer wagons to be attacked by the Indians." The discussion swung around to Rudyard Kipling in a public speaking class the other morning. The morning. The professor remarked: "Kipling was born in India, his parents were English, and he showed good sense by marrying an American." Many other Englishmen and Irishmen have rowed in the same boat. Helen Ruhlandt, sophomore College, will go to her home in Osawatomie, Friday. She says that she will bring back some pure cream and her friend to an old-fashioned strawberry short cake when she returns. John Henry Bauerlein, freshman College, is trying to coin a new word to replace "Hello." He thinks that the continual hello, he becomes monotonous, especially between morn-classes. On your daily trip down town Tuesday afternoon did you stop to watch the men moving the big safe into the second floor of the Stubba building? It weighs 7,000 pounds. "ENOUGH," CRIES STEVA Girly Name Worked For Awish, But Too Much is Too Much Here's one joke that has gone quite far enough. Stewart McGraw, senior engineer, is as masculine as any engineering boot, a leather shirt, and a slouch hat. Nevertheless he is called "Steva," and all because he learned to crochet just to show a girl that man fashion was real in the art of fancy work as a woman. "Steva" was not especially irritated over the new name he had suddenly acquired, but, when he began to re-examine it, he addressed to Miss Steva McGraw, his masculine feelings were hurt. Advertisements of dress forms, false hair, household draperies, dress goods, and various other things, not to be made by the engineer, convinced Steva that the make is getting old and thusome. GIRLS DESIGN OWN GOWNS Best Dresses Worn at Pron Made in Wee Small Hours of Morning Pink gowns, blue gowns, yellow green, orange, white, cream, lavender and rose gowns—all pretty, all stylish, all become, and every one made by the wearer. No, not every piece of them. Proportion of them. And lots of their creators never had a course in sewing. That pretty, fluffy white dress of net, high-waisted, and trimmed with pink chiffon, worn by the graceful, beautiful woman, just come from some French dress-maker. But she sat up a couple of nights until 11:30 working on it, and finished it easily the next morning. And what is more, it didn't cost a dollar to create her chine creation one of her friends wore, and it looked just as pretty. You probably noticed that orange-yellow creation of crepe de chine? It was one of the swellest dresses on the floor, and its owner, who looked like a very pretty Mrs. Vernon Castle, with her hair fixed the latest way, and it was so much better than mits that her mother helped her just a little with some of the seams and the hemming, but it was her own idea and her own pattern. The dainty blue mull with the ruffles and the old-fashioned quaint rounded neck was the product of two afternoons of work. And the amateur dressmaker didn't have to cut any classes, either, to make it. Her own skirt, made from velvet, heard about it, for it was the first party dress she had ever tackled. that thin white vole with the full, accordian-plaited skirt looks as though it had come out of Emery Bird's or Innes' most expensive collection. And it cost only $6 and two days of hard work on the part of its wearer. And not content with make-up and glittering sisters with theirs, hanging them, hemming them and laying in the gathers. The tall, dark-haired girl with her hair fixed low on her neck certainly didn't make that dress, did she? You ask her, though, and she will tell you that it took her two days to put that dress together. To her side, beaded bands over her shoulders and the high-waisted band above the full skirt. No breath of shop or modiate about these—these, and many others at the Prom. Purely home-made they were, but when she touched the fingers of the girls themselves. Whereupon with much dignity Miss Co-ead, the cause of this sudden and unusual activity on the part of my friend was told, "My physical condition was never better; my friend here was merely demonstrating that to pour cold water on the wrist would cool uncomfortable state of warmness." The flying waiters at Lee's, with handkerchiefs, damp towels, glasses of water, and lively tongues rushed up to the booth where sat two K. U. women yielding to the lure of fresh strawberries and ice cream. BILL TOO BIG FOR HER POCKET-BOOK The waiter wilted and having nothing else to do punched the ticket for him. "Has she fainted?" The girl with the pocket-book faint ed immediately. Can you imagine how a student feels with fifteen hundred million dead typhoid bugs circulating in his system? Well, after making three trips to the basement of the Museum and receiving a full size insulation, we are supposed to pack around for three long years. So far over 1,000,000,000,000 germs have been distributed among the students on the Hill. LIQUID AIR SELLS HIGH Didn't Expect 85c Strawberries Send the Daily Kansan home. Department of Chemistry Makes Money by Supplying Canned Ozone to Lecturers "Nothing comes out of nothing," wrote old man Perseus many years ago. And people believe him to this day. Still the University is able to take a handful of air and transfer it money to help a depleted treasury." About one hundred pounds of this canned air, which becomes a liquid on sufficient pressure, are made by the department of chemistry each week. Eighty pounds of this is sold at $1 a pound and from the proceeds the company is able to pay all expenses of production and have money left over. The liquid air shipped from the University is used for demonstration purposes only. So far it is too expensive to be put on any practical equipment in a university classroom the air just to show what can be done with it. It might serve as a substitute for ice, but only the idle rich could afford to pay a dollar a pound when the same amount of ice would be given as gas and less. There must be a reason why so many students drop into Wilson's Drug Store for their refreshments. They try to please everybody...Adv. Robbed by its young rival, the Lawrence Country Club, the Oread Golf Club finds itself facing a lack of material to make up a team to compete in the State Golf Tournament which is to be held on Wednesday. According to Prof. M. W., Sterling there is little chance that the Oread Club will send a team. OREAD GOLFERS WON'T GO Lack of Material Will Keep Club Out of State Tournament Two years ago this organization won the tournament and with it the state championship and last year team was the semifinal team as well the semi-final medals. The Wichita Club is making elaborate plans to entertain the visiting players this year and expect the tour to be even more widely attended than ever before. Send the Daily Kansan home. But week after next, K. U. students are to be given the chance that Columbia, Yale, and Harvard students have of hearing 155 trained voices sing A COLLEGE education should help you to know a good man when you see him," said William James, and it should not only help you to know a good man, but to know a good book, to know a good play or to know a good piece of music. A University situated in a small town like Lawrence has many advantages over the University in a city. But it has some disadvantages. The principal one that is pointed out is that K.U. students have not the opportunity to see good plays or hear good music as have our future rivals at Columbia University, Yale, or Harvard. 746 Mass. The Merchants National Bank The Bank of Good Service 746 Mass The Anvil Chorus from Il Trovatore The Bridal Chorus from Rose Maiden Sousa's Stars and Stripes Moskowski's Waltz Song Giese's Forget-me-not The Wedding Chorus from Spring Maid And Others The phrase, "Pop Concert" has by usage been entered into the dictionary. It gained its favor from the theory that a high-class concert at popular prices would be as successful as a high-class concert at prohibitive prices. In other words, 1,000 persons at 50 cents equal 100 persons at $5. It is a part of a man or woman's education to hear these world's masterpieces. The concert week after next will be one of those "Pop Concerts." Admission, twenty-five cents. Robinson Gymnasium. April 28. No seats reserved. Florsheim Shoes The judicious student will stick a pin here and take advantage of the opportunity to enjoy some good music. "For the Man Who Cares" Red Cross Shoes "Bends With the Foot" Leaders Everywhere Starkweather's Exclusive Booteries BASEBALL GOODS AT KENNEDY & ERNST The University of Kansas Offers over 200 courses BY MAIL through its Correspondence Study Department. Credit given for all college work. Address University Extension Division, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas. For Sunday— A Change YOU will appreciate the food, the service, and the cleanliness—not to mention the peacefulness of the place OREAD CAFE E. C. BRICKEN If a High School Graduate is in a Hurry to begin college work or to win a college degree. or if, for some reason, he is not fully prepared to enter the University without condition. The Summer Session of the University of Kansas is at His Service Work is offered in 29 departments and 136 courses. Extra classroom activities in the form of lectures, dramatic entertainments, athletic sports, etc., add to the pleasure of his sojourn on Mt. Oread, "The Coolest Spot in Kansas." Further details of the many opportunities of the Session are announced elsewhere in this paper or may be secured by writing to the Dean of the Summer Session University of Kansas Lawrence UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN STUDENTS LOVE DRAMA Renaissance at Dartmouth and Michigan Spreading—Ten Big Plays at Kansas Next Year Are students at the University of Kansas feeling the nation-wide reenaissance of dramatic art that is to be found in the universities and colleges around America. And the realities of a remarkably good character, have been produced this year. The cast has been well-trained and efficient, and the successes have done little damage to the stigma that so often attaches to amateur theatricals. The tendency of actors to overcrowd the stage, the last few years has really changed, observant ones have pointed out, and the movement has subtracted of considerable favorable comment. But it is what the students are doing themselves that is of interest, and this is best illustrated by what has taken place at Dartmouth and Michigan within the last few years. The students, a few years ago, would not be likely to pick it out as the place for a renaissance of dramatic art. There was a dramatic society, to be sure, which gave Sha Stoops to the court. The good one was "or the jolius Caesar," year after year. Student Stirs Dartmouth Martin Johnson remarks in the Bellman for April 10, that the most encouraging research in America today is the recent interest in the theatre which has sprung up among college students. The interest has coevolved with students whose selves may not been the work of the college faculties. A notable exception, to this, however, is Harvard University, where students were laboratory 67', where students construct and display plays as if they were conducting experiments in a chemical laboratory. At the University of Wisconsin, from which the Wisconsin Dramatic Society has developed. At the University of Minnesota, at Oceanside and Oberlin other courses in the study of the drama are being given. Three years ago there came to Dartmouth a young fellow named Wanger. He did not see why he should be playing football, the football team and be a slave to the members of the boating crew. Consequently, he was forced to study at students. He was bored with the study of the drama as it was given in a course on Shakespeare, just as he was disgusted with the cut-and-dried knowledge offered by his teachers. He decided to do something that would be as interesting as playing football or rowing, and as much fun as playing football. He gave a show that was far better than anything ever given by the dramatic society that was the beginning of Dartmouth at Dartmouthville company and gave a show that was far better than anything ever given by the dramatic society that was the beginning of Dartmouth at Dartmouthville company and gave a show that were different than any they had even heard or thought of. Among those students began giving plays Wallace Robinson, of Boston, gave Dartmouth a building to be used for non-athletic purposes about this time, and a theatre seat at the university. Out of the new Robinson Hall. Out of this revival of dramatic interest have sprung some companies—made up wholly of students—that have been theaters of the Boston and New York theatres. Gives Dartmouth a Theatre And at Michigan the same is true. Owing to the fact that one of the professors did not tolerate the production of anything but mossback shows on the campus, some of the students hired one of the younger instructors to coach them in the theatre's. The Wolverine professors regarded this as insubordination and expelled the leader from school. He is now the only known stage manager in Chicago. The new movement on the part of the students themselves suggests that perhaps a new ideal in education is developing, of education which is not so much a preparation for earning a living as for living. If that is the case, a social心理 consciousness which makes a nurture possible is beginning to find shape. "The Man from Home" was a success. Leaders in dramatic thought at Kansas say the club will, if the membership increases as prosperity fades, frozen good plays next year, having three or four casts working on different productions at once. HANNA WAS GOING, TOO Arrived at Professor Gleason's Arena Only One Week Late "The Call of the Wild," or perhaps the fighting spirit of old Roman gladiator days, proved too much for Hanna, the trusty, plodding horse which has drawn her master, Charles F. Hase, night watchman, at K. U., up the Hill every evening this spring. Hanna may have discovered that he hung reading or she may have felt instinctively, woman-like, that big doings were going on, south of the campus where Prof. Oscar Gleason was scheduled to make his "fight for life." Anyway, the fact remains that Wednesday evening, Hanna left her shed and departed to parts unknown. Upon a search she was found enduring torture by an entrance from place no longer, Gleason's hardiness in which place Mr. Hase had difficulty in persuading her to leave. leave. Hanna is all right. There is nothing the matter with Hanna. She was only one week late. PROFESSORS WILL SPEAK High Schools Want Them For Com- menence Addresses Fifty-five Kansas towns will listen to commencement addresses by members of the University of Kansas faculty this year. Webber will have the first, which is to be delivered a week from Saturday, April 24. The appointments run from that date until June 3, when the last one will take place at Pratt. The list of schools known Admire, Altamont, Aponita, Atchia, Corning, Axelst, Axtell, Belpwe, Corning, Dorgang, Ellsworth, Florence, Gardner, Garrison, Halsted, Hays, Highland, Hill City, Horton, Howard, Hutchinson, Ingalls, Kincad, Kingman, Latham, Louisburg, Lindbsor, Little River, Longton, Lovewell, Lucas, Meridien, Muscatotah, Olga, Oswatomie, Oakley, Ossauatomi, Peru, Powhatan, Pratt, Quenemo, Sawyer, Sawyer, St. Marys, Sharon Springs, Silver Lake, Speville, Toronto, Troy, Walton, Waterville, Webber, Winchester, Windom. PICKED UP BETWEEN CLASSES Who is so gullable as the freshman? Answer: delivered with promptness, the Sigma Nu seniors. The freshman that has bought shares in an alligator, which Jack Loveless is importing from the Florida Everglades. With philanthropic purposes, or with ambition to be stars in the circus, Jack Loveless Jack with a profit which will cheer the remade of his spring term. Gilded blossoms on the green campus are a thing of the past. The degree of landscape gardener has gone forth--dandelions are to be exterminated in a jannet, as well as in his soul has already begun to dig them up. Here is a phenomena whose explanation might well be tackled by some earnest graduate student or fellow in science. It is, that there is a very material connection between spring and typhoid inoculations. "Last week fewer students applied for treatment than any time during the entire year," said Dr. John. Sundwall professor of earliness. "Inoculations are harder to raise each week until it is hardly worth while to keep the material on hand. The students do not seem to realize what an opportunity is given them." A twelve year old alligator will arrive in town in a few days to play the role of house pet to the Sigma Nu fraternity. The freshmen have been appointed caretakers. Chief among their duties is to take him over to Potter Lake each day for his afternoon bath. "Mother" Young declares that she is going to tie a flannel cloth around his neck to keep the floors polished, "And," said one of the Sigma Nur, "the Betas may have their turkey pull and the Phi Ghs their pig roast, but if we ever get tired of Mr. Alligator we will have an alligator roast." The delegates to the convention of the Woodmen of the World enjoyed CASTLE ROLL Front 2 3/4 in. Back 1 1/4 in. BARKER CO BRAND 2 FOR 25¢ 2 FOR 25¢ MANUFACTURERS: WILLIAM BARKER CO., TROY, N.Y. Only at Peckhams Remember Mr. University Student that you can buy those FANCY GROCERIES and CONFECTIONS at all the sights around the campus, but most of them made the Dyche Museum headquarters. A Wichita delegate was heard to remark, "I should like to stay in the Museum all day, but the entertainment committee just piles us off and on the cars and takes us around town like a herd of cattle." LaCoss Grocery 1301 Ky. How do you bake cranberries? Question preferred by Jerry Riseley, senior Law, who is doing his own cooking since his wife went home. Why not introduce a short course in domestic science into the Law School? "No, no; fix your lips like I do. Get your road and pay attention to your lips." A group of faculty men going down the Hill turned around to see the principals in a man student. A man student was teaching a young woman to whistle. Elmer Bradley, (freshman) to Joyce Brown, (freshman): "Pardon me, but do you spell your name J-'o-y-e-'e' or J-'o- h-"? instances of woman's refining influence multiply. A band of sophomores, armed with paddles, was waiting in front of the Administration building at the university, the lustic second year man was eloquent about a victim whom he had selected for particular attention. Suddenly the east door of "Ad" opened and a woman student came out. The sophomore took his place and with a hurried, "Good-bye," I am too tender-hearted today," he walked away with her. The reporter was writing a story about a museum exhibit; the skeleton of a buffalo with particularly interesting significance to the student of pre-historic days. A sentence in the story ran thus: "This skeleton is considered to be the University's best proof-" and the typewriter, erratic as ever, skidded on the last word and left out one O. disgust. “To think that I must lie here in this musty old museum to be stared at by impudent students without being able to protect myself” Why was I once called the fierce antagonist of my life? I felt alien, flat horn on my dignified head crumble away from disease? It was an unhappy day for me when the great Cretaceous vaporated and left me here.” With a weary sigh the huge fossil lingered like had once been free and happy in the sea which ages ago covered the spot where the Hill now stands. "Aha," said Portheus Molassus as he grazed his sharp teeth in Old age must give way to youth even in the world of pets. And so it was with Bluey, the big Maltese cat of Reba Prothet, who lost his place after nine years as a favorite. He was once a playful kitten and loved him when this week Mr. Prothet brought home a little all toy-white puppie pup, the big cat resented sharing the attention of his mistress until it became necessary to choose between them. A little chloroform and a long sleep complete the process. The in-unaware of the sacrifice, is happy in the loving care of his mistress. "Professor Burdick was a snap in those days," said W. L. Sayers, county attorney of Graham county, as he recalled his college life of fifteen years ago. "He was encouraged in the law school that he went to the Law School. His lectures were good, but no one ever flunked; it is different now, the young lawyers tell me." McNish's aerated distilled water is the best protection for the health. Adv. Have you any idea as to the number of men and women on the faculty? Just as a bit of information, there are 200. Only 30 are women. Their salaries for March were $32.219. Send the Daily Kansan home. Something to Live for Until Next Tuesday Night K. U.Vaudeville 10 Big Acts-40 Entertainers An evening full of high class attractions equal to the standard vaudeville of the cities and setting a new mark for campus productions of this kind. The Principal Numbers are Russian and Character Dances Revealing the art and grace of the great Pavlowa. The Aerial Troupe Sensational stunts on the high bar. Whistling Jim Butin "That's him, that's him, that's whistling'Jim!" The Two Macks (McFarland and McCurdy) Variety Group Pyrotechnic club swinging and feature dances. Aesthetic Acrobats Introducing new and unique dancing. The Unparalleled Amarillians On the parallel bars. Jayhawk Tumblers Exceptional, daring, brilliant. Pat Crowell The monologue comedian. DeBenham Instrumental interpretation of light opera. The Glee Club Quartette Nothing Here You Could Afford to Miss Tuesday, April 20, in the Gymnasium And the Date Rule is Off The proceeds from the show will go to the W. S. G. A. to be used in furnishing a house for girls to be opened next September. General Admission 25c—Reserved Seats 35c Exchange Your Tags for Seats Monday in Fraser The best chance you have had in a long time to treat yourself to an evening brim full of entertainment and at the same time help promote a worthy student project. Directed by H. A. Lorenz Under the Auspices of the Department of Physical Education --- MAKE YOUR DATE NOW UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the Univer ality of Kansas This issue is edited by students in the Department of Journalism. Subscription price $2.50 per year in advance; one term, $1.50 Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kanaan, 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. FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1915 Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Next to excellence is the appreciation of it. Thackeray. This is the season of the year when young men are interested but they don't know it. K. U. students should be careful about letting their fancy run away with them with prices as they now stand. If King George lived in Lawrence he would think twice about that water-wagon proposition. GUESTS COMING The University will again be the host to high-school students from various towns of the state when the Interscholastic track meet is held here on campus. in all probability there will be eight or nine hundred students here at that time and preparations should begin at once to take good care of them. Many of them are prospective K. U. students and they should have an opportunity, in the school, to enter this school which will induce them to be more than ever anxious to come. The whole student body ought to cooperate in giving these younger bretheren a warm reception and a pleasant visit. Arrangements ought to be made for lodging them in student homes in order that they may come closer to the University student body. The impressions many of them receive on this visit may decide whether they ever come on to college. Notwithstanding the local state of prohibition Lawrence people and the University are at luger-heads over the water question. Willard cleaned the Tar Baby but he ought to try Chem. II. THE GAME OF GRACE When it comes to destructitn the Chinese U-9 submarine isn't in it. Archery, what romance has not been conjured around that word! But mention Diana, Robin Hood, Wilhelm Tell and the flood gates of romance are opened. And now the girls of the University of Kansas are joining the noble throng of archers. The Diana of Mt. Oread, though not in the flowing costume of her predecessor, will fit lightly from the west Gymnasium door over the green to the front of Fowler shapes and send the archers off the path to the target of admiring eyes—for the archery craft shows on the graceful lines of carriage and poise. Up-to-date Cupid has borne the name of the most adept archer, but let him have an eye to the maideness of Mt. Oread who take up as a sport what with him is a vocation. Some people give money to the White Cross fund and others merely pledge. CAMPUS MILITARISM Recent discussions of national defense have given prominence to the question of military training in colleges and universities of the United States. Many leading authorities, including some college presidents, favor the plan of instituting compulsory drill on American campuses, especially at the state schools, while others are strongly opposed to it. The Morril act of 1862 first instituted training at the land grant colleges of the United States by providing that military science should be included in the curriculum. This has resulted in the establishment, to date, of fifty-two colleges where one or more years of drilling is required. The President of the United States details a regular army officer to act as instructor at these colleges and the government forces nishes arms, equipment and amountition to the schools. This is the mostcommon form of campus militarism in this country. However, in addition to the land grant schools, many others have for one reason or another taken up the military work. Some because the governing body thought it advisable and some through freak legislation, as was the case at the University of Washington, where a legislator, who had been holding up the school appropriation, finally assented to its passage if military drill were instituted, and his amendment was, of necessity, accepted and passed. Such institutions also receive the services of retired government officers as well as equipment, providing one or more fifty or more cadets are being trained. The land grant schools are not held up to any standard work. For example, at Missouri University drill is required but one year and may be substituted for gymnastic work at the conclusion of two semesters. Otherwise the student must drill two years, but is virtually the second in grade to graduate by the requirement of fees. California requires two years work, three days a week, and the Oregon Agricultural College students drill during the entire course of their college career and every college day in the year unless they obtain special dispensation. Some advocate(s of the adoption of this work argue merely from the premise that the safety of the nation requires it while others uphold it also because the physical training resultant is valuable and reaches a greater number than athletic exercise, upon which we now depend. Dean Blackmar, has been quoted as sponsoring substitution of military drill for gymnastium work. On the other hand, some hand that colleges and universities can best provide for national safety by creating public opinion against war, and that the forced military instruction would stimulate and create the opposite desire and cause carriage to be more probable. These point to the need for a modern, individual drill is required of the student have found it necessary to supplement the military exercises with corrective gymnastics. It is significant that at New York University, where the matter came to a head soon after the discussion was begun, the students showed that they were strongly opposed to drill by forming an Anti-Militaristic Club, which plans to work for universal peace. This organization was not the first of its kind for Cornell, Columbian, Princeton, Yale, Pennsylvania, Stanford, Trinity, and others have similar organizations. Why is it that opportunity is never criticised for being a knocker? No, the point system is not designed to puncture ambition. FOR A NEW COMMENCEMENT Under a plan which would excuse seniors from final examinations the second semester, in case their work measured up to a standard of grade 14, the only serious objection urged against the new style of commencement would be removed. Few senior examinations would be necessary and these could be given earlier than the others with little extra work by instructors. It would then be possible to hold commencement exercises before the end of the semester while the student body was still on the campus and to furnish for the commencement crowd a great spectacle enjoyable alike to alumni and students. It is a plan that is gaining favor in universities and is worthy of more serious consideration than has been given to it here. MAKE BOATING SAFE As the Nile required yearly victimism as a sacrifice, the Kansas river at Lawrence has demanded and received in many past years the lives of students who were already ready this spring there has been one narrow escape from a drowning accident. In spite of the fine opportunity the broad surface of this river affords for sport, each year the attempts at making it a joy center are frustrated by accidents due to the carelessness on the part of those who go out in boats. Foolhardiness spoils a legitimate sport for boating; it is also a form of discretion from those who go canoeing on the Kaw? Let boat rockers stay on the shallow end of Potter Lake. A few minutes spent in watching the Chinese swat the ball will convince anyone that it is all a fable about their using chick sticks. Nutt--Jinks made the baseball team last week. Nutt—Good nuthin'. He broke his leg the day after he made the team. Nut—Bad matinh'. He got excused from all classes with v皈il and met a pepo of his own. Mutt—Ah, that's good! Nutt—Good nuthin'. He had to marry the nurse. Nutt—Bad nuthin'? The nurse owned an apartment house worth $10,000. A SONG Butt—Good nuthin'! "The building nutted down the day after he married her." Mutt—My, that's bad! And I, too, sing the song of all creation: A brave sway and a gild wind blowing by the sway of her heart. A long day and the joy to make it飞; A hard task and the muscle to achieve it A fierce nose, and a well-connected glom A still night and the red lights of home TENNYSON. Did you face the trouble that came your way With a resolute heart and cheerful? Or turn your soul from the light of day With a cavern soul and fearful? Oh, a trouble's a tom o'ta a trouble's an ounce, Or a trouble is what you make it; But it isn't the fact that you're hurt that counts, But only—how did you take it? HOW DID YOU DIE? You're beaten to earth? 'Well, well, what's that— come up with a smiling face!' It's nothing against you to be knocked flat, But to lie there—that's disgrace. The harder you're thrown the higher you bounce. Be proud of your blackened eye! It isn't the fact that you are hurt that counts, but how did you fight—and why? And tho' you be done to death, what then? If you did the best that you could, If you played your part in the world of men, Why, the Critic will call it good. Death comes with a cray, or comes with a pounce, But whether 'tis slow or spry, It isn't the fact that you're dead that counts, But only—how did you die*³ OUR DEHORNED CATFISH (From Billy Morgan's Jayhawker in Europe) "That reminded me of a Kansas fish story which I introduced to the audience in 1982 of the bred of hornless catfish which has been bred near the Bowersock dam at Lawrence. Some years ago Mr. Bowersock who owns the dam which furnishes catfish for the brewer conceived the idea that big Kaw river catfish going through the mill-race and onto the waterwheel added much to the power generated. Then he read that the river was so shallow so he hired a man with an accordion to stand over the mill-race and play. "These fish not only turn out to hear the music but they have learned to enjoy the trip through the mill-rise and over the wheel so that every Sunday or offender who families of catfish—or whatever else they all know—bowers's dam to shoot the chutes something as people go out to ride on the eenie railway." "The catfish came from up and down stream to hear the music and almost heard the drum, the wheel and increased the power. The fishes' horns used to get entangled in the whee and injure the fish, so Mr. Cray was always very persistent had a lot of the fish caught and dehorned and in a year or two he had a large herd of horriness Undergraduate Reactions Sh- "I don't it strange that the length of a man's arm is equal to the circumference." He—"Let's get a string and see." All Gaul is divided into three parts and the professor who assigns a quiz on the Monday following a football game owns two-thirds of the supply. He—Gee, the new dance hall has a neach of a floor. She- Then why do you dance on my feet? - How's everything? Jupr-er, Ohi- sie's all right--Ohio Sun-Dial. "What is the trouble between Van Cliff and I," I thought she was the right of life, her. Frost—How's everything? "So she was; but she went out too much." Columbia Jester. "18 writing home)—Dear Dad, send me $500. Money makes the mare go hard." The mailmail Yours received. Enclose $20. That ought to be enough for a jack ass. Nip - I fell last night and struck my head on the piano. Nip-No; luckily I hit the soft pedal. Stanford Chaparrel For a movect the beaver maid was silent, then, coyly slappin her tail on the bank, she whispered: "Then you do for me, for me, after all." — California Pelican. "My love," said the beaver, passion- ous in her voice in my newly built house in the street. EDMUND VANCE COOKE "What is the technical name for sorption?" Every now and then we have to help out our advertisers so here goes: strangulation by his collar. Ash! An Arrow escape—Yale News. out our advertisers so here goes: Ebert (what a name) was savedfrom Engineer—You ken? Ken you read mine? Mutt — I pass! — W·liams Purple Cow Caesar (cutting himself) — D !""""""""""""""""" - Wait, there's a space after "Purple Cow". - Let's check the whole line again. - Mutt — I pass! — W·liams Purple Cow Caesar (cutting himself) — D !""""""""""""""""" - Wait, there is a space after "Purple Cow". - Let's check the whole line again. - Mutt — I pass! — W·liams Purple Cow Caesar (cutting himself) — D !""""""""""""""""" Clapurnia (without) → What ho, m'lord! "Sheet Music." - Princeton Tiger. Grace. "Have you seen that new serial in the "Saturday Evening Post"? Yes, but not oatmeal suits me at right. Psychology Maj—1 can read minds. Ccasar—What hoe? **Hoe how?** Jillette, dama iti Jillette—Chaparral. * Pay.—Certainly. Eng…Why don't you hit me, then?—Chagarwal. COMMUNICATIONS HE LIKED "MAN FROM HOME" The K. U. Dramatic Club and the department of public speaking both deserve congratulations on the way "The Man From Home" was put on. I believe I am voicing the sentiment of a large proportion of those who saw the play when I say that it is the best performance. I say that the University in the last few years. The work of Frank McFarland and Pat Crowell was better than that of some so-called professionals I have seen. One who saw Thursday night's performance will tell you that nematics are on the decline at Kansas. GIVE US FAIR WARNING To Ha Dolly Kengon. As the general catalog of the University is about to be printed and sent to the seniors of the high schools, a little attention to the statement of college could not be out of place. On page 318 of the 1913-14 catalog, the incidental foe for seniors of the three second course was the annual year course in Pharmacy is stated as being ten dollars for residents of the state. When I enrolled as a senior in pharmacy, I received ten dollars. However, I found the authorities paid no attention to the catalog statement (although it was brought to their attention) but charged As the catalog is practically the only way which the high school senior have for courses they want, students in different courses, such statements should be corrected or charges made according- "Stung. ON USING THE LIBRARY To the Daily Kansan: Perhaps I have died and did not know it, or perhaps I have been sleeping; at any rate at the end of two years I find the value from the library. I believe the cause is simply that I could never learn about my life in general locations of the different classes of books, except by floundering around and finding out for myself. I believe I can teach students, especially the first year men, if a complete set of the library regulations and some other information is found in the catalog or student directory. Biblio. FOUL BALL OR STRIKE? he Daily Kansan: A suggestion to the manager of the baseball team: let's have five bases in our Varsity ball games - they have four and one, we must avoid traints of professionalism. I am a follower of baseball and would have liked very much to see the Varsity game, but it was too early. The games were scheduled to be played, out came a story that, due to objections on the part of the Agie management on the team, they had not been given games had to be cancelled. Later, Lowman denied that he had made any such a kick, but the games had been canceled. Now I am wondering. Can someone help me out? HATS OFF! To the Daily Kansan: When we go into another man's house, we never think of leaving on our hats. When we go into a church, our heads are bared; when we pass a lady on the street, we look at her with pay respect, our hats are lifed. Yet, every day, in our own halls, hundreds of us rush through on our way to classes or business trips, and that there is due to this institution certain respect which could be demonstrated so easily by this one little act. I have heard strangers remark at this point of etiquette but what do I say? A. O. H. A MISANTHROPE I wist I wuz a crow's egg, I wist I wuz a bad one. wist! I was a bad one, I wist there we a small boy a-climbing wist there wuz a small boy a-climbin' up the tree; I wist he'd climb and climb an' modly sheht he bad one: I'd burst my shell With horrid smell An' cover him with me G. MAYO. WHAT OTHER COLLEGE EDITORS ARE SAYING TRADITIONS VS. INSTITUTIONS, How often are traditions confused with institutions! The recenta pass a resolution establishing Convocation and Invocation, promptly begins to talk about the new tradition. The student council authorizes the wearing of toques thereby creating a new institution, which is so-called new "tradition" takes hold. There are great differences between traditions and institutions. Traditions are practices that grow up without restraint or regulation; institutionally, they tend to constitute bodies acting in their official capacities. The Michigan Daily. THE INSTRUCTOR WHO FAILED An instructor's profession is teaching. His duty is to help men to learn, to inspire them with interest for his subject, and to aid them to work and pass his course. Undoubtedly he should not smooth away every rough place in his pupil's path, for the overcoming of difficulties and the solving of problems. In general, the game of study as well as of the game of life. Yet the teacher is placed in the classroom as an aid, not as an obstacle. Young instructors frequently assume an antagonistic attitude toward their men. They try to find how much a man does not know, rather than to help him to know more, because it takes them "marks," they take the ground that each man is trying to pass their course with as little work as possible," and that it is their duty to prevent him. Their attitude antagonizes and repels the interest of most of their students. The work of their class is no more satisfactory than would be the work of a team which disliked its coach. We quote from the Alumni Review of December 1999, the following anecdote concerning James H. Canfield, '88 Chancellor of the University of Nebraska. Toward the close of the college year a young tutor of mathematics came into the Chancellor's office and asked whether he was to be reappointed for another year. The Chancellor said, "Well, what do you yourself think of your work? What have you done that you would like to teach?" I swerved, "Mr. Chancellor, I have just held such a stiff examination in my course that I have funkied sixty members of the freshman class." The chancellor looked at him kindly and said, "Young man, suppose I gave you a herd of one hundred cattle to drive them into the field. You came in to tell me that you had driven them so fast, and so hard and had made such good time, that 60 per cent of them died on the way. Do you think that I should want you to drive any more cattle to the Missouri River?" Yes, we did. "Well, I do not think we will let you drive any more freshmen."—The Williams Record. ACQUAINTANCE THROUGH COMPETITION Many a friendship is made in college through the competitions of college activities. One of the best things which contestants carry away from the gridiron, the debate platform, or the dramatic stage, is the friendship and associations of their competitions. The greatest are those where the longest are those which center around occasions when student opposes student in the fight for places on the various teams. The opportunities thus arising may be cited as among the greatest reasons for the existence of so-called college activities. And further, the fact that such opportunities make the appeal to enter them all the more strong and warranted—The Daily Orange, Syracuse University. SPLENDIDLY NULL Plain people, unaided by the supernatural, without overpowering insight, often claim to perceive what they call the "Yale type," over which gushing girls gently rave. Nobody ever describes this precious type; but everybody knows that it wears correct clothing, and doesn't pass passim on its form. It smiles discreetly, and silently; and sometimes it has tremendous dumb energy. Of this type, there are hundreds, with no more variation than the eggs of a hen. It is perfectly good; but is offensive in being utterly inoffensive. It is never wrongly enthusiastic, because it is never enthusiastic. It never has heretical thoughts, because it does not give forth ideas with all the precision of a parrot. And it has nearly the mental power of the original Yale Bull Dog. Physically, this "Yale Type" was once rather aggressive, like the Bull Dog. But now it is not aggressive at all and prefers to stay in the mud; and then uses all its energy trying painfully to conform to itself. It has no aspirations beyond itself, no ambitions beyond the goal of men most typical of it have often acquired positions where sufficient in tellect to purchase or sort tickets is positively required. The simple populace observes that these captains of undergraduate industry, at the top of the type, use their predecessors' brains wherever possible; and the simuli are more likely to conform than the "Yale type" then becomes a dumb show. But it is so powerful that it blights or discourages even healthy originality, where a man has his own idea and opinions. The work in the curriculum does not encourage it. The type must stay prosac and dull; the type must take undergraduation conform to it, they conform to mental mediocrity, which this type glorifies. But the greatest trouble with the "Yale type" is not that it encourages "faultily faultless, icily regular, splendidly null" mentality; but that it is willingly satisfied with itself skims its few pages. It struggles for its little positions and its little fame. It worries itself into unhappiness. It absorbs the froth of knowledge and gains practically no mental power without it they may who conforms to it really thin thatisting the best possible education. By his complacency, and his laziness, every such man is dragging on the few of mind and purpose. And many of this pseudo-Yale-type are criticisms that they should be prayerfully improving or criticising themselves.-The Yale News. THE COLLEGE KIDDER Of the characteristics of the college man of today, the one which is perhaps the most distinctly marked is the ability and habit of "kidding," a practice redeemed to a great extent by the training which the college man has received. He is good as he receives. A man who has spent four years in an American institution of higher education is usually prepared for practical jokes of every known species, and for "kiding"; clever, asinine, subtle or punitive; witty, asinine, subtle or punitive; ruffled by a jest, as a hippopotanus is put to flight with an airgun. The college man is an intellectual silk-worm. About his real self, by a process of years, he has woven a thread of manner, of joke and jest, so long and deep, that it is seldom that he has interacted with within. His heart is anywhere but on his 'sleeve. And few would have it otherwise. But, growing out of such an attitude towards the men with whom he comes daily in contact, the college man has reached an extreme. So long have his daily conversations and chats at the dinner table or in his study been more "kidding matches" that in many cases he has lost his power to talk logically, consistently, upon a topic of any nature more seriously than a game of the Varsity's chances against Penn. And, if perchance he has that power, he is afraid to use it, knowing well that the opening of any serious topic means the receipts of a choice and assorted collection of wit. Picture a group of men in a fraternity or boarding house engaged in talking over a matter of any importance. The conversation is becoming interesting and logical. The men are intellectually on edge. Of a sudden a rustling sound is heard. The house baboon, scenting his opportunity, utter his racial noise and swings nimblely. In the middle of an ineductible seriousness is at an end. The rest of the group, from force of habit join in with that species of comment that can only be described as "dlerer." The subject is forgotten. Undoubtedly this results from one or two men, college simians whose capacity for "cleverness" is greater than whom they come in contact, and who cannot allow an opportunity for the exercise of this faculty go by unheeded. They have a melancholy reward. It may be taken as a joke, it is impossible to look upon them seriously. The humor of the old circus conversation has its touch of pathos. "Why did Jones become a clown?" make the tattest answer. "What happened to the life of the party," answers he bearded woman. Such a situation which tends to toward the discouragement of any serious discussion among undergraduates is no small contributor to that intellectual slovenness which educators declare to be perhaps the paramount problem in American universities. The undergraduate program is ? His textual occupations the Saturday Evening Post always, and some of the monthly magazines. The remainder of his reading course usually retails at $1.08 per volume. No one would ask that the dinner meeting of students should resemble an undertakers' convention. But once in a white a serious thought outside of school, I found myself having little wit could be well exchanged for a bit of real intellect—Cornell Sun. He stood on the bridge at midnight And hindered my sweet repose; For he was a big mosquito And the bridge was the bridge of my nose UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN JAYHAWKER TO PAY OUT First Time Usual Calamity How ler Has Been Absent From Annual Staff Ou. of a dozen annuels which we are printing for this section of the country, the Kannas Jaghawker is the only book that is run in a systematic and business-like way. —UNION BANK NOTE COMPANY, Kannas City, Mo. The Jawhawk editors this year started out wisely by placing the annual on a budget basis. This is the first time to my knowledge that a college annual has adopted the methods of a successful publisher. As a result the managers are enjoying that confidence which accompanies university publications. I see the seen of the advance pages is a criterion the University will enjoy the best book ever turned out at K. U. - PROFESSOR MERLE THOPE Students of the University in genera and of the Senior class in particular are agreeably disappointed this year by not hearing the usual calamity-howl and hard-luck story from the Jayhawker. For the first time since K. U. began getting out real attention the Jayhawker will pay out and that no special assessments or calls for aid from the State Boards are necessary. Notwithstanding the cheerful notes from the exchequer the editors announce that the book will be as good if not better than any; that there will be more engravings than ever before, that the binding will be more elegant and durable, the paper heavier, that there will be more color work and that the book a whole will be right up to the minute as far as college annuals go. PICKED UP BETWEEN CLASSES Phi Gamma Delta will entertain with a dinner dance on Friday evenings. For more information, call 412-735-8096. Phi Alpha Tau will meet at the Phi Psi house April 22 instead of the 15th as announced. Lyie Wise, graduate of the Engineering School of '14, has accepted a government position to teach in the high school in the Philippines. Mr. Wise will leave Saturday for San Francisco, where he will attend the Fair, sailing for Manila on the Siberia April 24th. Mr. Wise has been teaching mechanical drawing at the Haskell Institute part of this year. The Mu Phi Epsilon, musical sorority, hold initiation Monday evening for Beth Dunn, Victoria Jones, Edna Mc Keeley, Lauren Maddox, Nicole Lewellyn and Ruby Whitecroft. Lucile McCormic, sophomore Fine Arts of Lawrence, is seriously ill with pneumonia. The Alpha Chi Sigma, chemical fraternity, announces the pledging of Roland Clark, sophomore Engineer, of St. Joseph, Mo. The Sigma Nu fraternity will give a dancing party Friday evening, April 16, at Ecke's Hall. Much grading and filling is being done on the west end of Hamilton Field this week. Coach Hamilton is getting the grounds in shape for a future baseball ground for the Varaty. By moving home plate back fifteen yards a regulation field bleachers will be constructed. Playing on McCook is hard on the grass and spoils the field for football. Cathrine Lux, of Topeka, is visiting her sister, Alta Lux, senior College, today and tomorrow. About eight girls of the Knuth Club will go to Kansas City Friday, to attend the wedding of Miss Helen Glascock and Mr. Lawrence Robbins. Miss Glascock was a sophomore. She first the first semester this year at K. U. Theta Sigma Phi, honorary journalism sorority, announces the pledging of Blankenship Simons, Martha Tayler, Conrad Viggiano, Virgil Gordon and Ruth Dyche. The Alpha Delta Pi will give their Spring Party Friday night. Kappa Kappa Gamma hold initiation Thursday for the following pledges: Helen Hurst, Kansas City; Adriance Jaulet, Court; Council Gear Smith, Springfield, Mo.; Lydia Smith, Springfield, Ill.; and Lydia Ainworth, Lyons. enson, sophomore College, this week. Miss Kingbury has been staying with her brother in Topeka for some time and is on her way to California. Miss Bernie Kingsbury, of New York City, is visiting Alberta Steph- To get a line on the student council one should visit the 11:30 classes Monday and Wednesday in extension space. Speak softly. Soil may speeches pro and con are given. The blue grass sod taken from the new hockey field, south of Robinson Gymnasium, is being used to cover the dead grass spots on the campus. Alpha Chi Sigma, chemical fra- cturing pledge of Rowland Clark of St. John's Mrs. Eustace Brown and Miss Elizabeth Sprague will entertain Miss Anna Burrows of Columbia University with a tea on Thursday afternoon at 4:30 in the women's corner of Fraser Hall. Mr. Glem Dorsett, teacher of physical culture in a Boston high school, has been visiting at the Wailing home this week. Mr. Dorsett has never visited K. U. before and is pleased with the University. Clara Powell and Agnes Moses, seniors, schools of Fine Arts, will judge rectal examinations at McLouth's audition consists of orations, piano solos, and songs. Louis Parks, of Englewood, who attended the University in '12 and '13, was married to Miss Gladys Wright of Kansas City, Mo. April 6 at Kansas City. Mr. Park is a member of the Sigma Pi Phi Sigma fraternity. Miss Lu Ridenour, of Emporia arrived Wednesday afternoon to attend the Dramatic Club play. She is visiting Alta Lux, senior College. Pearl Smith, freshman Fine Arts and Norma Marshall, freshman College. Save withdrawn from the University of Arizona. Be trained work at the State Normal. Constance Fennell, 13, of Kansas City, came up for the Prom. at half-time. Mrs. Luella B. McGreevy who has been visiting in Great Bend has returned to her house for her daughter, Rikie McGreevy, sophomore College. New Outdoor Regulation Court and Intercollegiate Games Planned K. U. WOMEN PLAY HOCKEY A natural knack for the defensive, and a weak offensive characterized playing of the women in exhibition hockey practice games at the Gymnasium. There is no doubt that women will show enough interest to make advisable the inception of intercollegiate relations with the women of neighboring universities, but before the competition can be successful from the start, women will have to be more dexterity in caging the puck. From the spectators' point of view, too, the aggregation that can open up and show flashes of team work, rather than play tight, is the one that brings the crowd. People do not like to sit through period after period and see the puck battered back and forth over such a small space. The women, are of course, hampered by the smallness of the floor in Robinson Gymnasium. This causes the players to bunch up rather than spread out and cover territory, thus eliminating much skill. They would not have a chance to shine on such a small arena and with so many people on the floor. It is planned to make the new outdoor court as near the regulation size as possible. This means that it will be as near 100 yards long and 55 yards wide at each regula- tion at each end. This will facilitate the task of Doctor Goetz in turning out a probable team of intercollegiate collegue. THEATRE VARSITY TODAY and TOMORROW The World's Famous Musical Salisbury Family Coasting Victim Improves Emery J. McIntire, sophomore College, who was injured in the coating accident is steadily improving. He is able to sit up most of the day, but will probably not leave the Jones hospital until May 1 because of an operation on his right leg. Coosting Victim Improves The ladies auxiliary of W. O. W., who are holding a convention down town, came on the Hill and made quite an impression, especially on the Laws for they deserted their quiz books, even an examination, and went to the windows to give the visitors a "Rock Chalk." Vocal, Instrumental and NoveltyEntertainment Better than all previous engagements with a selected program of Pictures, including CRANE WILBUR in "All Love Excelling" 3 ACTS Admission 20c ENTIRE CHANGE The Reverend Mr. Roy B. Guild and Mrs. Guild of Topeka who will leave this week for New York where Mr. Guild will be associated with the American Missionary Society have both been awarded a place in the Guild has spoken in church several times and Mrs. Guild has addressed the Y. W. C. A. Children 10c Our assortment will fascinate you. Sport Shirts Silk Hose Latest Novelties Foreign and Domestic Sporty Straw Hats Palm Beach Suits Robert E. House 729 Mass. St. George H. Brown, Frew W. Poas, and M. V. Barret, are among those who took the government examinations in an anthropology, Wednesday, April 14. Ten men to distribute new product Saturday, 17th. 20c an hour guaranteed. Call Billy 2500 for an hour enquiries. Call Billy 2500 for Wackerle. Call this evening...Adv. Katherine Tester, a former student in the University from Coffeyville, is visiting at the Alpha Delta Tester came down for the Junior Prom. DeWitt W. Brown, junior Engineer, was called to El Paso, Texas, Friday on important business. He was absent from the University a week. Wanted Ackerman Hat Shop Specialist in Tailored and Semi-Dress Hats Our Special Hats for Spring and Summer at $5 are unusual Values. Very Chic. Unusual Today Popular Tomorrow Individual Always Varsity Building Tango Victrola for dancing With a Victrola and Victor Records you can practice the new dances over and over again. You can have an impromptu dance whenever you wish and dance as long as you want. The Fox Trot, Castle Polka, and all the other new dances, played loud and clear and in perfect time. Come in and hea us demonstrate the different styles of Vigor and Victrola— $10 to $250. Easy terms, if desired. Come in and hear them, and let VICTOR ON MASTER'S VOICE Bell Bros. Music Co. R. D. KRUM, Mgr. Miss Constance Fennell, a former student in the School of Fine Arts, was the guest of Charline Smith Saturday and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs, A. L. Plowman arrived Monday for a visit with their daughter, Ruth, a junior College. Donald Rankin, senior Engineer, was called to Paola this week on account of the death of his mother. Here's the latest way to get out of it. Neal Ireland, freshman College, has procured a statement from Dr. J. A. Naismith saying that his eyes suffer greatly when he has to wear a freshman cap. He declares that he is accompanied by the subject he shows his document of authority, and all is serene. He takes great pains to wear the postage stamp, though, when the sun isn't shining. The April Shower of Bargains Has New Attractions Each Day Smart Tai- lored Suits $15.75 JUNE 1926 Other suits from models that were $22.50 in spandid range of styles, cloths and shades $19.75 These are Suits worth $18.00 to 20.00 and are mostly of Navy and Black. Sizes from 36 to 40 MARSHALL HOUSE DRESSES at 89c - we will show you tomorrow and Saturday a wonderful bargain in House Dresses of Amoskeeg Chambray Gingham in Stripes, Checks; also Percale in light, medium or dark stripes or figures. The best assortment of styles, and sizes, 34 to 46, we have ever shown. A full $1.25 value, on sale Saturday **89c** NEW DRESSES of Sorge and Poplin, for street, home or travel. A SPECIAL DISCOUNT OF 20 % on any of these stylish and practical Dresses. All sizes. NEW SILK DRESSES—Crepe de Chines, and Taffetas. In Belgian Blue, Navy and other popular shades, $13.50 SILK WASITS OF GREPE DE CHINE with Convertible Collar for high or low neck, white, flesh, sand, Belgian, or Navy the Maize $4, $5 $1.25 WASH WAIRTS 98c — A table of pretty wash waists, all new styles first time shown, Voiles, Embroidered Voiles, China Silk, Organsides and Lawns All sizes up to 46. April Bargain Showcase 98c Middy Blouses in Fine White Drill in Mary Pickford, Peg O'My Heart, and Jack Tar Models Wash Skirts, Palm Beach Skirts, $2.00, 3.50 and 5.00 Skirts of Navy蓝 or Black Serge at $2.95 Skirts, Suspender Styles, Shepherds Check or Palin Poplin in several shades at $5.00 and $6.50 White Chinchilla and Shepherd Check Coats at $10, $13.50, $18 Innes. Bulline & Hackman TO- DAY BOWERSOCK Palatial Home of Paramount Pictures TO- DAY Paramount Picture Corporation presents WILFRED LUCAS and BETTY BELLAIRJ in The Spanish Jade Matinee Daily 2:45 All Seats 10c Newhouse Symphony Orch. Kodakers-Films Finished in One Day-Squires'Studio UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN STOP DATES AFTER 5:30 To Save Men's Pocketbooks Nev Ruling is Made by DePauw University There will be no more buggy riding at the University of Depauw nor any social engagements except over the week-ends, according to a new ruling made by the faculty committee on social rules. This rule is even worse for the university at K. U, which have seemed so preposterous on moonlight nights. In accordance with this action of the faculty, men and women students are permitted to be together in the daytime only from 4:30 in the afternoon until dinner time at 5:30; or until 7 o'clock if they care to eat elsewhere than at their regular boarding places. Week-end dates must stop at 10 o'clock. Women who violate these rules may lose all social contact with the subject to suspension or expulsion. No penalty is provided for the mee. Protests from parents who assert that the expenses of the men students are abnormal is said to be the cause of the new rulings. University of Oklahoma; The Council of Deens will give student government a supreme test during the rest of the semester. The faculty has decided to keep out of any questions pertaining to gambling and let the students suppress the nuisance themselves. Greatest? How About Bill Penn? Alumni of the University of Pennsylvania are considering changing the name of the school to Franklin University. The plan is meeting with approval all over the state, the main idea in the change being to honor the name of all greatest of all Pennsylvanians, Benjamin Franklin. Sounds Familiar Here The Higher Criticism Dartmouth: in a hot contest over favorite authors. Kipling was chosen the favorite poet, but Elinor Glynn, author of "three Weeks" ran Shakespeare a close place for first honors in the finals. This. However, Sounds Unfami This, However, Sounds Unarmiliar Midland College: Students who maintain a class room average of ninety, are exempt from finals. This change was made by the faculty last week and met with immediate appraisal and support. The reason for the change—as told to a reporter by one of the professors—is to create some incentive for better class room work and to break students of letting everything go until the last of the semester. Seems to Cover the Ground University of Washington: The State Legislature of Washington has under consideration a bill to do away with all athletic contests between state schools in Washington, or be them and colleges outside the state. Jack Johnson Didn't Get Hit Hard University of Texas: A sophomore has some idea of how Jack Johnson felt when Jess Willard popped him on the floor. He then attended spring arm exercisers attached to the wall of his room, when the moulding loose, hurling the apparatus forward, which struck the owner forwailing. He knocked him across the apartment into a seasole case. He took the count. Football Arena For Greek Drama Princeton: The new stadium, seating 40,000 people, will be used this spring for an open air production of a Greek drama. Granville Barker, the English actor, playwright and manager, will supervision the production. The Wild and Woolly East Purdue: Students were recently reminded of the Nick Carter stories secretly read in the barn in their younger days when a herd of cattle stamped the campus in true westward direction and then the animals were finally quiet after tearing a large gap in the campus fence. Credit for Work on College Paper Colgate: Credit is now given towards a degree for work on the board of the Colgate Madisonissimus. The editor-in-chief, editor are given three hours a week, associate editors two hours credit. Penn State Adopts Honor System Penn State: An honor system very much like the one already in use at Princeton. has been adopted here. Students detected in cribbing will be suspended for one year for the first time. The defense will be dropped from the college. From the Others, No Reply Fordham: When the tennis manager contemplated sending the team on a trip through the south, he asked a couple of some of the southern universities. His friend took advantage of the manager's ignorance of the South and gave him a long list of the girls' colleges. Chaliang was a perfumed note from Goucher College stating that it did not allow its young women to play tennis with young men Hazing Taboo at Johns Hopkins Johns Hopkins sophomores are being congratulated on having managed to enjoy themselves at their recent banquet without a captive Freshman or two to turnish sport for the occasion. The News Letter as the evidence of a growing sentiment for peace and good feeling between the lower classes. Smokers Get no Pay University of Indiana: Because the members of an orchestra smoked cigarettes between dances, thereby breaking a law that barred them from refusing to pay the orchestra for its services at the last Union dance. As a result the musicians have filed suit in Bailey's court against the Union for $18, the amount they claim is due them. University of Virginia: Thirty student boarders have presented a petition to the faculty committee, complaining regarding the quality of fare. The students don't want fancy dishes with frill, but merely eatable meat and We Await With Peculiar Interest Golf Tournament at Columbia University of Missouri: A golf team for the University may become a reality this weekend. The students will teach the schools in the Missouri Valley Conference inviting them to send one or two men here for a conference golf tournament, which will be held April 29, in connection with the Missouri Valley Conference Track Meet soup free from refuse. The special complaint is that the meat reappears in many different forms after it remains uneaten. Have Golf Tournament at Columbia Trying Days For Yale Pikers Yale: There's very little joy in life for the stingy Yale freshmen these days. The cruel athletic authorities have published a list of those men who have failed to contribute to the support of the team. Only 350 only 350 have paid up, or have given satisfactory evidence of their inability to do so. Every Freshman an Athlete Princeset: Freshmen are allowed a wider choice than ever before in the spring schedule of compulsory exercise. The school offers track, baseball, rowing, tennis, football, golf, and soccer have been organized under the auspices of the varsity coaches. This system, in which every student takes some form of exercise, is almost an art. In course of time, it is possible only because of size of Princeset's athletic equipment. Ohio State University: The annual will devote twenty pages to fussier pictures. The department will contain 250 glimpses of "campusy" and the quantity of opportunity for sample picturization of all "mutual admiration societies." Will Have Fusser's Department Southwestern Needs More Money Southwestern: To raise an endowment of half a million dollars by 1918 was the plan adopted by the thirty-third session of the Southwest Kansas Conference at Dodge City last week. The effort to clear the conference college of all indebended and place it upon a university charter, passed by the M. E. Board of Education. Journalists Visit Chicago University of Wisconsin: Thirty students from the courses in journalism and agricultural journalism will visit Barnes-Crosby to establishments April 30. The classes will be accompanied by Prof. W. G. W. H. Wyde, Instructor G. W. Hyde. They expect to visit the Barnes-Crosby engraving plant, several newspaper offices, the Western newspaper union and the Associated Press offices. Wants School of Journalism The University of Iowa is asking the state legislature to establish a school of journalism. Great Alarm at Morning Chapel K. S. A. C: To set off an alarm clock during chapel seems to be the great annual ambition of students here. The band was sent to the above organ and started their work during the singing of the first hymn. The choir that was denied the spring fever victims. Yale: Coach Nicklas forbids his treatment to chew gum, claiming that it causes cancer. Trouble Ahead for Freshmen How 'Bout Star and Navy Plug? Northwestern University: Freshmen are covering their domes in any manner they see fit this spring, but the student council has written to other schools for advice. Green skull caps will probably be adopted in September. Miss Edith *Cubbison*, of Kansas City, Kansas, who was at the University last year, spent the week-end at the Pi Phi house. Hyball Ginger Ale. The best by test, McNish. Phone 192—Adv. Going to put in put away your face to give your face a make-up at Wil- son's Drug Store--Adv. Consuelo Krugg, freshman College, who has been out of school for a number of days on account of tonsilitis, is attending classes. J. C. Houck's BARBER SHOP The Students' Shop REYNOLDS BROS. How's This for Your Sunday Dinner? Vanilla, Strawberry, Chocolate, Caramel Nut Brown Bread, Peach, Cream Orange Ice There's "Goodness" in the Goods Bell 645. Home 358. Who? When? Where? Every snap shop that is worth taking is worth a date and title. Every picture will be more interesting if it bears on its margin an answer to the question: WHO? WHERE? WHEN? You can make such a record easily with the Autographic Kodak A full line of EVANSDRUGCO. Yes! We KODAKS and Kodak supplies. SUCCESSORS TO RAYMOND'S do Kodak finishing. 819 Mass. St. WHEN men who have been paying as high as $25 for their suits come to us each season for those we are selling at $15, it proves that we give wonderlful values at that price. Pure Wool, Hand Tailored and Union Made. One Price Only $15.00 with no end of the season sales makes possible a saving of from $5.00 to $7.50 on each suit we sell. Comparison in style, fit, tailoring and material with suits selling elsewhere at $20 or $22.50 will prove this to your satisfaction. and That Cash You are invited to look, as it is a pleasure to show these garments. 829 Mass. St. M. J. Skofstad COPYRIGHT BY ED. Y PRICE & CO. Who's your Teacher? The Little Schoolmaster Says: —"not what it costs, but what it's worth" Greater Clothes Service Means Lower Cost Mere ownership cannot compare with continued usefullness, and when you have your new Spring clothes made expressly for you by Ed.V. Price & Co. you'll get that satisfying service, fit and style which spell economy. See our new fashions and woolens and leave your measureToday! COPYRIGHT BY SAMUEL M. CROCKETT Bell Phone 505 S. G. Clarke 707 Mass. St. I I I University Vaudeville in the Robinson Gymnasium Tuesday, April 20, at 8:15 GENERAL ADMISSION 25 CENTS RESERVED SEATS 35 CENTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN K. U. VAUDEVILLE NEXT Real Stage Erected in Gym; Fund Will Furnish Fine Home For Girls Shall the K. U. Vaudeville profit go into the establishment of a girls' club? This is a new suggestion, offered so that the money can be put to immediate use at the beginning of the coming year. Similar stunts in the past have added to the dormitory fund, but that is still rather visionary. The rooming house plan is in harmony with the student loan fee, forment, for the students who live there and pay only their share of the cost of upkeep. As large a house as possible will be rented, and the rooms sub-let at cost. toob, details of the plan will be determined when the profits from the Vaudeville are known. Indications are that this will be a decided success, and the preparations are elaborate. A large platform is under construction at one end of the big Gymnasium floor, and all the wings, scenes draw on curtains, essential to the stage are now being built. The entire entertainment is being supervised by the department of physical education. The University orchestra will furnish music during the evening. Along Massachusetts The following odds and ends of store news picked up by reporters are chosen entirely for their interest to readers of the Daily Kannum. No space in this column can be purchased by advertisers. "Every year about this time there is special activity in athletic supplies, but this year it has been tremendous especially in golf accessories," Allie Carroll said this morning. "I don't know what has caused the demand. The opening of the Country Club should have some effect upon it, but the students are taking an unprecedented interest in games this year." Fornery the shoe-repaireer has a fluid called "Dry-foot" which will make shoes water-proof. It does not damage shoes, nor does it an offensive W. Winney of Winey & Underwood expresses this opinion on advertising; "insufficient and inefficient advertising is a wasteful expense; sufficient and efficient advertising is an economical investment." The cost of committing suicide has gone up. W.H. Varnum at the Round Corner Drug Store says that carbolic acid has advanced in price over seven hundred per cent. Thomas Edison is, at the present time making experiments to find a process by which the acid can be made in this country. A small plant is under construction at the present time, but the industry will probably be given up as soon as the war is over. Have you ever had the feeling that you could be heard for a biel because of noisy shoes? Fischer' show a means of relief by an economial rubber heel. This heel is made of the best flexible rubber and has a socket in the center. A steel plate is put in the center of the hee of your shoes, so that by being into which plate and the sock it enters with the rubber heel it adjustable and can be changed fro one heel to the other when one edge is worn down, thereby keeping th heel square. As an accommodation to motorists Mr. Fein has a compressed air system to force air into automobile, motorcycle and bicycle tires. The air is forced through a pipe under the walk. An eight foot rubber is used in this pipe and when not in use is hung up in a box near the curb. An indicator in the window shows the amount of pressure in the pipe. "The newspaper reports, which have been played up so prominently during the past few weeks, on the probability of Americans having to wear white clothes if the present continues, are afraid, afraid," said C. Shaler, the druggist, this morning. "I received notice of an advance in price on all brands of black dye, this morning, and it is probable that colors will stay that way. Even if there is soon prices will continue high and I would advise that people who need dyes of any kind buy them at once." Educate Yourself to the PUPPIES HAVE THEIR DAY Water Dogs to Furnish Means For Test of Circulation System Best Material and Work- manship in Shoe Repairing 54 Years Experience Speaks for itself FORNEY'S SHOE SHOP Two Doors North of the Varsity It seems as if puppies must ever serve the demands of science. This time it is the department of zoology which is using them to illustrate the circulatory system though the species is not like the usual puppies that are entertained free of charge in the medic laboratory. Amphibia, they term the new shipment just received from Venice, Ohio, and as the name suggests they like water. For these are the water puppies which many summers ago may have gathered the bait off your hook with one of their short fat, slimy legs. The water puppies have not made many friends since their arrival for the combination of the eel, the lizard, and the frog has produced nothing pleasant either in shape or odor. Going to put away your furs? Moth Balls and Crystals at Wilson's Drug Store—Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. RADNOR RADNOR THE NEW ARROW COLLAR Glad to Meat You Fine Meats for Picnics. When you think of meat think of our number 14. Hess Bros. Meat Market Both Phones 14. 941 Mass. St. While attempting a slide to third base in a practice game Saturday afternoon, Walter Kauer, sophomore in the School of Engineering, was struck on the nose by a ball thrown by the player being positioned by McConnell proved that there was a bone broken. Kauer was unable to attend classes this week. tom Gumbier, Frank H. McFarlane, Harold B. Crowell, Marion C. Reid, Bland B. Hutchings, John H. Dykes W. Johnson and Guy L. Waldo. The Chi Omega sorority gave their annual Founder's Day banquet Saturday night at the house. The freshmen entertained the upperclassmen with a fairce after the banquet. Mrs. Ester Degen Howden, *Clara Morton*, Helen Degen, and Pearl Emley were back for the event. Calvin Lambert, who attended the University last semester and who is now employed on the Emporia Giraffes, will play in Delta Theta house his week-end. Phi Alpha Tau held initiation Wednesday night for Otto H. Dittmer, AlM Miss Olive Starns, '13, of Fairmount, Kansas, will visit at the Wood ruff Saturday and Sunday. Notice, Fraternities I have for lease some of the nicest rooms in town, with light, heat, hot and cold water—both furnished and unfurnished. If interested, call J.M.NEVILLE Notice. Fraternities! Let "Egg" shine those Shoes for that Date Houck's Barber Shop Stubbs Bldg., Opposite Court House-Phone, Bell 384 Commencement Speakers For High Schools Package Libraries Lantern Slides Class Plays Address University of Kansas University Extension Division Lawrence The most enjoyable outing when you have a good lunch. Picnic The Oread Cafe can fix up the very best. We clean and relock all kinds of hats. Ladies and Gents Panamas Especially. 737 Mass. St. ALL SHINES, 5c... Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE 12 W. Ninth Lawrence Pautatorium Phones 506 Ladies and Gents Imperial Shining Parlor and Hat Works Some of the many good things we have: Chicken Loaf, Veal Loaf, Potted Meats, Vienna Sausage, Potted Tuna, Alaska Red Salmon, Van Camp's Pork and Beans, Sweet or Sour Pickles in 10c bottles, Green, Stuffed or Ripe Olives in 10c bottles, delicious Peanut Butter Sandwiches in original packages, fresh Potato Chips, imported Sardines, Mustard Pickles, Pickled Onions, a large line of 10c packages of assorted Cakes and Cookies. 818 Mass. St We Also Make Any Kinds of Sandwiches 10e 25c and 50c 1241 Oread Remember the Place 592 Bell Phone The Oread Cafe Home Phone 60 HIAWATHA HOTEL (European Regular Meals and Short Order Rooms 50c and 75c THE FLOWER SHOP Those party flowers are always appreciated when they come from and we are always pleased to fill your orders $ ^{25} \% $ Mass. Phones 621 Professional Cards Want Ads J, F. BROCK, Optometrist, and Spouse J. L. HARRIS, Optometrist, 655 Mass. St., Bell Phone 655. Washington, DC. WANTED—To buy a second hand canoe in good condition. Address Daily Kansan, state price. HARRY YEDING, M. D Eye, ear, noses, and hands. Glasses fitted. Office, F. A. U. Bleg. Phones, Bell 513. Home 512. J. R. BICHELT, M. D. D. O. 822 BBCETT. Both phones, offices and residence C. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diseases of the stomach, surgery and gynecology Suite 1, F. A. U. Bldg. Residence 1261 Ohio St. Both phones. 25. DR. H, L CHAMBERS Office over Squires studio, Both phones. FOR RENT—A modern house of twelve rooms, in a very desirable location. Bell phone 1823. DR. PETER D. FAULS, Osteopathe, Office and residence. 7½ East 7th St. General practice. Both phones 541 hours to 9:30, 2 to 6, and 7 to 8 yrs. DI. N. HAYES, 292 Mass. St. Geneva, practice. Also treats the eye and Blid surgery. in or between Fraser and Administration Building. Finder keep dollar and return bag to Maude Coverdale, 1245 La. phone B. 1244. Classified LOST—Mesh bag containing dollar G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, ear and i.n. infection Guaranteed. Dick Blige FANK E. BANK, Inc., and abstraction of Title. Room 2. F. A. U. Building ED. W. PAISONS, Engraver, Watch jewelry. Belle Phone 710-211. 717 Mass. PHONE KENNEDY PLUMBING CO. for gar. goods & gear Mazda imps. 108- 796-532-4200 Barber Shops Jewelers FIDE INSURANCE LOANS, and Bank ad valuing. Belt 120. Home 2502. Insurance Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK, 012 Mean PROTSCH "The Tailor" SPRING SUITING Box Stationery All Grades—All Prices McColloch's DrugStore BURT WADHAM'S "College Inn Barber Shop" LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. WATKINS' NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depository. Lawrence, Kansas Large and best equipped business college Kansas Lawyers Law TYPE abbreviation by machinist Write for sample of Stenotype notsand a catalog Full Line of Spring Suitings STUDENT HEADQUARTERS FRANK KOCH *STUDENTS' SHOE SHOP* R. O. BURGERT, Prop 1107 Mass, St. tisfaction Guaranteed A. G. ALRICH 744 Mass. Street. THESIS BINDING Engraved, and Printed Cards. Sheaffer's Self-filling Fountain Pens. At Merge Street. Real Summer Recreation for the High School Teacher Is no longer thought to mean a back-woods retreat haunted by the sense of falling behind the ever-moving educational procession. It means not only a physical change of scene but also a meeting with new ideas, acquaintance with new personalities, healthy growth of mind and renewal of power. The true recreation combines pleasure with preparation for professional advancement. Upon these lines is built the Summer Session of the University of Kansas For some, this session affords the only opportunity to prepare to meet certificate requirements for next year under the law passed by the recent legislature. legislature. For all, it affords opportunity to pursue work in any of 29 departments and 130 courses under the most competent instruction by professors in the University faculty and six well-known teachers from other institutions. The Extra Class-room Activities will be an important feature of the Session. will be an important feature of the Session. The COBURN PLAYERS will again present their delightful out-of-door entertainments. SPECIAL LECTURES for the benefit of teachers will be given by Dr. Edward F. Buchner of John Hopkins: ATHLETICS and PLAYGROUND ACTIVITIES will be discussed in lectures by Dr. Henry S. Curtis, organizer of the American Playgrounds Association. AGRICULTURE and ALLIED INDUSTRIEES will furnish the AGRICULTURE and ALLIED INDUSTRIEES will furnish the subjects for several extension lectures. Special Announcement is Made of Additional Courses in Spanish provided for by appropriation from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. A Course (Conditional) on the History of South American Countries, Courses in Physical Education preparatory for the handling of physical education and playground work in high schools. A New Course in Bacteriology and two courses in Anatomy First Term, June 10 to July 21; Second Term, July 22 to August 11. For Catalog or Further Information write to the Dean of the Summer Session University of Kansas Lawrence UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PREP ATHLETES TO K. U Two Hundred Valiant Cinder Artist Will Take Part in Ppproach- ing Meet TRACK INTEREST INCREASES Showing of Last Year's Valley Champs Causes Great Enthusiasm Among School Speeders Two hundred athletes from the public high schools of Kansas are expected to compete in the twelfth annual interscholastic meet on McCook Field, Saturday, May 1, according to an announcement by Manager O. Hamilton today. Last year the entrants in the 14 events totaled 192. The work of the University of Kansas in winning every dual competition in the valley last spring and the prospective trip of the K. U. distance man to the classic Penn Relays has aroused a new interest in track and several new records are looked for, if the weather favors keen competition. Last year's meet was held on a soft, wet oval. TELL OF PREP TRAINING Jayhawkier Distance Men Products o Nature's Development Edwards Distanced Br'er Rabbit Few of the crack Kansas distance runners dreamed of achieving fame on the cinder path before registering at the University. Following are their own stories of how it came about: Herriott a Broncho Buster THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS INTERSCHOLASTIC RECORDS J. Homer Hermiott has spent the most of his life on a cattle ranch riding bronches and feeding stock yet finding time to attend school and Event Record Holder School Date Mark 50 yard Dash Hardy Catholic H. S. 1912 5 4-5 sec. 100 Yard Dash Butler Hutchinson 1912 10 1-5 sec. 220 Yard Dash Stahl Lawrence H. S. 1907 23 3-5 sec. 440 Yard Dash Palmer Lawrence H. S. 1912 53 1-5 sec. 880 Yard Run Palmer Lawrence H. S. 1912 2 min. 2-3-5 sec. One Mile Run Cooley Kansas City, Ks. H.S. 1906 4 min. 41 sec. 120 Yard Hurdles Johnson Lawrence H. S. 1905 16 4-5 sec. 220 Yard Hurdles Martin Lawrence H. S. 1902 27 2-5 sec. High Jump French Pittsburgh H. S. 1908 5 ft. 9 in. Broad Jump Brooker Lawrence H. S. 1912 21 ft. 2 1/2 in. Pole Vault Patterson Hutchinson 1912 10 ft. 10 1/2 in. 12 pound Shot Hartwig Humboldt 1912 42 ft. 8 in. 12 pound hammer Bryson Overbrook 1909 148 ft. 11 in. Discus Willur Lawrence 1913 111 ft. The following rules govern the competitors: Captain Ray Edwards was born near Junction City 24 years ago. When he reached the age of 5, he and his brother walked two miles to school. He played on the Dickinson County high school football and basketball teams and never once thought to track man until he enrolled in K. U. The same general plans of dividing the schools into three classes, successfully applied last year, will be carried out again. Schools with an enrollment of more than one hundred in class A; more than one hundred and less than two hundred fifty, class B; and those with less than one hundred, class C. This insures the spectators of three distinct track competitions and equalizer conditions among the actual contestants. It also makes a better showing in the meet. Capt. Edwards worked in the harvest fields of South Dakota last summer where he found it difficult to make the fellows believe he was a star runner until one day he ran down a half-grown jack-rabbit in the stubble field. Now they all agree with K. U, that he is "some racer." Just before the game, Manager Hamilton negotiated for the purchase of a ticket issuing register. The new machine works automatically and Hamilton can now rest easier while the game progresses. The machine came from the National Cash Register Company. The feature of the 1914 competition was the work of Sol Butler, the Hutchinson negro, who scored enough points himself to "bring home the bacon" for the "salt city" institution. Butler still holds the record for the hundred, having completed the century in 10-1 at the 1912 meet. He will not have the best win yet, preferred at an Illinois preparatory school. Butler recently tied the world's record for the sixty yard indoor distance. Third: No one is eligible who is not doing basking work in at least one hour a day. William J. Weber, junior Law, has been elected captain of the freshman baseball team. Weber attended Cooper College last year and gained his training at first base on the college baseball team. He has been successful in coping the initial sock on our own freshman team. Second: No one is eligible who has not been in school continuously since the Christmas holidays of the current year. Fourth: No one is eligible who would more than 20 years old his last birth date. First: These games are open only to athletes in good amateur standing under the rules of the A. A. U. (This rule excludes all men who have played for money in any sport or have competed for a cash prize.) Fifth: No one is eligible who has competed in high school athletics for 10 years or more. Sixth: No post graduates, persons receiving pay for instruction in any department of the school, or special work doing advanced work are eligible. Homer Herriott, the crack long distance runner of the relay squad, is also an ardent tennis devotee. After the tryouts Tuesday, the lanky miler played a couple of stiff matches. Herriott is set on going to the Penn Relays, as he has never been east of Missouri. reach the sophomore class in K. U., at the age of 19. He was born near Lawrence but soon afterwards moved with his father to a ranch near Engleh. About nine years ago they went to garden City which he now calls home. "Junk" as he is commonly known on the cinder path was discovered by last year's track coach, A. St. L. Mose, who saw him wandering about the campus and thought he would make a crack hardler but soon uncovered his wonderful ability as a long distance runner. Rodkey, King o Freshmen Fred S. Rodkey is the youngest man on the team, having passed the 19 year mark but a short time ago. He won his "K" while a freshman by lowering the half mile record for the University. He was a member of the irving high school team for three seasons before the cross country team last fall after winning the Missouri Valley long distance title. The neighbors between his father's farm and the school house two miles away say that for years Fred could be seen with dinner pail in his hand scampering away to school like a frightened rabbit. Archie Sprinted to School Bryce V. Grady began his school life by making a journey of two miles twice a day to a country school. He uphold the honor of the Reno County high school in track by running the quarter and half. He won his K. Archie surely did not make a very promising appearance when he first came out for track at K. U. He looked as if the first Kansas breeze that came along would topple him over. "What can you do?" asked Coach Mosse. "Don't know," he replied. Coach sent him off on a mile up the hill, and then the way he developed muscle, wind and speed soon won him a place on the K. U. track team. Grady is 22 years old. Fred Poos, the alternate, started student activities as a debater. He had no high school experience as a runner, but once represented the Atchison County high school in a state oratorical contest. Poos was born at Potter, 22 years ago, and spent the first few years of college there. In 1996 track emblem while a sophomore at the University, running the two mile. Poos Got His Wind in Debate 24 TEAMS CROSS BATS Imogene Murdock, senior College, her home in Kansas City, Mo. WILL DISTRIBUTE BASE BALLS Hash House League Will Put on Twelve Hot Contests Tomorrow Orders For Official Horseshides Will Be Sent Out By Mail Eat Your Meals at TOMORROW'S GAMES Restaurant Willis vs. K. K., Hw., 10:30 o'clock Martin vs. Co-op, N1, 4 o'clock Urlich vs. Neal, N2, 4 o'clock Hayes vs. 1038 Tenn., Hw., 2 8:30 o'clock. Midway vs. Dunakin Co-op, He 2 o'clock. Dad's dvs. Daniels, He, 10; Custer vs. M, Y, M. He, 4 'o'clock* Stevenson vs. Lee's, N2., 2 'o'clock 1328 Ohio vs. Franklin, Hw., 8:30 o'clock* 715 Mass St Hope vs. College Campus, He, 8:30 o'clock. Midnight vs. Durbin, Co on Los Amigos vs. Track Training, N1, 2 o'clock. Confectionerv The lack of ground facilities was the chief question discussed by members of the Hash House League at their meeting in the Daily Kansan office last night. The diamonds north of McCook are not level, and a full schedule of ten or twelve games can be played on the two Hammond Fields in one day. We have been compelled to play on hastily constructed钻石 on the golf links, wherever any level ground could be found. Negotiations have been opened with the owners of Woodland, and the diamond there will probably be leased for each Saturday after tomorrow. The ground will be available from show, and consequently will not be available for Hash House teams. Moody vs. Oread, Hw., 4 o'clock *Corrected change from official schedule. The method of ball distribution presented by the Commission was adopted. Each team will be provided with three orders for a ball, dated for the various week-ends. Thus each team will be expected to get a ball for half or one-third of the orders specified on its order. These orders will be distributed by mail today. Interpretation was given to the rule that a Varsity player must play an outfield position as follows; anyone who is on the Varsity squad shall be considered a Varsity player. An additional rule was passed that no player can be a member of two teams at the same time. He, 2 o'clock. Los Apitos vs. Track Train No withdrawals have been reported, in spite of the fact that several teams were defeated by large scores last week. Two teams are on the waiting list, and any club wishing to withdraw is urged to notify the president of the Commission at once. Additional names and corrections Hope Club; Jones, Cooke, Tucker, Chandler, Arnold, Baker, Smith, Weidlein, Hogapple, Weible, Gearhart, Henson. Dad's Club: Larimore, captain, Schmitter, Osborne, Sherman, Wilson, Long, Zeigler, Fitzgerald, Weber, Christ, MacGregor, Eaton, Crowley. Additional names and corrections for the official register are: Willis; Carter, Travis, Groft, Frank, Green, Campbell, Allen, Smee, Bond, Covey, Youse, Douglas, Williams, Webster. Stevenson : withdrawn, Scalapino; new man, Bixby. With Gene Cook and Ray Deaver as the battery for this season, the Custer Club intends to place chairs in the outfield for the benefit of the fielders. In addition to these players there is a roster of five players who won a letter at Washburn, and manager Clarence Hardin, who claims no distinction other than a batting record of less than .500. Other notable players in the lineup are: Carl Luke, Tommy Shreve, Fred Cooper, Timothy Shreve, Fred Cooper, Jessie Kabler, and Thomas Benton. Dunakin Has Hopes When Outfielders Rest "We've played one game with the College Campus team and beat 'em 10 to 6," said Gordon Street, captain of Dunakin Club. The line-up is Street, Zinc, O. Darby, Shelley, DaMetz, Spencer, Cheney, Johnson, Hilton and Smith. "Our battery is nothing to speak of but our short-sort, Bob arber S stewart's shop 838 Mass. Proprietors Anderson's Old Stand JOHNSON & TUTTLE Proprietors Short Orders Cigars "So far we haven't any broken fingers, black eyes, or loose teeth, but we have a plenty of sore arms," says Street. "We practice every afterhand and for the chance for the championship shoes fair—but one never can tell." John Johnson, is a second Hans Warner. Blondy Has Hard Luck At the grand opening of the Hash House League Saturday morning, the Oread Club met defeat at the hands of the Los Amigos team, 16 to 7. "Blondy Jones," captain, got his finger broken during the second inning, and the scheduled diamond was not available. "Blondy" succeeded in landing a home run before he was disabled, however. Two men were on bases and matters were at a high state of excitement when Sorenson, of the clubhouse, hooked his chin on a clothes-line. He was not hurt much but received a good jarrying up. "Brick" says that the defeat was due to non-support of the fair boards. College Campus Isn't Disheartened The College Campus nine likewise lost its first game playing with the team from Hope Club on Saturday morning. The members of the team are: M. Ruble, Afford, Travis, R. Brule, Bressen, Fletcher, Schmutz, Hemphill, Miller, Filley, Dolecik, Hartley. "Tot" Tarrant Is a Juggler The Urlrich Club defeated the Coop 5 to 2 Saturday. The victory was due to the brilliant pitching of Baker. (Not the Home-Run Baker of Philadelphia, but Quin Baker). Even Jo D. Berwick, the Kansas cheerleader, could not be classed with him. Charley Stiller, a pitcher, got before the spotlight with the one home run by a batter. It was himself a juggler by catching a fly ball after it was interrupted by the third baseman. The club holds no regular practice, but tots the ball back and forth across the parking before the admiring girls on the porch. "Booze" is Optimistic "We have some ball team," said Ross Bausenbark, of the Los Amigos Club. "Our chances for the champions are the present time seem pretty good." "Saturday we played the Oread Cafe team and took the long end of a 17 to 6 score. Our two pitchers, Todd Schoenberg and Jamie league form, and will do much toward winning our game with the Track Training team Saturday." This is Applied Mathematics Composed of six Engineers and three College men, the Neal Club is endeavoring to apply its mathematics to baseball, and instill some knowledge of geometric curves into the arm of pitcher Crowley. The first problem with the Marvin Club was difficult to solve. After a week's application to hyperboloids and tangents they expect to wreck their vengeance on the Ulrich Club Saturday. The team lost one of its best supports in Ralph Crow, of Bennington, who was called home Monday for the first semester by the illness of his father. The following is the probable lineup for the game Saturday: pitcher, Crowley, catcher, L Thiele, ib. Melia, 2b. Swatek, 2b. Blessner, ss. Steinhauer, cf., Wieters, rf. Neal; If, Yeumk, (mgr.). DeLongy's shift to the backstopping department temporarily cut the fight for the third sack guardianship down to King and Russell. The former had been the keystone station when the skipper is on the receiving end of the battery. C. Sproull, who will run one of the half mile laps for the two mile relay team at Des Moines, is also an embryonic journalist. Sproull will cover the Drake Relay Carnival for the Kansan. Lloyd Bishop, the former K. U. heaver, failed to get on with the Portland Beavers in the Pacific Coast according to reports from the Coast. SPALDING'S GENEVA Racket $1.50 We Feature the One for Women It Can't be Beat CARROLL'S Our Gym Shoes are best sizes for women Phone 608 709 Mass. St. FISCHER'S SHOES ARE GOOD SHOES Oxford Better Oxfords Just a little better in shape, a little finer in finish, a BIG difference in quality of leather used, and you have a word picture of this new Oxford, for men. We tell the manufacturer who makes this Oxford for us, to put in every penny's worth of value they can. They have done so. May we show you this special Oxford? $5.00 pr. Otto Fischer --for Summer Wear. Not Too Early to think of Graduation Gifts of Quality from Ye Quality Shop of Gustafson The College Jeweler Special attention to mail orders. Make a noise like an order. GRUEN Veri Thin Watch Arrow Shirts— Here you will find Silk Shirts, in white and in fancy stripes and satin stripes and all the new patterns— $3 up The largest assortment in Madras, Percale, Crepe, Soisette, in either French cuff or starched cuff shirts, ever displayed in the city at **$1.50** Johnson & Carl CITY Arrow Shirts at this store only, in this city. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII NUMBER 133 NO COLLEGE HOLIDAY; ENGINEERS GET TWO Faculty Objects to Giving Vacation; but Chancellor is For it "FOR GOOD OF SCHOOL." JONES Largest Group in University Need Celebration to Create Unity and Bring Students Together Ogden Jones, hasn't given up hope of having a College day even though the University Senate voted down the proposition once. The College is asking for less than the other schools. It only asks to have classes dismissed from 9:30 o'clock in the morning after school and gives a whole day. In fact, most of the Engineers get two holidays a year for each of the chief groups, chemicals, electricals, and mechanicals, has a special holiday and the whole group general holiday Friday of this week. Have Worked Long for it Have Worked Long for it College students have been working for several years to get a holiday but the University Senate voted it down declaring that too many holidays are being given to students. Chancellor Frank Strong favors giving the College its holiday as long as the other schools of the University get theirs. Ogden Jones has asked that the faculty reconsider its action and is hoping that it will grant part of a day during which the College students can hold a celebration. "Make College Real School" NEW PLACE FOR MEMORIAL Chairman Whitten Seeks Location Which Will Meet With Approval "College Day would be something more than a mere vacation," Jones says. "We are the largest school in the University and are the most scattered. We have our classes in several buildings and have no way of coming together as do students of the School of Law and School of Engineering. If we could have a big celebration, we would become better acquainted and more spirit would climb and College would be more than a technical division of the University work. It would be a real school." Not to be discouraged by the cold water which the Rules and Grounds committee threw upon the first senior class memorial plan, Chairman Willis Whiten is at work drawing up a new design, which will be submitted to the seniors at a general meeting the first of next week. Chairman Whiten still adheres to the bulletin board idea and now plans to ask the Grounds committee to allow the seniors to erect their memorial to the rear of the Adams campus box near the approach to the campus. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, MONDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 19, 1915. The same general idea as to the structure of the board still remains. The greater part of it will be open to the general campus, but a smaller indented section will be set aside for the faculty alone. GIVES BIRDS TO MUSEUM Mrs. H. C. Smith Donates Mounted Collection Numbering Sixty-five Mrs. H. C. Smith, a resident of Lawrence, has given to Dyche Museum a collection of sixty-five mounted birds, all but two of which are native to Douglas county. They will be put in a specially built glass case, and kept separate from other exhibits. The collection was made more than 30 years ago, and has been packed away since. Some of the birds, common then, are quite rare now. A piloted woodpecker is now extinct in Douglas county, and probably in Kansas, except in the extreme southeastern corner. The collection includes two old quail species of young, with the eggs which they were hatched. These will be placed in a special group. The mounting was done by Mrs. Smith herself years ago, without any particular knowledge of taxidermy, the animals are remarkably well preserved. Dr. Fraser to Talk Peace Dr. Leon Fraser, professor of political science at Columbia University, will discuss the peace problem at the Pi Upson house tonight at 7 o'clock. The meeting will be under the auspices of the International Committee and will start on time as Dr. Fraser must leave on the 8:40 o'clock train. The Mott campaign committee will meet one week from tonight at 9 HOPKINS PRAISES MISS GATLIN'S WORK K. U. Graduate on New York Sun Dana Gatlin, K. U., '05, of Paola, is now employed in the literary department of the New York Sun. In speaking to the university, M. Hopkinson of the department of English said: Miss Gatlin has had the pleasurable experience of succeeding in what she wanted to do. "I didn't know what to write," literary writer and she stuck to it." Miss Gattlin's interviews and short stories written for the Sun have been freely published by the Century, McClure's and many women's magazines. McClure's ran a series of her articles on Burst as well as her discussions on "Automobiles" has been copied in the Kansas City Star several times. "Miss Gatin had a instinctive me ey touch in her work in my course," remarked Prof. R. D. O' Leary. "Her papers were different from those of other members of the class." After four years' work at the University of Kansas Miss Gatlin went to Columbia University and here her English professors urged her to take up writing. After graduation she took up a newspaper job. Every editor expressed kindly interest in her, but sent her on to the next one. Finally, she called on Chester Lord, managing editor of the New York Sun. "And why do you want to write?" queried Mr. Lord. She told him she did not have the least idea. "But why do you want to write for the Sun?" What attracts you? "Have you ever seen a movie that makes you happy?" never see a copy of the Sun." Half an hour later she had her first assignment. HEALTH OFFICERS COME TO MT. OREAD TO STUDY Special Problems of Public Sanitation to be Investigated at K. U. The fifth annual session of the Kansas health officers opened this morning when the members registered in the basement of Dyche Museum. It will continue in session here and at Rosedale School for the convenience of physicians who wish to take advantage of it. The first week of the course will be given at Lawrence and will consist of the post graduate work in medical science. The second week of the course will be given at the hospital at Rosedale; the forenoon to the hospital and the afternoons to lectures on the public health service. Three of the most noted sanitarians in the United States have been secured for giving the public health course: Dr. Mark J. White, surgeon Dr. John S. Fulton, secretary of the Maryland State board of health, and professor of preventative medicine at the Johns Hopkins University, and Dr. A. J. Chesley, epidermologist for the University and assistant professor of preventative medicine in the School of Medicine of the University of Minnesota. Boost Estes Park Conference An Estes Park meeting is being planned by the University Y. M. C. A. for next Sunday afternoon. Pictures of last year's Rocky Mountain Conference will be shown, and talks made by some of the K. U. men who attended the conference. Twenty-five men represented the University at Estes Park last year, and a larger delegation is expected this year. Prof. Charles A. Shull, of the department of botany, will preside over the chapel this week. His general theme will be "Science and Religion in Botany," which has been planned ahead on account of the absence of Dean C. S. Skilton. At Morning Prayers Thursday: "Science and Immortality" Prelude, "At Evening," Buck, Anthem, Row Down, Thine Ear, Bow Down, Finale of First Sonata. Mendelsohn. Tuesday: "Scientific Spirit and Religion." Prelude, "Spring Song," by Meredith Hoffen. Anthem, "Jubilate in the Matter," Postlude, "Chorus" by Gulmant. Friday: "The Nature of God." Prelude, "Adagio," Volekmar-Jen- cheng. Heard the Voice of Jesu- fiancé. Gilicharn, Posthale, "Toocata" by Dubois. Wednesday, "Science and Faith." Prelude, "Prayer," Lemaigre. Anthem, "The Lord Gave the Word" Truette, Postlude, "March," by John W. Brown Every Member of Organization Played Saturday—Work Begin 8:30 and Ended at 6 SECOND ROUND OF HASH HOUSE LEAGUE IS OVER SEVEN DIAMONDS LAID OUT Two Contests on Diamonds and Five on Golf Links Going Twenty-four teams from the Hash House League played their scheduled games Saturday, as many as seven contests going on at the same time. The exhibitions started at 8 o'clock in the morning and it was almost supper time before the termination of the ethinal battle. - By playing two contests on the opposite ends of Hamilton at the same time and utilizing everything available, you can create an area in the immediate vicinity of McCook, seven diamonds have been laid out. Some, however, are very rough and an unsatisfactory but it is next week's games begin. Probably the slowest games were those taking place on the diamond laid out on the green to the east of McCook where our team is positioned in ditch and numerous voluntary pigtails facilitated their problem of supply and demand. Hope 11; College Campus 4. Battery: Hope, Weidlein and Bost. Scores of the Games Midway 8; Dunakin 11. Batteries; Midway, Webster and Rinker; Dunakin, Zink and Street. Paul of the Midways hit a home run. Los Amigos 4; Track Training 12 Batteries: Los Amigos, Jones, McEheney, and Henry; Track Training; Niles and James. Stevenson 20; Lee's .. Battery; Stevenson, Grady and Robinson. Oread 7; Moody 6. Custer 6; Y. M. 2; Batteries: Custer, Dean and Cook; Y. M., Elm Co-op, 5; Martin 14. Batteries; Co-op, Berwick and McLoughlin; Martin, Foltz and Thompson. Hayes 1; 1088 Tenn. 11. Battery; Hayes, Hayes and Embry. Wills 15; K, K. K; Batteries: Willis, Travis and Carter; K, K., D Ritter and Wocknitz; home runs by Woosey, Wocknitz, and C. Rictor of Danielis 11; Dad's 3. Batteries: Olson and Schmutter; Dad's Olson and Schmutter. The Co-Op Club, composed of Jo D. Berwick, capt., McLaughlin, Wyman, Culin, King, Raemer, Fairchild, McColough, Dryden, Wdile, Farris, Subkrupk, Bowers, Pearson, Huntsman, Blair, Kitchen, and Bayles, has been having regular practice and the players are in good condition. The benefit is attributed to lack of batting practice, and this defect has been remedied. Co-ons Improve Batting "Men in fine condition and full of spirit," said Manager Frank Bost, of Hope Club baseball team. According to him, the players are enthusiastic about future games and practice continually. Weidle Weinlid, pitcher, has had considerable experience in the game—he trains faithfully. Saturday Co-ops will play the Martins and are confident of victory. KANSAS TRACKSTERS FELL DOWN AT DRAKE Red's Bunch Are Industrious Host feels confident about the outcome of the finals, in light of the victory. With the election of John M. Shea as manager, the men are practicing in earnest. Shea says that he is going to get a job that he isn't get out to practice— The Hayes Club, after disastrous defeat at the hands of Willis Saturday night, has taken a firm hold. The girls of the club have promised entertainment and good eats for a victory. And the girls attend practice, develop the majority of the thirty men out. Hal DeLongy, twirler, is in good condition and has some "round-houses," "ocean waves," and "spirals" that are wonders. In the last game Hal almost got into trouble by a long "round-house" that circled the batter's neck and struck a rooter on the head. (Continued on page 4) Shea Threatens Violence "Kewpie" is Some Base Stealer "No, we haven't been doing much practicing," said one of the Franklin baseball men. "I'm afraid that the men are thinking more about tennis than baseball." "Kewpie" Taylor is our real base stealer but he had bad luck in the game. Trying to steal third, he ran into the baseman, and took all the The Blue Ribbon Four Mile Team Finished Fifth at Classic Games RODKEY LEADS FIRST BUNCH Grady Loses a Little and Herrion Hits a Snag in Campbell of Chicago Before one of the largest crowds that ever attended a track meet in the west, records went galore at the Drake relay games Saturday afternoon on the Drake Stadium at Des Moines. All conditions that go to make up a good meet were there. And the result was that seven stadium records were held, an elephant hoop in eighmile relay, which was lowered thirty-two seconds, six teams finished under the record set last year. Kansas Handicapped Kansas' share of the honors in this meet is limited to a third place in the two mile relay. The four mile race broke the former record of 18:362 but K CAPTAIN RAY EDWARDS while they were doing this four teams managed to beat them to the tape. This event was won by Wisconsin in the record time of 18:04:24 with Michigan a moment to the rear. Chicago and Minnesota were the other two teams who finished in front of the Jayhawkers. The four mile relay was one of the classiest events of the afternoon and nine teams took part in it. In the drawing for placements, the outside lane which is a slight handicap. However, Rodkey overcame that and with a final sprint on the end of the first mile succeeded in finishing in front of the other team who was 4:30. Grady made almost the same time in the second mile but meanwhile Michigan and Wisconsin speeded past the Jayhawker and finished a few yards to the good. Her ability to keep Campbell, of Chicago, does the mile in 4:26, from passing him. The handicap was too much for Captain Edwards who put everything he had into the finish by Watson of Minnesota. Edwards and Harriott averaged about 4:40. Fiske Started Relay In the two mile relay Kansas was more successful and won a third place. In this event Coach Hamilton was more lucky and drew the pole in 2:02:59 with boys. Fiske started for Kansas by following close behind the stalwart East of Purdue. The midget half-miler made the first two laps of the relay in 2:02:59 with Rogers of Northwestern then gave chase to the Purdue man but was overtaken by Northwestern on the second lap. Young Sproull then took up the chase and kept it up until the Northwestern on Northwesterner gave the half mile in 2:03:11. Poos was not able to gain on the fast Osborne of Northwestern or Van Aken of Purdue and Kansas finished in third place. The second half-mile was 8:01:31, is one and three-fifths seconds from the world's record. Too Tired For 1-Mile Kansas entered a team in the one mile but the men had used up all their strength to win against land a place. This event was won by Missouri with (Continued on page 3) HIST! TIS A DARK VILLAINOUS PLOT Prof. Bailey Gets Mysterious Box Sam, an expressman, brought a box into Prof. E, H. S. Bailey's office in the Chemistry Building the other day and set it down on the floor. Sam went out and Professor Bailey picked up the box. It was a foot square in size and was not heavy. There wasn't a single mark on it except the address scrawled in crude pencil-writing. "Um-hm-hm" mused the chemistry man who had just been reading about the bombs being found in a New York church. And he recollected that he made several enemies by telling the truth about his interior. After being called on to investigate, So just to make sure, he called Pete, the janitor. "Let's open this box, Pete, but well be careful. It might be dangerous." They pried the lid off without any serious consequence. Inside was a small, fuzzy paper-dome filled brown wrapping paper. It was packed with excelsior. They took it down on the golf links and carefully unwrapped the ball, at the same time uttering silent prayers in case the worst thing could happen, they should find their bodies rent severally into a few hundred pieces. They unrolled two or three coverings and then the paper began to show signs of b'ood on it. The back of Pro Vail stayed with the job and finally got the wrapping all off. It was a cat's head, sent to the University for analysis, the cat having scratched a child some time before parents of the child feared rabies. MAY QUEEN AND ROBIN HOOD CHOSEN----SH-H-H But the Names Won't be Given Out—Honest, It's a Secret For once in the history of Kansas University, girls will keep a secret. So well will it be kept that not even the brothers and dearly belovedvs will have an inkling of it. There is no man in school who can find out who is to be the May queen for this year's Fete. It happens this way. At a meeting of senior womens last week, we were for. May queen were made and a vote taken. Then, because the women remembered the way the secret has of getting out, they just took the votes and sealed them up, and put them away. They are to be counted a few days before the Fete, and only the candidates themselves were included. Senior who were nominated were Helen Riley, Genevieve Herrick, Mary Powell, and Genevieve Walker. The junior women are to have one of their number to be Robin Hood and to share the throne with the queen, during a siege. The senior plan of sealing the votes was followed, and the result will not be known until the time of the announcing of the queen. The junior women whose names were proposed for Robin Hood were called Einhalt Ekeiler, and Einhalt Hawkins. FRASER TO HAVE NEW STEPS Approaches on West to be Replaced By Stone Ones New, stone and concrete entrances are to replace the present west approaches to Fraser Hall. Work will be commenced soon on the south entrance but owing to the heavy daily use of the north entrance that approach will not be replaced until after the closing of the Summer Ses The approaches will be somewhat larger than the present wooden affairs, constructed of stone with stone veneers. The hardwood will be the same height as the old ones but will be so constructed as to eliminate the basement doors. GIRLS' GLEE CLUB TO GIRLS' GLEE CLUB TO GIVE CONCERT WEDNESDAY The program will be given in Fraser he held Wednesday night, April 21. The jogram will be given in Fraser he held Wednesday night, April 21. Admission will be 25 cents. Psychological Sociology The Junior Prom benefit舞会 not start until after the concert is BIGGEST AND GRANDEST SHOW EVER WITNESSED Prof. V. E. Helleberg, of the department of sociology, will address the Philosophy Club tomorrow night at 7:30 o'clock, in Room 101 Administration Building; subject, "Psychological Sociology." This is an open meeting of the Club, to which any who are interested are invited. Galaxy of Wonderful Performers to Greet K. U. Tomorrow Night DANCING COSSACKS COMING Arrive by Special Dispensation of Czar—Others—All Headliners —One Night Only Sensational. Magnificent. "Costumes are Elaborate" intuition. Magnificent. U. Washington. Show Climb on the Joy Woman, folks; the driver is waiting, and there's a wide, smooth road straight ahead that leads to Funnyland. Don't. forget that in Riverside 8:15 o'clock in Robinson Gymnasium. When the curtain goes up for the first act of the annual K. U. Vaudeville tomorrow, the best variety entertainment ever staged by the department of physical education will be presented in the Gym-full of spectators which are expected to pack the improvised theater to its limits. Dancing, athletic work, and straight vaudeville will be combined in a harmonious conglomeration that will bring delight to the interests of person in the audience. Twenty-five performers count them—twenty-five will take part. "The show will be the niffiest affair ever attempted here," said J. B. McNaught, one of the directors, this morning. "We had fifteen acts all ready to give, and at the last minute selected ten of the best of them. The costumes are elaborate, the manager is very protective securing them; and the stare setting is a revelation. The entire University orchestra is to furnish music." Behold the Heroes! Following are the performers who are to put on the various acts in this workshop. Glee Club Quintet, H. L. DeBeourie, Paul Sautter, and Fred Paude Dancing Jumping Jacks: H. Henderson, P. Bressam, R. Sperry, T. H. Richter, Charles Akers, and Ed. Dolecek. The Two Macks, "those dialoguing dopesters who scatter patter and chatter; Henry McCurdy and Frank McFarland. Pat Crowell, late leading man, is able to do some vaudelle headliner stuff. And now comes the greatest ag- regation of acrobats ever brought together under one tent—pardon—a one roof: G. B. Stanley, Roy Gra- ham, Walter Priest, Earl Nixon, H. Lorenz. Then, ladies and gentlemen, those never-to-be-qualified dancing Cossacks, imported direct from the Russian steppes by special dispensation to the stage of their stage names: J. B. McNaught, Roy Casility, C. Gorrill, G. Walters. Now step right up, ladies and tiemen, and buy your tickets. The lady is waiting at the check stand in Fraser Hall today and tomorrow and the tickets are only twenty-five and forty dollars. You must have the exact change ready please and don't crowd, people. I thank you one all for your kind attention. FRENCH STUDENTS GIVE PERFORMANCE OF MOLIERE The French play, "Le Medecin Malgré Lui," one of Molière's comedies, was presented by the students in French under the direction of the department of Romance languages Saturday night. Barbara Abel and Rex Miller were commended by the directors for their The cast of the play is as follows: Sganaralle—Lewis R. Miller. Martine—Louise Imus. E.Jolley—E.Jolley. Valere—Bruce Shomber. Lucas—Harold C. Miller. Geronte—Raymer McQuiston Jacqueline—Barbara Abel Lucinde—Grudroe N. Lobbell Leandre H. Leandre Tibauri—Hobart H. Kriegh. son,纪 of Tibauri. D. Ehery Jil Gave it up as Bad Job James T. Lardner, financial secretary to the Board of Administration, who came to Lawrence last week to audit the account books of the various student organizations, decided to leave the work until a future date, and accordingly returned to Topeka Friday evening. Receives Samples Prof. E. H. S. Bailey of the department of chemistry has received a sample line of the products of the Borden Condensed Milk Company. The different kinds of milk will be placed in the museum chemical. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF EDITORIAL STAFF John M. Klein - Editor-in-Chief Raymond Chapet - Managing Editor Helen Hayes - Associate Editor William Cady - Exchange Editor BUSINESS STAFF J. W. Dyche...Business Manage REPORTO Leon A. Gleason Gilbert Clayton Charles Crimerow Chase Carriner Elmer Arndt Louis Boulanger Louis Puckett Glendon Patterson Subscription price $2.50 per year in advance; one term, $1.50. IALTA STaff Eric Doyle John M. Gleissner John H. Gleissner Don Davis Carolyn McNutt Paul Mandel Cary A. Ritter Cary A. Ritter Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office 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. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone. Bell K. U. 25. The Daily. Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate life of the University, more than merely printing the students' names on their faculty or the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be maniacous; to be courageous; to be troublesome to wiser heads, in all, and to qualify the students of the University. Flat Play and Accuracy Bureau Prof. H. T. Hill...Faculty Member Jon Doseph...Student Member John M. Henry...Secretary to make mistake in an experiment or impression in any of the columns of the Daily Kansan, report it to the secretary at the Daily Kansan office, instruct you as to further procedure. MONDAY, APRIL 19, 1915. THE INTERSCHOLASTIC The failure of the Kansas four mile relay team to "deliver the goods" at the Drake Relay Carnival Saturday is an incentive for making the annual interscholastic meet the "best ever." The fact that the Jaylawkers lost to men, no better equipped physically than themselves but trained from the time they entered the preparatory school, should serve to stimulate interest in the high school competition. Athletes from Michigan, Chicago and Wisconsin outstripped the Kansans because they had been trained and disciplined along these lines over a considerable period of time. Each of these schools encourages athletics among the young men of its respective territory. The University of Kansas will be the host to the track athletes of this state a week from Saturday. Is there anything you can do to help the good cause along? If participation in interscholastic athletics develops men who can leave home, stand up under the trip, and come through in the foreign competition, then interscholastic competition is a good thing. It is helping in the making of real men. FIGHTING FOR THE STUDES By Special Correspondent At the Ringside. On the campus arena where many similar battles have been waged, the roped enclosure is all prepared, and the ambulances wait for the beginning of the annual battle between Faculty and Spring. The contest has been postponed several times owing to the belated appearance of the veteran Spring. He is now here, in the pink of condition, fresh from the training camps of the Southlands. Faculty has been here for some time, waiting the tap of the bell, confident and prepared—but not over-confident. In their corners, the two are glaring at each other belligerently. Spring is surrounded by his large group of camp followers, Tennis, Golf, Baseball and Strools, while Faculty is seconded by the Powers-That-Be. With Spring showing such great condition Faculty money is disappearing. ROUND I— At the tap of the bell the fight is on. Faculty opens up a bewildering attack of quizzes, book reports and lectures. Spring can only block and hold on. Distinctly Faculty's round. ROUND II—Faculty continues force attack along same lines. Spring stands up well, and answers with a strong right to the jaw, in shape of the Junior Prom. Faculty counters with semi-finals, but does not哭 Sneire. Round even. does not jar Spring. tound even. ROUND III—Spring tries running tactics and experienced floorwork of Faculty prevents decided gains. Spring gets in effective wallop by announcing that Woodland Park will open soon. Faculty finds the pace fast and is content to hang on. Goes to corner groggy. Spring's round. FLASH--Spring knocks Faculty out in 10th by confirming report that midweek rule is not enforced anyway. Faculty takes the full count. Spring goes out in triumph on the shoulders of the studies. It is said that students of mathematics are on the average more accurate and truthful than other students. In view of recent difficulties we suggest a course in mathematics for journalism students. Taking the noise made by the visitors to the Hill last week as a criterion we pronounce W. O, W. a most expressive name for them. "K. U. Nabs the Opener." How can you blame her when she has nothing but Lawrence city water? Prof. H. A. Lorenz has been appointed to a senior committee. Is Don Joseph still taking Gym? They call it "campusry" at Ohio State. A kid writer on the University Daily Kansan, who has no better half to make him afraid, perpetrates with less powder on herself, but never a Maxim silencer." Not that we believe what the kid writer says, or that we endorse his sentiments. But when he has a kid has, "Wellington Journal." Chasing the Glooms The "kid writer" of Chasing the Glooms column would say to the Wellington Journal that if the possession of a "better half" means being afraid to say what he believes he is thankful he is a kid. Too much threshing usually leads to the sowing of wild oats, speaking paradoxically as it might seem. "The climax of good luck is that of the Terre Haute officials whom the Salina-Union says in a headline are "sentenced to Kansas." The height of the ridiculous was reached when a New York periodical pleaded that the reporters of that magazine William Allen White. It can't be did. Pandora's Box "Oh, honey, won't you come over and eat dinner with me tonight?" the girl-politician will say to you pleasingly as you meet her on the Hill. "And you want to go out, will go with her, thinking how nice it was of her to invite you. THE GIRL POLITICIAN You will have a good time at the dinner. The girls will treat you as if you were a queen, and everything from the weather to the next spring-party is talked about. And then, just as you start to go, and have begun to frame that nice little speech about what a good time you have to jump on you in a body, and ask you whom you are going to vote for. Of course, the laws of hospitality have to be observed. So also you like to retain your self-respect by sticking to your former promise. So what will you tell her? You stumble around for words, and blush, and look uncomfortable, and plead with you, and you're promised to vote for the other side, although you wish you hadn't, etc., etc. "Honey," she will say to you, that doesn't make a bit of difference—not a bit of difference. You probably promised them before you knew what was out, and it will be all right for you to change your mind now." "No," you insist, "true to your ideas of right and wrong, "you know your candidate had her petition out two weeks before the other one but I didn't sign it; I waited until saw who she was running again." Well, you don't know how it happened exactly, and you never will complete it, but you should completely bent, and before you left the sacred politician's den, you had promised to vote for Namie Mulligan—by far the best, the nobleest, the most brave woman to own. You're president of the Suffering League. 'Well, now, you just do the way you want to, but I know you think Name Mulligan is the best, now don't you?" REQUIEM. Under the wide and starry sky, Dig the grave and let me lie. Glad did I love and gladly die, And I told me down with a will. be his the verse you grave for me; Tere he lies where he longed to be; Tome is the sailor, home from the sea, and that the sailor had been ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON. DESIDERATA Four things a man must learn to do 1. Learn the value of honesty. 2. To think, without confusion, clearly. 3. To love his fellow man sincerely; 4. To trust in God and hears parley. 5. To trust in God and hears parley. HENRY VAN DYKE Speaking the Kansas Language When a girl gets a fellow to sighing, he had just as well begin saving his money to buy furniture.—Sedgwick Pantagraph. Just because a young man is fresh and should get pickled. The Betty Way. We note the newspapers saying that a certain eminent man was educated "at his mother's knee." What's noteworthy about that? She was every other boy—and we can testify that some of our painful lessons were learned while being across "mother's knee." -Gomer Davies. An exchange says: a farmer, coming to town today, drove his buggy through a mud hole while the wheels 'round. "Sedgwick Pantagraph." A man can now walk across the United States of America without touching a state which has a legalized saloon. This is to say, it will be so after all the new laws have become effective. He would pass through the states of Georgia, Alabama, Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado, Utah, Idaho, Oregon or Washington. That's a fine streak of white across the American Republic and some day it will be all white—Jewell Republican. An Illinois woman complained in her petition for a divorce that her husband mewed like a cat. She was not alone. Her family, her loving spouse, as most women complain because their husbands roar like a lion, growl like a bear, or like a cur. You just simply can't compare some women. -Gomer Davies. THE QUITTER The quitter is one of the best-known members of society. He gave promise of being a quitter when, at the age of thirteen, he vowed he would never go to school another day. It took all the persuasive power, and not a little physical force, he would order a mon to induce him to change his mind. He returned under protest, and thereafter threatened to quit as often as he felt like starting something. Finally, perhaps, in his junior year in high school, he fell in love with a girl in the class above him for her beauty, so order to prepare a home that she married as soon as she graduated. But about the time his job had yielded him three monthly payments of $10 each on a lot, he quit the girl and turned his attention to another who was the sole heir of parents who owned a very good home. About two years later, he was the most adorable man on earth, he began to take a new interest in his job, and worked nights at the office while another paid the attention she demanded. His work at the office attracted the attention of the manager, and he decided to promote, but he decided True! Husband—Isn't it going to be a stylish affair, my dear?—Chaparral Wife—Heuray, do wish I had to wear to wear to Mira. Gurumfurtion's ball. were concluded at a certain place by the singing of a well-known hymn, which happened to be in the back of the book. In the Appendix At the time of King Edward's recovery from appendicitis, thanksgiving services were held all over the British dominions. The services "Let us close the services," the rector sadd, "by singing the hymn, Peace, Perfect Peace,'—in the appendix." Receives Telephone Material The department of electrical engineering has just received a sample of the most recent telephone discoveries from the Western Electric Co., Chicago, Ill. The equipment was sent from the Kansas City branch through the courtesy of B. F. Uhrig, of that company. Mrs. Smithers—How is it that your husband is such a small man? Mrs. Biggers—Oh, he shrinks from danger. Chaparral. The High School Student who feels an interest in such a vocation as Mechanical Engineering should be encouraged in knowing that the growth of industry, and the modern striving after efficiency, open a broad way of opportunity to the able mechanical engineer. He is always in demand. His position is often one of large responsibility. He is well paid. A four-year course in mechanical engineering with the advantages of fully equipped shops and laboratories, prepares the student to enter this broad field under the best conditions. VOCATION EDITOR University Daily Kansan Lawrence, Kansas The Pleasure of School Life is Doubled If you are acquainted with the current happenings "on the hill". The cheapest and easiest way to get acquainted is through the columns of the University Daily Kansan SUBSCRIBE NOW $1.00 for the rest of the year UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Gymnasium Team Takes Part in Annual Show Last Year's Gym Team A Wood Lytle Lindsay Dyche Babb McGillon J. E. B. Miller PICKED UP BETWEEN CLASSES Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity an- mology of James B. McLean Bio of Olathe. Whether Prof. and Mrs. DeWitt Croissant enjoyed "The Man From Home" is uncertain, but the closing song of the play must have aroused old memories. As they were coming down Massachusetts street after the performance, passers-by were much surprised to hear both of them singing the refrain, "Sweet Genevieve, Sweet Genevieve." C. C. Janzen, of the Graduate School, who has a fellowship in sociology, intends to enter Chicago University next fall. Lota Harschell, '14, returned Monday to Warrenburg, Mo., after a short visit with friends in Lawrence. Miss Harshell went to Warrenburg in Normal this year. Miss Cleora Wheeler, of St. Paul, Minn., visited at the Kappa house Wednesday and Thursday. Miss Wheeler is one of the grand of the Kappa sorority and is making her first visit at the University of Kansas. The Y. W. C. A. Advisory Board will give a tea to the sustaining members and the cabinet this afternoon Roberts home, 1307 Massachusetts. The Y. M. C. A.-Y. W. C. A. party that was to have been given Friday night has been postponed. No further date has been decided upon as yet. Prof. H. V. E. Palmblad will enter tain his German 4 class Tuesday evening at his home. Chancellor Strong was on McCook Field Wednesday afternoon watching the Varsity practic pre preparation; to their games with the Chinese team Edith Adriance, senior College plans to take a class of small children, from the Friendship Club Saturday afternoon, for an outing. The Indian girls at Haskell will give a picnic for the University girls, who have been teaching their Bible classes, on May 22. Bernice Pickard, senior Education, has received the appointment to the position of English teacher in the high school at Abilene. Mary L. Scenader, senior College, has secured a position at Oakland high school. Miss Scenader will teach department of German and Latin. Miss Bentha Conger, Miss Ruth Greer, and Miss Fay McCutecheon, all of Union, Missouri, will come the first of May to be the guests of Ruth Jackson, junior College. They will remain for a week. Itaica Hilsman, sophomore College, went to Kansas City Thursday to be bridesmaid at the wedding of her sister. Viola Wineinger, a former student in the University, 1910 to 1913, died at her home in St. Joseph, April 14. North College is being beautified by several busts of famous composers and an electric clock. The ornithology class under the direction of Remington Kellogg and Dix Teachenor are taking hikes before breakfast. The class starts from the Museum steps at five o'clock and observes the habits of birds till seven. Emery McIntire, who was hurt while coasting on Indiana street during the Christmas vacation, is slowly improving at the Jones hospital. The Y. M. C. A., according to Conrad Hoffman, is planning a big Estes Park meeting for a week from Sunday. There will be a days program given by students who have been to Estes Park and onthusia for the next trip is going to b estirred up. Haskell will probably send more Indians to Estes this summer than any other school. "Sickness has been, very rare among the students for the last two weeks. Doctor Nalsmith, a student describes that stuff and more ventilation in study rooms. The Social Service committee of the Y. W. will entertain the children at the Friendship Club, Friday afternoon from 4 to 6. ? Miss Mary Atkinson, a former student in the University and a member of the Pibeta Beta Pi sorority, who has been visiting in Key West, Florida, will return to December will return to her home in Lawrence the latter part of next week Laura Stewart, junior College, of Wathena, will not be able to continue her school work on account of illness. Miss Elizabeth Brown, Miss Marriar Ellis and Miss Constance Fennell will be guests at the Pi Phi house tomorrow and Sunday. They are coming to attend the annual farce given by the freshmen of the sorority. The National Rifle Association met Tuesday evening and elected L. V. Walling, president; J. P. Clevenger of Six Corners, vice-president; Foster Gary, secretary and treasurer and Allen Sterling, range master. Instead of buying crushed rock, a rock crusher has been brought in and Superintendent John Shea is economizing the rock we have on the campus. PI U.S. AND P.A.D.S WINNERS Three Straights for Gaitskill's Gang —Lawyers Break Into League The score was 8 to 7 and that in dicates how close the game was. Three times the Phi Betas were in the lead and things looked bad for the Adams Street boys on good solid work, but bases worked and, when the seven innings were over, the Pi U.s had the big end of the score. Eight hits were all the Phi Betas could collect and they were well scattered, whereas the Pi U.s hit out nine safe ones and they all came in the pinches. Stockton and “Doc” Miner had a nice pitchers’ duel, the former winning due, to the bunched by his team-mates. Stockton had scored three, Carson, Welt-Stockton, and Stauffer were the leading, laddies, with the stick. The Pi U.s. played Phi Alpha Delta Tuesday afternoon at 4 o'clock on the clock. To the tune of 7 to 2, Alpha Chi Sigma took the count from Phi Alpha Delta Friday afternoon on Hamilton Field. "Shorty" Strothers, for the lawyers, had the chemists under his thumb and the winners were never headed there until the test. Badwin was the winner for the Alpha Chis. It was the lawyers' first appearance of the season. P. A. D.s Win Too | Teams | W | L | Per Cent | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Pi Upsilon | 3 | 0 | 1000 | | Phi Beta Delta | 1 | 0 | 1000 | | Phi Beta Pi | 1 | 1 | 500 | | Alpha Chi Sigma | 0 | 2 | 000 | | Sigma Chi Sigma | 0 | 2 | 000 | KANSAS TRACKSTERS FELL DOWN AT DRAKE Inter-Fraternity League Standings Adrian Lindsay, star punter on last fall's Varsity eleven won the silver loving cup offered by the Sachema as the prize in the football kicking contest held Saturday morning on the field north of McCook Lindsay made a total of 126 points. A perfect kick counted as ten points. the same team that beat K. U. in Convention Hall March 12. LINDSAY MAKES BEST TRY FOR SACHEM CUP (Continued from page 1) With the loss of the four-mile relay race the Jahyawkers' hopes of a trip to the Penn Games this week passed away. Many of the men had made their plans for the trip and were trying to arrange it with friends, but they neglected to cinch the trip before attending to the smaller things. Allan Burch, junior College, took second place with 108 points while L. Gillispie, freshman College, was third with 106. Notes on the Meet Thirteen universities, fifteen colleges and thirty high schools competed in the various relay races of the afternoon. In all a total of five hundred athletes representing 126 relay teams took part in the events which furnished the best program ever seen at a meet. Interest in the meet swept over Des Moines as a cyclone causing the legislature to adjourn for the afternoon, county and city office. The department opened of the business houses to close while the meet was in progress. Dropping the baton caused Chicago to lose one of the prettiest races of the afternoon, the mule relay. Niedorp, running for Missouri, had a lead of a few yards on Dismond, of Chicago, in the last lap of this race but the latter made that and took a simi'r lead on Niedorp before the tape was reached. He did the baton in his hand when he finished which caused team to be disqualified and the banner go to Missouri. Each runner carried a blue and white baton, the colors of the team giving the meet, and had to pass it on to his team mate. ENGINEERS PREPARING PICTURES FOR EXHIBIT A collection of forty scenes of the K. U. campus, laboratories and student life is being enlarged by the School of Engineering and will be sent around the school to other exhibitions and other expositions. The pictures are being made at the request of the Board of Administration. The Board considers them useful in showing the people of Kansas what Kansas is doing at the university. It is believed they will interest high school students in the University. The pictures, when enlarged, will be 20x24 inches in size. They will be systematically arranged for display and unframed, so as to facilitate transportation, then sent free of charge to any part of the city. Do not use the pictures are to be bung not in use the pictures are to be bung Wavin and Hawworth Hills. The collection will be shown for the first time on May 13 by Dean P. P. Walker at the state convention of the national engineers of Kansas at Wichita. The Ames Aggries, doped to have one of the best baseball teams in the Missouri Valley Conference will appear on McCook Field for a two game series Wednesday and Thursday of this week. This will be the first time in recent years that Ames has sent a ball team to Lawrence although the Aggries were on the K. U. visiting schedule last year. AMES AGGIES COMING TO McCOOK FOR TWO GAMES Bob Rowland Offers Cup or Medals to Hash House League Bob Rowland, of the College Book Store, has offered a cup or medals for the championship of one of the Hash House League divisions. An attempt will be made to obtain other offers for the two remaining divisions. Medals will be given if their price is not offered. Cups will be offered. Alle Carroll is assigning the League championship cup. DIVISION AWARDS, TOO The Commission is endeavoring to lease Woodland Park diamond for some $d$ the remaining five series of playgrounds at a cost of playing on the golf links. The resignations of two professors at the University were received this morning. They are Charles H. Gray, an assistant professor in English, and A. A. Seipt, an instructor in German. The former will take up a professor's position, and the latter will health was the reason given for the resignation of the latter. TWO PROFESSORS LEAVE FACULTY OF UNIVERSITY Professor Gray has been at the University since 1905, while Professor Sept came here in 1940. Both were on a leave of absence the last year. **D. William T. Dr. Wilkinson T. Fitzsimons, who was graduated from the University College in 1910 and from the University Medical in 1912, has onlusted for the second term of six months in the Cross service for duty in Belgium. TWO PROFESSORS LEAVE Front 2 1/4 in. Back 1 1/4 in. 2 FOR 25¢ BARKERCO BRAND FOR 25¢ "The Date Rule is Off" Front 2½ in. K. U. Man Goes to Belgium CASTLE ROLL 2 FOR 25¢ BARKERCO BANK Tickets at check stand in Fraser all day Tuesday MANUFACTURING: WILLIAM BARKER CO., TROY, N.Y. Oniy at Peckhams M M M The Elsie Janis Pillow Special Offer Elise Jane, the famous star of light opera, selected this dazzling sea and it has been named *Southern Jewel*. She is sure to have a lot of her favorite pailons. There are three of these pailons in our suite, including one of those pailons in its suitty, and one of them in its dress. K.U.VAUDEVILLE 1 Elise Jani Pillow on White Repp 2 Ellen Kelley on Black Silk Foils 4 14 Limousine's Pure Silk Foil 1 Sure Guide Embroidered Lesson 5 Sure Guide Embroidered Lesson 6 Ask me to design the elegant designs, 8:15 Architect No. 1543 Tomorrow Night Robinson Gymnasium Mrms Bulline Nackman LAWRENCE KANS The Chinese University of Hawaii got sweet revenge on McCarty's bail tossers Friday afternoon handing them a fearful 15 to 1 drubbing. Russell's long drive to the club house gave Kansas its lone run although they would probably have made several more but for fiendish base run Chinks Beat K. U. Score by innings K. H. E. Chinese; . 301 059 420 - 15 18 0 Batteries; . 301 059 420 - 15 18 0 Batteries; Kau and Mark; Sproull Stiller, Moss; Delongy and Harrell. The men who have acted as ushers and doorkeepers for the musical events during the year are asked to be at Robinson Gymnastics night at handle the vaudeville entertainment. E. M. Briggs, Paramount Picture Corporation pre sents David Belasco's famous American drama "May Blossoms" with an all star Belasco cast Matinee Daily 2:45 All seats 10:25 Newhouse Symphony Orchestra Today BOWERSOCK The University of Kansas Offers over 200 courses BY MAIL through its Correspondence Study Department. Credit, given for all college work. Address University Extension Division The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas. Notice. Fraternities! J. M. N. YELLEY Stubbs Bldg., Oposside Court House—Phone, Bell 384 STUDENTS Notice, Fraternities I have for lease some of the nicest rooms in town, with light, heat, hot and cold water—both furnished and unfurnished. If interested, call J. M. NEVILLE Ladies and Gents Imperial Shining Parlor and Hat Works Let "Egg" shine those Shoes for that Date Houck's Barber Shop We clean and reblock all kinds of kinds, Ladies and Gents Panamas Especially. 737 Mass. St. ALL SHINES, 5c. Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE 12 W. Ninth Lawrence Pantatorium Phones 506 Those party flowers are always appreciated when they come from THE FLOWER SHOP 825% Mass. Phones 621 Subscribe for the Daily Kansan Professional Cards J, F BROCK, Optometrist and Spe- cialist @ 822-367-5051. Office 802 McLane, St. Bell Phone 692. J. R. BECHITEL, M. D. D. O. $82 Bathroom. Both phones, office and residence HARRY REDING M. D. Eyes, eap, earpins L. B. Black Phones, Bell 615. Home U. Bidg Phones, Bell 615. Home G, W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diseases of Sutite. J. Biochem., 1970, 46, 2825. Sutite, both protomonas, 1980;敢德堡 1802. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squirres studio. Both phones. F. ANDERSON, M. D., Office 715 V6 Phone 1243. Jewelers DR. N. HAYES, #29 Mass. St. General drice. Also treats the eye and St. causes. DR. PETER D. PAULS, Osteopath, office and residence, 7½ East 7th St. General practice. Both phones in room. 2, to 5, and 7 to 8 by pointment. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye ear and Plumbers Classified ED. W. PARISSONS, Engraver, Watch- Jewelry, BELL Phone 711, 717, Mass PHONE KENNEDY PLUMING CO. for gas, gas pump, Mazda lamps. 937-258-6100 Barber Shops Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK, 912 Mass. Insurance FIRE INSURANCE LOANS, and abstracts. Insurance Bills 125; Home $202. FRANK E. BANKS, Ins., and abstracts *C Title.* Room 2. F. A. U. Building Want Ads Manufacturer Will Pay Large number of college students and teachers $6 to $18 daily during summer vacation. Ear for music a help. Experience unnecessary just energy. Learn to use a computer. Samuel C. Osborne, Masonic Temple, Chicago — Adv. WANTED—To buy a second hand canoe in good condition. Address Daily Kansan, state price. PROTSCH "The Tailor" SPRING SUITING Box Stationery All Grades—All Prices McColloch's DrugStore BURT WADHAM'S "College Inn Barber Shop" LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas Lawrence, Kansas. Largest and best equipped business college in the country. Hire a team of Bank building. We teach SQL. Write for sample of Stenotype note and a catalog. WATKINS' NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depositary. FRANK KOCH "THE TAILOR" ull Line of Spring Sultangles NINT HEADQUARTERS Full Line of Spring Sultage STUDENT HEADQUARTERS STUDENTS' SHOE SHOP R. O. BURGERT, Prop 1107 Mass. St. Satisfaction Guaranteed THESES BINDING Engraved and Printed Cards. Sheaffer's Self-billing Fountain Pens. 744 Mass. Street. A. G. ALRICH 744 Mass. Street. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SECOND ROUND OF HASH HOUSE LEAGUE IS OVER (Continued from page 1) skin off his head! "I suppose Winters and Whitehead are about our best batters, and Samuel James Enrico Caruso Cooley is sure some fielder." Here's a Feminine Fan Margaret Heizer, sophomore College, a young newspaper aspirant was sent to the Oread Tea Room to gather dope on the last game of the season. You see, many flies or what ever you call them, did you get? How do you spell that kind of fly? All right, thank you. Well did anything exciting happen during the game? I knew it, and it can know. Thank you ever so much." One Lone Pessimist Margaret was just half way out of the room when she came running down the hall. She asked what the score was, who pitched and who your manager and captain are." "Our prospectus for winning the cup in the Hash House League are rather slim", said Raymond D. Beavell, captain of the Stevenson CCC. "The 1328 Ohio bench beat us 12 to 11 in our first game and since then the fellows have seemingly lost all interest. Also everybody seems to be biting into policing and we couldn't expect to do anything without regular work-outs." Willis Camp is Confident Confidence excels in the camp of the Willis Club, 1131 Vermont. Conferring with the players they have such players as George Smee, last year Varsity man, Leslie Carter, freshman catcher, Andrew Groft, and several others who ought to be on the team. Lee Has the Pen "I present indications impress me that the Varsity is about the only club around the University that has an official name," said the captain Wednesday. Martins Expect 1000 Per Cent Lee Bryant is proud of his baseball team, and firmly believes that his nine will win the pennant. Fred Doggett is proud of his baseball team. Wiley Wyatt, freshman Engineer, is the star, pitcher, O'Brien, Smith and Clark are holding down the bases; Gear is short-stop, McCormick, Mccorkie and McVey are fielders. The Martin team is reaching for the pennant. Every man of the club is on the practice squad, and since there are no co-eds at the table, the eats are according to the demands of the athletes. Thompson will take Irwin's place behind the bat Saturday and Irwin goes to show Bell, who was sick at the game with the fielder. Third, Pattinson going to second. Folt will start the game in the pitcher's box to be relieved if necessary. Sorensen who now has the bat is Thompson's Captain Irwin expects victory again. Varsity Athletes Play Too The Track Training Table, with John Niles as manager, expects to be the pennant-winner with ease. The members of the team are: J. Niles, Frederick, James, Wood, Lindsay, Hilton, Connors, Peterson, Smith, Crabb, Thorpe, The oneicular team that all the men are athletes but only two of them, Lindsay and Wood, are baseball men. Don't Need Practice? No longer shall the latest entry into the Hash House League be known as the Kenney Club. It seems that the chivalrous engineers who make up this club so named it after a young lady but vigorous objections perplex the management. So the more informative name of 1038 Tennessee. Whatever name they choose to go by, these husky engineers can certainly play ball, as they showed when they smothered the K. K's under twenty-one scores Saturday. Some players have made their notice of the fact that they practised but once before their Saturday's exhibition. KODAKS STATIONERY PERFUMES Hash house teams may come and hash house teams may go, but the Midway team goes on forever. Two years ago it won the champion's cup, last year—well they didn't win the championship, but did win the division cup, and came so near to winning the national title that weren't quite sure they had the championship even after the game was over. The battery consists of Cooper, a fire-eating freshman, for catcher, and Welster, a pitcher imported from Colorado by the Midwayites, who is said by the girls of the club to excel all living beings in bashfulness and in action. He was hit by the pitcher on the freshman team he makes the average Varsity player look like an old woman fighting bumblebees with a rolling pin. Bennett, the shortest, is so shortlegged that he is often mistaken for a rabbit running about the diamond, but by a bit of shaking, he just the same. German, the third baseman, is a whole German army when it comes to winning, while Haran, ex-cheer leader, keeps the club's peppery pep. Weltmer, of freshman baseball fame, fields the long flies, as long as the long ones he muffs and dreams of days he played on Reno's state champion basketball team. Midway Still Plays List of Players Following are the names of players on several of the teams. Managers are required to place a list in the hands of the chairman of the Commission, and those who have resigned are required to attend to the matter at once. Evans Drug Store Successor to Raymonds' 819 Mass. St. Track Training Table, 1339 Ky; J Niles, Frederick, Fink, J, Dean James, Wood, Lindsey, Hilton, Conway, Smith, Smith, Hilton, Crabbe, Thorpe, Bord. Midway, 1042 O. 3225B, Weltmert capt, German, Webster, Barlar, Barger, Bennett, Frisch, Paul, Wadel Baldwin, Elswich (incomplete) Co-op, 1345 Ky 1116; Jo D. Ber wick, cap., M.Claughlin, Wyman, Culin, King, Raemer, Fairchild, McCullough, Dryden, Dryden, Warris, Subelkrup, Bowers, Pearson, Huntsman, Blair, Kitchen, Bayles. Y. M. house, 941 Ind.; Blincoe Thomasm, Kingsborough, Ireland Payne, Cearlson, Austin, Wilson Sloan, Cearlson, Lyons, Zelowels, Palkowsky, Dunakin Co-op, 1304 Mass : Street, Shelley Island, 2180W *Dar- bay* Darien, NJ. Hayes, 1237 Oread, phone 2181W Bell; Dad's Club, 1313 Vt. Larrimore, MacGregor, Long, Hill, Peterson, Major, Fitzgerald, J, Fitzgerald, A., Eaton, Osborne, Crowley, Schmitter, Wilson, Stuewe, Slade, Beil, Manning, Stortz, Mathers. Hope, 941 Ala. B. 2336; Bost mgr, Tucker, Jones, Cook, Chandler Harms, Weidlein, Hogapple, Weible Gearhart, Ruth. Martin, 912., 127 B. Irwin, mgr. Foltz, Sorensen, Sorsen Russell, Patterson, Farley, Bell, Gray, Tempson, Templin, Living, Koold Custer: Washburn, capt., 1026B. Harden, mgr., 1232W B., Pierce, Harding, Deaver, Cook, Rogers, Cummins, Burns, Nixon, Didge, Young, Williams, DeRoin, Kabler, Coover, Demitt, Shanton, Threve. 1328 O. 1641J B.: Graham, mgr, Glasco, Fritz, Nanny, Young, Bell, capt., Cooper, Robertson, Palmer, Frost, Campbell. Daniels, 2129 B.: Arnold, mgr. Schoenfeld, Buchan, Madden Schoenfeld, Cooper, Hutton Ford, Hill, Bowerson Stevenson: Messick, Kubic, Sperry, Jones, Mather, Teasley, Calpino, Terry, Pickering, Reed, Jeter, Robinson. Murphy. Lee's: Gear, Wyatt, Joliffe, O'Bryan, Clark, Smith, Fuller, Bowman, Huey, Young, McCorkle, Morgan, McCamon, Rogers, Champlin, Cox, Weible, Frost, McVey, Nixon, Degen, mgr. College Campus: M. RUBle, Alford, Travis, R. Rubble, Bressen, Fletcher, Schmutz, Hemphill, Tillotson, Miller, Filley, Dolecey, Hartley, Cook, Pilee, Dolecey, Deaver, Cook, Uhrlub, Griffith, Coover, Lomax, Nixon, Washburn. Franklin: Cooley, Lamb, Taylor, Timmons, Winters, Wheeler, Smith, Scrivner, O'Brien, Whitehead, Carter, Jones, Gloye. Hayes Club, 1237. Oread; Slaterty; captain; Hayes College, Ireland, Goy. Goy, Ireland. The Neal Club, 17 W. 14:4h. Swatke, Crow, Weiters, Martin, Crowley, Steinhauer, Mella, Reed, Theile, Merrill. Nvtstrom. Yockum. Dunakin Co-op Club, 1304 Mass. St.: Street, captain, O. Darby, Shelley, manager, DaltMe, Spencer, M. Johnson, Smith, Smith, Cheney, Johnson, Hilton, Zinc K. K., 1225 Oread Ave., 2418 B. C. Richter, T. Richter, Davidson K. Pratt, Kristin Cullivan, Robbins Anderson, Woolsey, Monah, Monah, Appel, Wentworth. 1038 Tennessee Club: Hugh Brown, Frank Miller, Harry Curlman, Goe, Ball, Art Thomas, Gaue, Pauly, Orin Ruth; Victor Hunt, outside; Winton Smith, outside; Lee Rees, outside; T. Baer, outside; Geo. Beltzis, V. T. Newton, manager, B. 1277J, 1131 Tennessee street. Los Amigos: Parker, mgr. Koesten, Henry, McIlhenny, Bu塞bank, Jones, O'Bryan, Swartz, Green, Beal, Kitter, Ferguson, Moss. Ulrich: Hite, manager, Stiller, Baker, Gear, Terrent, Chandler Webb, Thomas, Carter, Tucker, Jarboe. Application for these five scholarships open to women of the University will be received until April 22 by the committee, Professors Gallo, Boyle, and Ursula Curry; Vice President Memorial, $100, senior and senior College women; Elizabeth Matheson Innes Memorial, $100, all women of the College above the freshman year and the Graduate School; Caroline Mumford Winston Memorial, $25, all women of the College above the freshman year; Kansas Branch of the Association of Collegiate Alumnae, $50, women of the Graduate School and College above the freshman year; Daughters of the American Revolution, $100, interest for three years after graduation to women of the senior class. The Lucinda Smith Buchan Memorial scholarship, a loan of $200 for two years without interest, to women of the junior and senior classes of the College. Applications will be received until April 22 by the committee, Mrs. F. H. Smithmeyer, Mrs. W. A. Griffith and Miss Oliver. Loan of $200 The Women's Student Government Association scholarship, $100, open to women of the freshman year for use in their sophomore year. Applications will be received until April 2016. Professor Galloo, Hyde and Oliver. The company will make a whirlwind tour, in fact they will be back in about three weeks. They will stop at a few places on the way out and back and then will spend about half of the time out there. Butin will reenter school when he returns. Butin's a junior College. Butin on Whistling Tour James A. Butin has accepted a position with the Santa Fe Reading Room Concert Company and left for Boston, where he was in need as a whistler and it was on his ability that he was chosen. W. S. G. A., $100 to Freshman Send the Daily Kansan home. Pan-Hellenic Baseball Schedule Scholarships for Women DIVISION II. | | Acacia | ΣΑΕ | ATΩ | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Acacia | | | | | ΣΑΕ | April 13 | | | | ATΩ | April 8 | April 27 | | | ΣΝ | April 29 | May 3 | April 20 | DIVISION II. | | ΚΣ | ΔTΔ | ΦΔΘ | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | ΚΣ | | | | | ΔTΔ | April 14 | | | | ΦΔΘ | April 30 | April 9 | | | ΒθΟΙ | April 7 | May 5 | April 26 | DIVISION III. | | ΣΛ | ΦΓΔ | ΦΚΨ | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | ΦΓΔ | | | | | ΠKA | April 19 | | | | ΦΚΨ | April 10 | May 6 | | | | April 28 | May 4 | April 28 | Inter-fraternity Baseball League Schedule RADNOR RADNOR THE NEW ARROW COLLAR
Phi BetaSigma PhiPi UAlpha ChiP A. D.
Phi BetaREAD THEApril 7 April 26April 17 May 8April 24 May 15April 10 May 1
Sigma PhiApril 7 April 26DAILY KANSANApril 13 May 4April 20 May 11April 23 May 14
Pi U.April 17 May 8April 13 May 4FOR THEApril 8 April 29April 21 May 12
Alpha Chi SigmaApril 24 May 15April 20 May 11April 8 April 29LATEST OFApril 15 May 6
Phi Alpha DeltaApril 10 May 1April 23 May 14April 15 May 6April 15 May 6SPORT DOPE
A Correction By mistake the K. U.Vaudeville Show was advertised for Thursday. It should have read TUESDAY, April 20th. 40 New Fiber Silk Shirts Appeal to the men who enjoy the comfort and good looks of all silk shirts but give economy a first thought. Our assortment is so complete that it will be interesting for you to look through it whether you are ready to buy or not. $2.50 and $3.50 See Windows Ober's See Windows HEAD-TO-FOOT OUTFITTERS Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS "Egg"gives you "Some Shine" Houks Barber Shop Girls' Glee Club Concert Wednesday, April 21 Fraser Hall 8 o'Clock. Admission 25c. 100 American Lady Corsets Please the Discriminating American Lady Corsets correct irregularities of the form, supplementing graceful lines and perfect shaping to usease the discriminative dressers. American Lady Corsets are modeled for all types of figures, slender, medium and stout, including a model for "your" particular figure. American Lady Corsets are war wanted to wear and not to rust Why not buy service and satisfy customers specially when prices are popular? Let us show you the new models, including The American Lady Front Face at $2.00; The American Lady $1.00 Corset in several new models; The American Lady Corset for medium stout or slender figures at $3.00 is Ours Perfection. PLENTY OF NEW SPRING COATS just arrived, Silk Poplin, Coverts, Checks, White Chinchilla. SPECIAL PRICES ON SEVERAL LINES OF SUITS $13.50, $15.75, $19.75, $22.75 Onnes, Bullene & Hackman Subscribe for the DAILY KANSAN Base Ball — AMES vs. K. U. — Wednesday and Thursday Tickets 50c Student Tickets Admit Grand Stand Cushion Seats 15c extra Games Called 4 o'Clock UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII. NUMBER 136 BANQUET TONIGHT OPENS ENGINEERS' FESTIVITIES Spread in Gym to be Followed Tomorrow by Stunt Program and Field Meet PARADE AT 10:20 O'CLOCH Students Will Have to Watch Motion Procession Between Classes— Medals Offered for Winners UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 22, 1915. Engineers' Program Banquet in Gym, tonight, 8 o'clock. Parade tomorrow, 10:20 o'clock. College m.i. Law classes not permitted. McCook, tomorrow, 1 o'clock. Dance in Gym tomorrow night, 9 o'clock. ... The fifth annual Engineers' Day will swing into full progress, for a day and two nights of almost ceaseless activity when the Engineers' fifteenth banquet opens tonight in Robinson Gymnasium. Tomorrow all classes will be called off in the week before as the parade and athletic meet held and a grand dance in the Gym will end the Engineers' big yearly event. The banquet, a six course affair will start at 8 o'clock. Prof. Goldsmith will be the toastmaster for the occasion and the speakers scheduled are George E. Tebbelt, bridge coach; John R. Campbell, co. Kansas City; B. J. Luschez, and a subject from Kansas City; G. W. Russell, K. U., '10; R. A. Rutledge, K. U., '9I; chief engineer of the eastern esides of the Santa Fe, from Topeka, ancelor Frank Strong and Denn P. P. Walker will be present and give tues. Plates will be set for two hundred dollars according to the departments they are enrolled in. Each department is preparing some stunt, for the evening's entertainment, which will include songs or yells. Then the Grand Parade Athletic Events in Afternoon The parade will pass through the campus, north on Oread and Indiana, then east to Kentucky and south to Quincy, where it will turn east to Massachusetts and go north to three house and then west to McCook. The parade, the first of tomorrow's program will start from Marvin Hall at 10:20 o'clock. It will consist of beakers, thermometers, and every engineer will take part in it. The electricals will have four floats, the mechanical four, the civil three, the miners two, the architects one, the chemicals one, and the freshman one. At 10:30, the campus at 10:30, it will not be necessary to dismiss classes. The athletic events start promptly at 1 o'clock on McCook. The events will be: 50, 100, 220, and 440 yard dashes; I mile run; standing and running broad jump; high jump; pole vault; high and low hurdles; tug-of-war; spectacular, inter-school, and inter-class relays and baseball games. The officials of the athletic events will be: Coach W. O. Hamilton, final referee of appeals; W. A. Whitaker, judge of the field; H. S. Shaw, judge of field events; F. L. Brown, C. H. Ashton, G. C. Shaad, C. C. Wheeler, judges of the finish; H. A. Rice, L. B. McCarty, and A. Carroll, timers; W. O. Hamilton, starter; Ricks, ampire judge of tug-of-war; and A. M. McCollough, announcer. Medals are being offered the winners of the first three places in the tournament. The team awarded the winning relay, tag of war, and baseball teams and a huge banner will be presented to the department that carries off the day's The rules and regulation committee has made the rulings that no contestant in the track meet will be persecuted. The rules state that Varsity baseball players will be allowed to play in the baseball games but not in their regular positions and that no person can compete in any event in which the one in which he is enrolled. To be Decidedly Informal Every engineer in school will be in tomorrow's performance. "Glad rags" and especially white collars are tabooed. And the Engineers have "a plenty" in store for the violators of this ruling. Many of the men will probably mask for the morning's celebration. The dance in the Gym tomorrow night, which commences at 9 o'clock the day before. The closing stunt of the Engineers' Day, Haley's orchestra of Kansas City will UNCLE JIMMY GIVES HEALTH PRESCRIPTION And Tells How to Stay Young Don't study too hard; go to bed early and get up late. Don't eat too many ice cream sodas or things like that. Associate with young people and continually draw from their fountain of youth. Don't worry if you haven't your lesson. Flunk gracefully and blame it on the teacher, or have the teacher, has pets and are not fair. These are not beauty hints by fair Lilian Russell, but merely a few rules on keeping young which Undee takes very seriously as a reporter on the sly the other day. Uncle Jimmy has reached the ripe age of seventy-three and still has a deep love for the veins than the average freshie. During a "feast" recently in Green Hall Uncle Jimmy let the cat out of his dog and his wife for remaining a single public place. "I'm just naturally one of those healthy beings," mused K. U.'s Grand Old Man. "I've only been sick once, and that was last summer. That I never want to be sick again. I never take any violent exercise and I think that is one reason why I feel so fine. I tried to swim once and went to bed. That ended my aquatic career." Then came the quartet of health rules. W. S.G.A. DELEGATES TO BE CHOSEN TUESDAY Each Class to Select its Representatives at Separate Mass Meeting Representatives from the freshman, sophomore and junior classes to the Women's Student Government Association, will be chosen at mass meetings Tuesday at 12:30 o'clock. Two students from each class will be selected. Mass meetings of the different classes will be as follows; Freshman, Fraser chapel Sophomore, Fraser Fenster, 210 Junior, Fraser 210 Seniors will not be given a chance to choose members of the Council. Next year's freshman class will select two representatives early in the fall to represent senior women who leave the Council at the end of the present semester. IMMUNITY AINST TYPOID ASSUR. BY INOCULATION Free typhoid inoculation may still be obtained from the School of Medicine, Room 2, Dyche Museum, between 4 and 5:00 c clock every Friday after- This inoculation affords protection against typhoid with little inconvenience. Nothing but standard vaccine is used, and not over 5 per cent of the population is immunized than a sore arm. One complete inoculation will insure immunity from the disease for a period of from three to five years. If paid for, the treatment costs are about $10. More than 100 students have aken advantage of the opportunity. Geologists Hike Prof. W, H. Twenhofel's class in physiography will journey up one side of the Kawat east of Lawrence next Saturday, and come back on the other to study formations along the way. Saturday the geology classes hiked from Williamstown to Midland, studying rock and formations as they went. Women Hike A "Newspaper Party" will be given at Westminster Hall by the members of the Westminster Guild, Friday evening, April 23, at 8 o'clock. Freshmen will go on a bike Saturday morning teaching Robinson Gaskin. furnish the music for the evening's entertainment. Tickets will be sold on the door. Prof. Charles A. Shull, of the department of botany, will preside over the chapel this week. His general theme will be "Science and Religion." The music for the week also have been chosen from account of someones death. Don Kiskor, Skulls. Give a "Newspaper Party" At Morning Prayers Friday: "The Nature of God" Prelude, "Adagio," Volkmar. Anthem. Heard the Voice of Jesus Gloriosa! Pendulcus "Tocata" by Dubois. AMES COULDN'T TOUCH CRAIG AND LOSES 5 TO 2 McCarty's Men Take First Conference Game by Good Pitching BOTH TEAMS MADE NINE HITS Aggies Made Two Bobbles but Jay hawkers got Through With Clean Slate The inability of the Ames Aggies to bunch their hits off Craig, cost the Iowans their first Missouri Valley Conference game yesterday with McCarty's Jayhawkers on McCoack Field. Although both teams made field. Also, a Kansas made rent use of their's with its resulting score of Kansas. 5, Ames. 2 Although slick for more blows, Craig really pitched a better game than in his initial performance against the Chinks last week. His control was perfect not a man being flirted with by a teammate, the long walk back to the bench, after gazing at three elusive strikes. Okey for Ames also pitched an O. K game but the two errors by his teammates came at critical times, resulting in three of the Crimson and Blue runs, which were enough to win. Both teams two counterwere a result of clean sweat splaying by Delongy's batters. Bangham's Boot Made a Run The first Kansas run came!; the opening inning when "Rabbit" Wood walked, and was sacrificed to sc. and Wandel, DeLongy hit safely to left but the blow was too short to bring Wood in. The midgut scored however when Bangham booted Lindsay's bounder. Wood also started the K. U. score in the third when he led off with a Texas leaguer to left. Wandel and Chinney both singled, the latter's hit bringing in Wood. DeLongyza's sacrifice飞 score Wandel but Chinney was nipped going to third. Lindsay ended the agony by a long fly. In the eighth, *nailed* by the old "tide of Craig's assistants determined to give him a safe lead and went out and got two more runs. Lindsay opened with a double. King was safe on Firkin's double and both scored on Webel's under right. Ames not an additional man in the ninth on a single and double. The score: Kansas AB H R H PO A E Wood, ss. 2 2 1 5 4 0 Wandel, ss. 3 1 1 0 2 0 Dandel, ff. 3 1 1 0 2 0 Delongy, c. 3 0 1 7 2 0 Lindsay, 2b. 4 1 2 0 2 0 King, 3b. 4 1 0 2 0 2 Sprow, lb. 3 0 1 12 0 1 Weible, rf. 3 0 1 12 0 1 Craig, rf. 4 0 1 0 2 0 Ames AB R H PO A F Kenick, rf. 4 0 0 A F McBride, 2b. 4 0 0 3 1 Bamsh, 3b. 4 0 2 1 3 Jones, if. 4 1 2 4 1 Kenally, c. 4 0 2 4 1 Davis, cf. 4 0 0 5 2 0 Kerringan, 1b. 3 0 1 8 1 0 Firkin, ss. 3 0 0 1 2 1 Okey, p. 3 0 2 0 2 Score by innings: R, H, E. Ames, . . . . . . . . . 000 000 011—2 9 2 K, U, . . . . . . . . . 102 000 02x—5 9 0 The Summary: Two base hits Sproul, Bangham, Lindsay 2, Kerrigan, Wobble, stolen base Kenney, hited in the back Lonoy, double play, Sproul to Wood. Base on balls: off Craig 0 off Key 3. Struck out: by Craig 8 by Okey 4. Left on bases: Kansas 7; Umpire, game 149, i49. Edmundsion, McDonald. 33 2 9 24 11 One feature of the game noticed from the grandstand was that Don Davis freshman "fuser" wasn't present with his usual inevitable date. Ross or Merrill, the two star pitchers of the visitors, are slated to pitch the second game this afternoon, which will be called at 4 o'clock. Edmondson the "umpf" for yesterday's game was formerly a Washington American player. According to Ames players who wouldn't know it. MISSOURI WINS OVER KANSAS IN DEBATING The grandstand crowd started a cushion bombardment of "Doc" Burch's new spring hat in the ninth iming. The fire was so heavy that Doc had to adjourn to a more sheltered position outside the stand. Notes The attendance for the game while good didn't quite equal the crowd at best. Send the Daily Kansan home. Tragedy of Last November Repeated in Jungletown Last Night MONROE DOCTRINE SUBJECT Affirmative Upheld for K, U. by Car son, Joseph, and Wedell—Lost by 2 to 1 Vote Columbia, Mo., April 22—After an hour and a half of live argument on a live question the Missouri University debating team won by a two to one decision over the men from the University of Kansas last night in the Big Ten conference here. The Jayhawks spoke on the affirmative and the Tigers on the negative of the following question: Resolved: "That the United States should abandon the Monroe Doctrine." In their logical argument the Kansas team appeared superior to their opponents but clever retorts by the Missourians kept the audience in good mood and won great favor with the judges. Kansas' Argument Cale Carson opened the argument for Kansas by showing that the Monroe Doctrine has changed from one of self defense to one of aggression and domination. Also that it very indefinite to inconsistent application. Don Joseph, who was the leader for the American brought out the point that the Monroe Doctrine placed the United States in a disadvantageous position as policemen of this hemisphere and was liable to involve us in war. His second point was that the holding of this policy had caused our South American trade to suffer. That the army and navy and not the doctrine policy protects the United States and plans of the military be dead subordinate over the points addressed by Hugo Wedell, the last speaker for Kansas. Missouri's Argument The constructive argument of the Mouri team team followed three main points That the South American Republics were weak and needed protection; for the sake of our sister South American republics in their perilous condition and for our own safety we should maintain the Monarchical authority in the hostility between the U. S. and the Republics. Albert Thornton, P. H. Arthars, and C. K. Lutes were the Tiger speakers. Mr. Lutes, who closed the argument for his team spoke extemporaneously and was considered highly by the judges. President Hill of the University presided and a crowd of more than 200 attended. There was great rejoicing when the decision was announced as this is the first time in three years that the locals have won. Entertained K. U. Men After the debate the visitors were guests at a banquet. Each member of the Kansas team, Prof. C. A. Dykstra, who accompanied the men from Lawrence, and the judges, N. H. Bostick, secretary of the St. Louis College, Rodger Baskell, of the St. Louis College, Haskell, of the Kansas City Star, made short talks. President Hill took the visitors to the train in his automobile. The Jayhawkers said before they left that they had had the time of their lives and that for hospitality their University was the only place. PROF, WILCOX DOES "AEROPLANE" DANCE The next meeting of the Greek Symposium will be at Prof. M. W. Sterling's home at 1129 Louisiana street, on May 6. The last meeting of the club which was held at Prof. A. M. Wielox's home was one of the clubs that has been enjoyed that has been held this year. A book entitled Teddysee which is a satire on Theodore Roosevelt was read and compared to Homer's Odyssey. The Teddysee is written in the same form and metre as the Odyssey and is a story of Roosevelt's wanderings in South America and of his trips. The book includes a dance gave by a exhibition of a dance which he called the "Aeroplane." Plan New Teachers Course A teachers training course will be opened to freshmen and sophomores if the motion made by Dean Arnin Olin at the College faculty meeting Tuesday is favorably reported upon by the administrative committee. This course would make sophomores eligible for teaching positions. Mu Phis Pledge Mu Phil Epilion announces the picking of Mary Linn Junior Fine Art. MUST PEEK TO SEE ENGINEERS' PARADE College Gets no Hour off “And so you want an hour off to tomorrow to see the Engineers’ parliament.” Dean Arvin S. Olin overheard a reporter ask Miss Moodie, the chancellor of the college, to students in the College were going to get to see the Engineers put on their annual stunt tomorrow. The dean ordered the engineers to school days and continued his musing. "When you were little kids in the public schools and a circus came to town the teacher dismissed you a litter street or to the village square to watch the elephants and the calliope go by. Now here comes another sort of a circus and you are all clamoring for them we will not let you out; what then?" "If you don't let us out, don't you think we will all peek anyway?" ventured. "Well, well, I guess you are right," laughed Dean Olin. "And since you are just kids grown tall I guess they ought to let you see the show." But there is no authorized hour holiday for College students tomorrow; if they see the parade they will "just have to peek." TO HAVE FLOWER CHECK STAND FOR SOPH HOP Second-Year Class Plans Strictly Informal Event Friday Night Special decorations, new party gowns, white trousers, and light suits are receiving the attention of the sophomores and others who are going to the Hop Friday evening, April 30. The curtain for the farce will go up at 7 o'clock and the dancing will begin at 8:39 until 2 o'clock. "We are going to have a check stand where flowers will be deposited until after the dance," said Lawry. "I will be in this morning." "In talking over the plans of the Hop with the manager, George Yeokum, I find that he is determined that the affair shall be initiated and free from flowers and cabs." The spirit of informality has even been extended to dress, according to Manager Yeekum. Not only white trousers and dark coats will be in evidence but palm beaches and even grey blue serge suits will be prominent. Lawrence Miller expresses his belief that the modification in costume will make the Hop attractive to other classes in the University besides the second year men and women. For this reason an invitation has been extended to all students who have the necessary "two-fifty." After the force the entire evening will not be given over to the usual dancing. Several surprises have been booked for the latter part of the evening in the way of fun dances. One or two features are being kept secret. The couple will left for Kansas City this morning to make necessary arrangements. The students taking part in the farce are Henry J. McCurdy, Alton Gumbiner, Dora Lockett, Helen Clark, and Itasca Hillman. They Want College Day Following are the names of students who have pledged themselves to take part in the activities of College if it is granted by the University. Francis H. Arnold Harold Robinson Aileen Adler Alena Rodgers Slyvia Adams Jane Sheets Harold Brown Esther Smith Betty Browne Lucille Sterling Dorothy Brown B. R. Taylor Marie Buchanan Mildred Thomas John E. Curran Theo Thompson Erna Flasher Dick Treweke Stephen Fahringer Ollie Wasson Fred Krause Tom Woodbury Ilde Fuller Tom Woodbury Clai Gellitt Ethel Zook Pearl Gillock Jay Hargett William M. Glasso John M. Henry Mable Harper J. W. Dyche Pearl Hudson J. W. Timmins C.A. A. Willson Ogden S. Jones F. W. Koester Frank H. Fry R. O. Dyche Charlotte Kreek Don Davis Helmer Klock Gilbert Clayton Mildred Light Vernon A. Moore Francis McCall J. C. Parker Inez M. McKinnow Fred Bowers, Jr. Marjorie Rickord E. R. Crabbe Carl Becker, professor of European history, has written a book, "The Beginnings of the 'American People,' which will be out sometime this month. The book is being published by the Houghton-Mifflin Co., Boston. UNIVERSITY MAY CREDIT BIBLE STUDY ON DEGREE Work in Bible History and Literature to Count Toward A. B. Under Proposed Plan MINOR PROBLEMS YET IN WAY But Student Pastors are Hopeful of Result—Plan Successful at Other Schools They Say Credit for work in Bible classes is under discussion in the administrative committee of the College faculty. The proposition was submitted in the faculty meeting this week. The com-mission return it to the faculty for decision later. Student Pastors Would Teach "For the first time there is active effort for credited Bible classes," said Secretary Conrad Hoffmann of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers been suggested before, but this is the first time that a real campaign has been started. The student pastors, teachers and students from all he'd behead, have been preparing the arrangement which was submitted. "The plan is to have the student pastors conduct classes in Bible history and literature, to meet in Myers hall or Westminster Hall, the pastor of the college, at A.B. degree," Mr. Hoffmann continued. "They would be two or three hour classes, and would be conducted just like any other classes in the University. The work would be really as such as other literary and historical classes, particularly for English students would be a valuable part of the course. "There are several major problems to be settled, of course. Myers Hall is really a denominational building, and that might be made a point of objection. And the pastors are not universally located as a University instructor. There are a great many who are prejudiced against the introduction of subjects that appear religious. But in New York they are introducing Biblical training into the public schools, and the fact that it is legitimate and beneficial is beginning to be realized in New York. It would give credit to the classes would dignify religious study, and would encourage the students to take it up, as well as inducing more thorough work," he concluded. PUT SLIDES ON CIRCUITS Lantern Seenes Will go From Place to Place Next Year The extension division has adopted a plan whereby lantern slides will be banded by means of circuits instead of glass, and all directly from headquarters here. On account of the increased demand for the slides some scheme for increasing the range of circulation is necessary. So on September 1, 1915, each of fifty schools will receive a set of slides and when one school finishes these slides the photo of the student sent to on another school in the town it has not been decided whether there will be one or two circuits but in all probability there will be two. Supplementary sets of slides will be kept at the extension division here so that in case there is $n$ demand for more than the circuit can furnish, slides may be sent from the University direct. Letters explaining the working of the system and a bulletin giving names of all available slaves have been published in this school in the state and now all they have to do is to apply for entrance to one of the circuits and they will receive a certificate and a lecture on the fifty subjects each week, beginning next school year. MORE Y. M. MEN WILL GO TO ESTES PARK The Kansas College Young Men's Christian Associations are planning to send to the Rocky Mountain Student Conference at Estes Park in Colorado to meet the history of the conference. Kansas has always had the largest delegation of the states in the conference and expect to take the banner this year. They are planning for a speeck instead of the special car for the trip. The states that are in the conference are Kansas, Colorado, Nebraska, New Mexico, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming, Texas, and Oklahoma. The states that are not in the conference are Kansas delegates is $37.50 for fare, board and registration fees. Dean Templin to be Judge Dean Olin Templin is to be one of the judges in a debate between the Kansas State Agricultural school and the Baker University teams tomorrow. The contest will be staged at Manhattan. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF BIBLIOGRAPHY John M. Henry... Editor-in-Chief Raymond Manley... Managing Chef Helen Hayes... Associate Editor William Cady... Exchange Editor RUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS START I. W. Dyche ... Business Manager Leon Harach Gilbert Clayton Vincent Oliver Charles Bentley Elmer Arndt Michael Rudolph Louis Puckett Glendon Patterson AL STAFF John A. Mielsener John M. Gleisner Don Davis Don Davis Carolyn McNutt Harry Morgan Harry Morgan C David Houser Subscription price $2.60 per year in advance; one term, $1.50. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1890, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate of the of their more than merely printing the news by newspaper holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be careful; to be charitable; to be courteous; to have more serious problems to wiser heads, in all, to serve the neediest of the University. Fair Play and Accuracy Bureau Prof. H. T. Hill...Faculty Member Don Joseph...Student Member John M. Hamaye...Secretary I will find a mistake in statement or impression in any of the column of the Daily Kansan office serving the Daily Kansan office will instruct you as to further procedure. THURSDAY APRIL 22,1915 WHY SOME PEOPLE DON'T GO TO THE MOVIES "And I says to her, I says, 'I wouldn't let any man treat me that way, not if he was the best man in the world,' and she says—" Metal Resistives Donald Mabel Recognizes Donald as the Man Who Insulted Her "They failed to vote the bonds just like I said they would, but you know——" Donald Does Not See Mable "I remember the time I was in a scrape just like that last scene. Only it was in Colorado, and the man was bigger and ———" And he went through the Canary Islands. Make Mabel Back Through the Crowd and Mabel Back Through the Crowd and Johns James "In the next scene she meets him at a houseparty and he recognizes her, and——" "James, I hope you are still my friend I need protection. That brise is still in town." "Jimmy wanted a date with me, but I knew you would call and so I fobbed just a little, and said that you had spoken first." MAKE COUNCIL STRONGER Some students do not take kindly to the proposition of the return of student disciplinary power to the Senate by the Student Council because they believe it means doing away with the Student Council. They are misinformed. The return of the power will not destroy the Council. On the contrary it will leave a stronger Council, one that can carry out programs of student interest, not embassaded by the necessity of expelling or reprimanding fellow-students. With the disciplinary power out of their hands the members of the Council would be spared the isolation now existing, and could get among the students, hold their confidence, and do things now impossible. The return of the discipline certainly will not kill the Student Council. IF THEY WANT IT If the students want a College Day they may get it by signing the petitions, then taking part as much as possible. If they are not willing to work for the Day they do not serve it. There is as much reason for a College Day as there is for an Engineers' or Laws' and there is every reason for these Days. College students have as much peep as any others. "No Spitting or Expectorating," he the warning in the Gym. The "spitting" is for common studies and the "expectorating" for Phi Beta Kapas. STUDENT OPINION 12. 19 Editor Kansan: Editor Kamal On May 4 the students of the University decide whether they are capable of self government or whether they must be placed under the control; of the faculty. This is a question of vital interest to every student in K. U. and every voter should obtain a thorough knowledge of the matter before he casts his ballot either for or against it. There is absolutely no room for doubt that student government, under the present form of administration, is a failure and the entire system is pernicious in that it shows the student body up in its worst light. Now the question naturally arises, why is student government a failure? As a senior University of Kansas? As a senior I would hesitate before I attempt to answer it. So many demands enter into the causes of its failure that it is impossible to point out any one thing and say that it is responsible. It may be that the wrong men have been placed on the Council, or that the Council has not had stamina enough to declare war and make power strong. Personally I do not believe that such is the case. Themen upon the present Council are representative students and I do not believe that any other student should be part of body who could better serve the school as a whole. and seem trouble must lie deeper. It must be owing to some inherent defect in our present system of running the University and, since we, as students, are unable to materially better the conditions of the school as regards its management, not only the power of the power of the Student Council until such a time as conditions shall seem ripe to place it in successful operation. Theoretically student government is logical and should be effective. Practically it has proved a weak and ineffective method of administering discipline. The body has degenerated into a group of men who meet and talk and do little else. The Council allowed the Men's Student Union to close it proved that it was a fault in power to do things and that it could not rise to a crisis. This one act should have sounded the death knell of the body in the mind of every thoughtful student in the school. It may be that when K. U. gets a dormitory system and places the students in a position where they will naturally take some UP degree as a university, that it can be governed by a body of students selected by popular vote. But at present, and the present is what every student consider upon May 6, the system is a mere and should pass out of existence. Senior Chasing the Glooms It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a pretty woman to go unnoticed at K. U. The man would make a fortune who would invent a shirt that would not come back from the laundry with the back collar button holes soldered Jess may be entitled to that cowboy appellation if the plan to make butter from sunflowers pans out. Some men have baseball reputations and others belong to Hash House League teams. "Ninety per cent of the successful recitations," said a professor Tuesday morning, "is in guessing what is in the instructor's mind." But if he did doubtless be in favor of having a course in mental telepathy on the Hill. Evidently Dr. Josiah Strong is neutral. “Phi Alpha Deltae eat.” How deuced absurd of them. In view of the idea that boozie must go for victories we cannot see why the aircrafts do not drop kegs of beer and not guns. The most important country rather than of bombs. Now for the freckles. Shots at Half-Cock Not every man that wears funny-looking clothes is doing it because of a fight bet. It is the fashion. It is said that a student who wished to make restitution for his wrongs on the Mott campaign is returning stolen kisses. Or Foolishment in Verse but still that mown over overhead, And Psych, but served to stir my WORKING AT NIGHT I tried so hard to study Math. But still that moon shoe over And, Paych and to stir to sit wrath; Which ended with one skeeter dead; At last I tried to read some More— it smothered me a jacket; I threw the bathtub through the door. And raised a tennis raquet. The Downs News has discovered the hardest job and announces the find in the shape of a question: "How would you like to be orderly assemble your company?" Compelled to call the roll of names in your company every day?" Speaking the Kaasas Language A Kansas City woman wants the body of her dead husband dug up. "Digging up" is a feature of the live husband.—Arkansas City Traveler. Many men are regular self-starters around about meal time, but when work looms on the scene they develop tire trouble—Concordia Blade. NOT I POKE FUN at THE BOW Another gem, author unknown, making the rounds; Devin is from in at the boy who went with me in from the classroom with seed in his hair and mud on his feet; patches on the north department of his pants and just one gallus on. He may look seedy now, but ten years from now he may be president; pastor pastor; judge of some physician to some people. Just because a boy lives in town, wears two kinds of socks, parts his hair on his mother's curling tongs, and has a daddy with spoonful burn, that is not necessary is going on physically in the future. We put our money on the sound, sane and sensible boy from the forks of the creek.-Galena Times. DON'T POKE FUN AT THE BOY All through the fragrant April afternoon old men with crutch or cane sit in a building's shade, compare this season with that of a year long gone, said in their unutterable longing for the days of youth and things as used to be, glayed on gates and flowers again to look forward almost with glee to the day a week or two away when the dying embers of sport in each old heart will be fanned into a flickering flame, by the daily afternoon game of horseshoes, which he played by the old livery barn. And when that game starts, spring—gentle spring—has come to southern Kansas. —Toronto Republican. IN FRAGRANT APRIL STUDENTS BROKE THEN TOO Same Old Story; Wrote Home to Dad for Money Like the student of today, the medieval scholar was continually and eternally in need of money. "A student's first song is a demand for money," writes an Italian father, "and there will never be a letter that does not ask for cash." Letters are of course usually addressed to parents, though sometimes to others, and commonly announce that the student is at such and such a centre of learning, well and happy, but in dire need of money. Sometimes books, parchment, and others supplies are sought directly from home. Arguments for granting the request are numerous—living is expensive, owing to famine, crop failure, or seize, the messenger sent with money had been robbed, or had absconded, and so on. And Got Called Down Sometimes, as now, a student meets with reproof. This is from a father to his son at Orleans: "I have recently discovered that you live dissolutely and slothfully, preferring license to restraint, and play to work, and strumming a guitar while others are at their studies, whence it happens that you have read but one volume of law, while you more informational professions have read seventh. This is followed by an exhortation to the wayward one to mend his ways. The arrival of students at school is frequently the occasion for a long letter describing the journey and the new surroundings. Travel was pericarious, and facilities poor. Bouncemono of Bologna devotes his collection to accidents that may befall one on his way to a university town. Once in a university, leaving is always distasteful. Always the students ask an extension of their time of study. One deems it folly to forsake Pallas for Venus, since one can always find a wife, but science last can never be recovered. Theology Was Popular Quite naturally the students' letters reveal little of the recreational side of their life, and if they be taken solely, one gains the impression that the student of 500 years ago was a model of diligence and industry. An abundance of material of another kind is found in the French sermons of the 15th century, although they were designed to edify rather than record. These sermons are especially numerous and well-written during this period. Naturally they designate the theology as the all-important study, and the arts as merely preparatory. Theological study was the natural road to ecclesiastical preferment, and the preachers complain that the chief hope of too many students is in securing a good benefice or prebend. Frequently a benefice is conferred upon an illiterate, who then repairs to a university for knowledge—"like a physician who should take his pay, leave his patient, and go to Salero to study mediene." The ideal scholar, according to the preacher, was obedient, respectful, and eager to learn. Robert de Sorbon lays down rules for successful study: a fixed time for each subject, concentrated attention, memorizing specific things, conference with others, and prayer. Now that it is picnic time we have all kinds of good things for sand-wiches, like mango tofu, olive salad, and potted tuna fish. At Dummie's...Adv. We have nice imported figs in 25 cent boxes. Dummeir's-Adv. Complexion powlers and creams at Barber's.—Adv. There's Zip to it, Boys! HERE'S the yell master of them all—the campus favorite with college colors in stripes across the breast and sleeves. There never was a more attractive design—never a better made, a better styled, or a better wearing shaker sweater. It's a A "THE Bradley" KNIT WEAR —ideal for all 'round service—a big luxurious sweater that will stand four years and more of "roughhousing" on the campus. If your dealer doesn't sell Bradley Sweaters, America's best Shakers, Jumbos, Jerseys, and the only genuine navajos, write us for the names of dealers who do—it will pay you. BRADLEY KNITTING CO., Delavan, Wisconsin See our grape fruit. We have especially good values at 5 cents. Dunn-mire's—Adv. RADNOR RADNOR THE NEW ARROW COLLAR Bamboo scalp combs, bath caps, and rubber gloves at Barber's Drug Store.-Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. "Business is Business" so attend a "Perplexing Situation" and hear The Orchestra at the Christian Church Friday, April 23, 8 p. m. BAYSIDE Wherever You Go — Regals Are Right A T home or abroad, on Massachusetts Street or on the Board Walk, at Atlantic City,—wherever you are, you want your shoes to be irreplaceable in style. And you demand, besides the maximum of service and comfort. We can supply your footwear we. Have in Regals exactly what you would order if you were going to have your shoes custom-made. Every little nicety of fit and finish—every combination of leather, shape and pattern. We are extra careful in fitting, too. "BARRISTER" Black Walking Oxford $5.00. **"BARRISTER" Black Walking Outdoor $out** of time, we wear this outfit, postal model year in and year out, because $1 Thousands of men wear this roony, restful model year in and year out, because I couples smart style with urtmost comfort. Made of dull Black Calf, with rounded toe; medium arch; low broad heel and invisible cyelets. PECKHAM'S Do You Remember That Impulse You Did Not Obey? You Intended to take the University Daily Kansan But—You Delayed You can now read the Kansan's stories of Track, Baseball and other spring activities for SPECIAL OFFER UNTIL JUNE 6th $1.00 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN GLEE CLUB CONCERT DRAWS SMALL CROWD Girls Give an Excellent Program Before a Poor Audience With the best program it has ever given and with the poorest crowd that ever assembled to hear it, the Girls' Glee Club entertained a audience at night. Its half-night program was well-balanced, just the right length and with just enough solos to give the proper effect. Both the ensemble's singing and the solo work showed a painstaking preparation and evidenced much musical talent. The solos presented were exceptionally good, "Mifianwy" by Miss Mary Stanwaity standing out above the rest. It was the most pleasant performance with the exception of the last number, with Miss Cora Reynolds carrying the solo part and Prof. W. B. Downing leading the club. The girls were at their best in this number. "At Dawning" and "Hawkinson" were also appreciated. Of the ensemble numbers, the "Pfirms" Chorus and "What the Chimney nary the Firebird" Armstrong gave an excellent读物 The Armstrong gave an excellent读物 of an "Uren Remu" tale. ENTOMOLOGISTS TRYING TO EXTERMINATE MOTH Now is the time of year that the coding moth and other predatory insects are making life miserable for the farmer by feeding upon the blossoms and leaves of the budding fruit trees. Every year the loss is greater than the loss from all The department of entomology is making a study of the moth and will make an effort to drive it from the state. Spraying the trees when the blossoms are about two-thirds fallen will kill many of the pests before they have grown to such a size as to be dangerous. If the present warm spell continues the trees should be sprayed in about two weeks. ANYTHING WRONG WITH YOU? X RAY CAN TELL If you fear that your nose was broken when you missed that ball in the h. h. l. game, or if you are not of the baseball gender and got crippled playing hockey, it is a very simple matter to discover the extent of your injuries. Over in Blake Hall is an X-ray machine which is aiding and abetting the department of physical education in determining what has happened to the student with a crooked nose or an elbow that will not work. Four cases have been examined with the X-ray this year. The patient has been equipped for surgical anatomical examination and special tubes are held in reserve for the department of physical education which bears part of the expenses of the equipment. CALLS CROMWELL NARROW Thinka Englishman "Strong-armed" Those Differing in Beliefs From the Boston Transcript. In his little monograph on "Cromwellian Gardening," Dr. Gardiner describes the complete success of the Cromwellian method as follows: "In some sort Cromwell is best understood by fixing his relations to the two great tendencies of the Revolution. In his nature the destructive aims of Puritanism were most clearly revealed. He was intolerant of everything opposed to the higher order of spiritual religion, to the forms of evil which death, choked and hindered its development. With a strong arm he pronounced a distinct negative to everything persistently antagonistic to what he regarded as the interest of the people of God, of the Battle of Marston. Moor he rereported that with one of his officers; 'One thing lay on his spirit; that God had not suffered him to be any more the敌人 of His enemies.' "Armed with this faith, Cromwell himself struck blow after blow. He dashed down Laud's miter and Charles' throne; he was foremost in sending Charles himself to the scaffold; in later years he committed Parliament after parliament. Nor was it merely his blows were hard. It noticeable thing about them was that they were permanently successful. "Never again did there appear in England a persecuting Church supporting itself on royal absolutism; monarchy restoring its claim solely to divine right; a Parliament that had the colony, by which it had been conquered as well as the government by which it had been summoned. Constitutionalists might challenge the negative Voice as claimed Charles to obstruct inform of conform-well exercised it in right of form-fellow permanent requirements of the nation." Dally Reporter (to stude in jail)— Will you please give me your side of the story? Victim — I would like to, but I'm not at liberty. — Gargoyle. FINDS WAY TO TEST SOILS Professor Shull New Measures Pulling Power of Clay in Atmospheres To determine the pulling power of soil upon moisture in terms of atmospheres is a discovery made by Prof. Charles A. Shull, associate professor of physics as the result of two years constant experimenting upon soils by Professor Shull. Other physicists who mechanically means but were never successful. Professor Shull has found the solution of the problem by using seeds as testing apparatus. He used Riley county clay, a clay noted for its power of retaining moisture. By a series of experiments, first he filled the clay with water, then later with water, he determined the pulling power of a seed to be about 1000 atmospheres. Working with these figures he tested the Riley county soil and other types of soil, finding that some air dry soil holds water. Some dry soil does not hold forcing force. Professor Shull will next try sand, the lowest water bearing soil. Prof. L. J. Briggs, bio-physicist in the bureau of plant industry at Washington Professor Shulman will probably prove of great value. Haskell Party Postponed The reception which had to have been held by Haskell students at the Baptist church tomorrow night has been postponed one week. Haskell Party Postponed Send the Daily Kansan home. PROF. E. F. ENGEL GIVES PICNIC AT ENGELHEIM Prof. E, F. Engel entertained members of the department of German with a fruit blossom picnic at Engelheim last evening. A picnic supper was served in cafeteria style out under the fruit trees. The women she attended and targets were amused as they were by pitching horse a sport introduced to the faculty by Prof. W. W. Hawkins, recently of Missouri. Later they all gathered together and sang German songs until the moon came up and then they all walked back to town. Engelheim is a little fruit farm out Cap and gown pictures. Squires.— Adv. Engelheim is a little fruit farm out west of town which Professor Erik has taught. When he gets tired of teaching and wants to go back to the farm. Prof. W. J. Baugartner will take a number of students to the Puget Sound Marine Station this summer for investigation in biology. The work is open to university students. He has any training in biology, and costs include travel in the University. MARINE STUDENTS MUST SEE PROF. BAUMGARTNER The Christian Endeavor Society of the First Christian Church will give an entertainment at the church Friday evening for the benefit of Mr. Gulal, a native missionary of India, who is supported by the Society and its society. Gulal receives a salary of $30 a year which he says provides for all his wants. Gets $30 a Year Salary Students desiring are required to apply to Prof. Baumgartner at once. Black Helmets Meet The Black Helmet will meet tonight at 8:30 o'clock at the Acacia house. Send the Daily Kansan home. THEATRE VARSITY TODAY George Klein's Spectacular Attraction JULIUS CAESAR Admission 10c Six Reel Classic First Show, 7:45 Tomorrow: Shubert Presents Vivian Martin in "The Arrival of Perpetua". An Early Spring Sale of Tailored Suits LANGUAGE, LIFE AND TOMORROW The Lowest Prices Ever Made in April This is your opportunity To secure at a small price a suit desirable in every way, as to model, cloth and shade, a suit that is indispensible the entire season through. This Suit Sale Opens Friday Morning AllSizes--Misses', Women's and Extra Sizes Wool Suits that were $13.50 and $15, at $10.75 " " " " " 18.00 and 20 " 13.75 " " " " " 22.50 " 16.75 “ ” “ ” “ ” 25.00 “ ” 18.75 “ ” “ ” “ ” 27.50 “ ” 21.75 “ ” “ ” “ ” 30.00 to 35 “ ” 25.00 Silk Sweater Coats in Colors at $6.50 Inves. Bulline Hackman Soloist for the Irene Jonani The Lawrence Choral Union Announces Admission 25 cents Irene Jonam of the Chicago-Philadelphia Grand Opera Co. No seats reserved Chorus of 150 trained voices in a program of standard opera and cantata selections and part songs by eminent composers First "Pop" Concert Robinson Gymnasium, April 28 That the students in the mechanics department may be given instruction in the construction and assembling of machinery, the department of carpentry is working on pattern-making and assembling of furniture in Flower Shops. These patterns are to be kept permanently in order to give future students the benefit of similar instruction. Several of the patterns have already been constructed and will be cast as soon as the foundry department can get to them. Prepare Patterns Cap and gown pictures. Squires.—Adv. CASTLE ROLL Front 2 3/4 in. Back 1 3/4 in. BARKERCO BRAND 2 FOR 25¢ 2 FOR 25¢ MANUFACTURERS: WILLIAM BARKER CO., TROY, N.Y. Front 2 in. 2 FOR 25¢ HARGERCO BRAND 2 FOR 25¢ Only at Peckhams SHUBERT Wed. Mat., 500 to $1.60 Nights and Sat. Mat. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thurs. Fri. GREAT FIVE- STAR AGGRE- GATION in the NEW HENRIETTA NEXT—HIGH JINK8 Jack Chanty *WM. H.CRANE *THOS. W.ROSS *KLEENBLE *AMELIA BINGHAM *NABEL TALIJAFERRO Newhouse Symphony Orchestra Matinee Daily 2.45 All seats 10c Have a soda fountain in your home by ordering a case of soda water from McNish. Phones 198—Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. BOWERSOCK TODAY ARROW SHIRTS Sold exclusively by A Paramount Photoplay in Five Parts Featuring Max Figman in Johnson & Carl BASEBALL GOODS KENNEDY & ERNST Notice, Fraternities! Notice. Fraternities I have for lease some of the nicest rooms in town, with light, heat, hot and cold water—both furnished and unfurnished. If interested, call J. M. NEVILLE Stubbs Bldg., Opposite Court House—Phone, Bell 384 th Lawrence Pantatorium Phones 506 Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Lawrence Pantutorium Phone 506 Those Party Flowers Are Always Appreciated When They Come From THE FLOWER SHOP and We Are Always Pleased to Fill Your Orders 825 $\frac{1}{4}$ MASS. PHONES 621 Subscribe for the Daily Kansan Limeade, 5c at Barber's—Adv. Choice cigars at Barber's Drug Suspect. Call McNish for quantity rates on water.—Adv. Professional Cards J. F. BROCK, Optometrist, and Spine Surgeon of New York. 605 Madison St. 505 Madison St. Bell Phone 695. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diseases of the stomach, surgery and gynaecology, Suite 1, F. A. U. Bldg. Residence 1251 Ohio St. Both phones, sk. HARRY HEDRING M. D. Eyes, ear, say, noe C. B. Bickley, Phone, 813, Home U. B. Bickley, Phones, Hall 513, Home J. R. BICCHETT, M. D. D. D. 822 Breet. Beth. Both phones, office and residence. DR. H, L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires' studio. Both phones. A. J. ANDERSON, M. D., Office 715 Vt. S. Phones 124. DR. N. HAVES, 292 Mass. St. General practice. Also treats the eye and St. brain. DR. PETER D. PAULS, Osteopath, Office and residence, 7½ Eight St. General practice. Both phones Hours to 12,30; to 2, and 7 by 8 to 11am. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye ear and B. J. BELL. Died in Guaranteed. Dick B驳. Jewelers Plumbers Classified ED. W. PALSINGS, Engraver, Watchu- nke ed. Office, Bell Phone 711- .456- 3280, Bell Phone 711- .456-3280. Insurance PHONE KENNEDY PLUMING Co. face mask 854, Plumers Lamp., phone 858, Mash 854, lamps. FIRE INSURANCE, LOANS, and abstracta. E. J. Hilkley, People's bank Building. Bell 155; Home 262. FRANK E. BANKS, Inns, and abstracta. Building. Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK, 913 Mass PROTSCH "The Tailor" SPRING SUITING Box Stationery All Grades-All Prices McColloch's DrugStore BURT WADHAM'S "College Inn Barber Shop" B LAWRENCE Business College LARRIVÉE I am interested in good business college Kansas. I have a degree in Business Bank building by madden. Write for sample of Stampeotype note and a catalog. WATKINS' NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depository. FRANK KOCH "THE TAILOR" "THE TAILOR" Full Line of Spring Sutlage STUDENT HEADQUARTERS THEISIS BINDING Engraved and Printed Cards. Sheafer's Self-filling Fountain Pens. 744 Mass. Street. A. G. ALRICH 744 Mass. Street. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN You are the man we expect to show through our extensive display of exclusive new suit models tomorrow. territory Brands Clothes It will be a pleasure for us to show you whether you buy or not. We are proud of it. New Glen Urquhart plaids, "Watch-your-step" checks, in fact, every pattern that's new. O Say! you must see the new Piping Rock Flannel. We are showing it exclusively in Lawrence. Regardless of the size or style you may desire there's a suit here to SUIT you. The prices are made to suit your purse, too. $15 $25 Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUT-FITTERS See See Window Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUTFITTERS Window Making Good Whatever you get out to win—honor in classes, leadership on trach, diamond or gridron, train on Coca-Cola Full of vim—every drop of it supremely wholesome and good Delicious—Refreshing Thirst-Quenching THE COCA-COLA CO. Atlanta, Ga. Whenever you see an Arrow think of Coca-Cola PLANNING HOT TIME FOR HIGH SCHOOL TRACK MEN Fraternities and Clubs to Welcome Young Athletes Who Run Here May 1 The entertainment of high school visitors to be for the interscholastic track meet May 1 will be the most extensive ever attempted at the University, if the plans of Manager W. O. Hamilton are worked out. At basketball tournament the girls receive a free pass of the game this time the boys will be taken care of, and no girls will be here to detract. The plan which is being worked out now is that every high school visitor is to be a guest at some fraternity or club house during his stay in Lawrence. In having them mingle with the University students Manager Hamilton believes they will get a good idea of student life and work. This does not necessitate that they must be taken around for meals, but simply to visit the students some time during the day. The necessity of having high school students entertained by the students of the University has come to be realized as necessary. In previous years the athletic association provided meals and sometimes a banquet. Manager Hamilton expects to take the question up with the fraternities Monday night and with the clubs as soon as possible so that every K. U. student can take a hand in the entertainment. PENNSYLVANIA RELAY RACES Team Entries Number 341-The Championship Competitors The largest number of entries even made for the University of Pennsylvania raley race has been made this year. There are 21 relays, 95 college teams are entered, in prep. schools 56, in high schools 109, in grammar schools 71, and parochial schools 10, a total of 341. The following have been entered: One mile relay—Illinois, Northwestern, Columbia, Harvard, Cornell Two miles replay—Illinois, Chicago, Princeton, Dartmouth, Harvard, Cornell. Four miles relay—Illinois, Massachusetts Tech., Michigan, Chicago, Wisconsin, Cornell, Kansas, Pennsylvania. Freshmen one-mile relay—Stevens, Columbia, Pennsylvania. Medley sprint repaint—Chicago, Leibigh, Harvard, Pennsylvania. Medley, distance relay-Chicaco, Bhichin, Princeton, Harvard, Pennsyl- burgh, U.S.A. Send the Daily Kansan home. The High School Student who feels an interest in such a vocation as Mechanical Engineering From early morning until late in the evening the cry of "serve," the patter of rubber shod feet and the twang of ball on racket are to be heard around the tennis courts down by McCook Field. At least 100 players are accommodated each day on the nine courts. should be encouraged in knowing that the growth of industry, and the modern striving after efficiency, open a broad way of opportunity to the able mechanical engineer. He is always in demand. Dix Teenchen, captain of this year's Varsity team and a member of the team which won the championship of the state in the doubles at Wichita Falls. He will form Elvin Cowdill, freshman College, is also playing a steady game. His position is often one of large responsibility. He is well paid. Students and Faculty Men Enjoying Spring Weather NINE TENNIS COURTS BUSY A four-year course in mechanical engineering with the advantages of fully equipped shops and laboratories, prepares the student to enter this broad field under the best conditions. Lawrence, Kansas VOCATION EDITOR University Daily Kansan Owing to the fact that seven of the courts were treated to a new surface last spring they are not in the best condition. Hamilton has provided a supply of tiles and these will be put down in the near future. This will do away with the muddy spots in the courthouse, even a source of trouble in the past. OVER on the faculty courts Prof. C. A.Dyktra looks like the best bet, while Prof. Arthur Mitchell and Prof. Dykstra are playing well finished games. in the annual handicap tournament which was held last Saturday, J. B. Whelan defeated Carl Anderson in the finals. "CALL YOUR CLUF" GOLF TOURNAMENT THIS WEEK The Oread Golf Club will hold its annual, "Call Your Club" tournament, Friday and Saturday. In this tournament each player must announce to his opponent before each club he will use on the next shot. The Golf Club has decided to allow any student to join this spring without paying the usual $3 membership. All that will be charged is $3 for dues. A temporary list of handicaps has been arranged for all except the cup tournament. A new list will be made for it from the score cards of the first tournaments. The list as made out now is: Scratch, Anderson; one stroke, A. Sterling, Kitchen, Altman; five strokes, Allen, Briggs, M. W. Sterling, Whelan; seven strokes, Osborne, Mac Murray, Stratton; nine strokes, Burns, Hesson, Lindley, Miller, Reed, Strong, Warren, Wade, Olinger, Foster, Robertsen, Smith, Haskins, Burgess, Latimer. All others fifteen strokes. ABILENE HIGH WINS CUP IN DICKINSON CO Abilene High School—Abilene high school won the cup for Class A events in the fourth annual Dickinson County track meet held at Abilene April 17. Dickinson County high school held another entries in Class A. In Class A events, Gish of Abilene broke two county records, winning the 120-yard high hurdles in 17-2-5 seconds and setting a record of 5 feet 4 inches for the high jump. Gish also won first in the broad jump. Taylor of Abilene ran high with a score of 1-10 second from the 1914 record. Moninger of D. C. H. S. set a record of 55 seconds for the quarter. Kyle of Abilene winning second. The mile was also won by Moninger with Mounch of Abilene, freshman, second. Kyle of Abilene was highly ranked with 18 scores by Moninger of D. C. H. S. with 11. The final score was, Abilene, 63-1-3; D. C. H. S., 46-1-3; Herington 7-1-3. J. W. French, 12, coached the Abilene team. Enterprise high school won the cup for Class B events and Abilene in district state school meet. There were 160 athletes entered in the meet. Shorty Fowler of S. A. C. A., was referee and starter. Salary - June, July. August selling a new practical necessity. Reference for reliability required. Give name and street address. K. Daily Kansan. Adv. Ablene will enter 10 men in the district meet at Abilene April 30. Winners of first place will be sent to the state meet at Manhattan. A few men will be entered in the invitation meeting at Lawrence May 7. **Ladies' Tailoring** Mrs. Morgan up to date dressmaking and ladies' party dresses. Prices very reasonable. 1321 Tennessee. Phone 1146 W. Cumberland. Ladies' Tailoring Kodakers we develop and finish in one day, Squires! Studio...Adv. Hyball Ginger Ale. The best by test, McHench. Phone 119—Adv. Salary—June, July, August selling a new practical necessity. Reference for reliability required. Give name direct address. R. Dally Kanan. -Ady. Arrow Collars, the largest, most complete stock in the city. "Some Shirts" . Everyone who has taken a look at the new Arrow Shirts recently has made the same remark, The shirts this season are worthy of exclamation. From the artistic silks, in all their freshness of pattern, to the Madras and Sosettes and other typical summer fabrics in new designs at... $1.50 The lines are bound to please the most fastidious. In fact we're the shirt store of Lawrence. Anything and everything, no matter what your wants might be, can easily be found here— $1 to $6 Johnson&Carl Johnson & Carl Exclusive Agents for Arrow Shirts. "Egg"givesyou "Some Shine" Houks Barber Shop Buy your tickets now for Soph Hop at Check Stand in Fraser, or from HOYT NELSON CORA SHINN ALFRED WIETERS E. L. ROLFS ANNETTE ASHTON GENE GEMPEL ALBERT IRWIN JOHN MILLER LUCIEN DYCHE DOE BARNARD HILMAR APPEL GLADYS LUCKAN FRED McEWEN FRANK HAITHBRINI NEWT DILLEY BESS ULRICH RUSS COWGILL GEORGE KAMPERT MARGARET HEIZER WILLARD GLASCO SHERMAN KELLY MARCH PATTERSON HENRY McCURDY EDGAR VAN CLEEF W. R. DAVIS FRED RODKEY M. BOOTH J. M. SCOTT JAS. CARTER MARION REID A. N. MURPHEY JOHN NILES Inter-fraternity Baseball League Schedule
Phi BetaSigma PhiPi UAlpha ChiP A. D.
Phi BetaRE A D THEApril 7 April 26April 17 May 8April 24 May 15April 10 May 1
Sigma PhiApril 7 April 26DAILY KANSANApril 13 May 4April 20 May 11April 23 May 14
Pi U.April 17 May 8April 13 May 4FOR THEApril 8 April 29April 21 May 12
Alpha Chi SigmaApril 24 May 15April 20 May 11April 8 April 29LATEST OFApril 15 May 6
Phi Alpha DeltaApril 10 May 1April 23 May 14April 15 May 6April 15 May 6SPORT DOPE
r20.21 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SENIOR MASS MEETING TO BE HELD TUESDAY NUMBER 137. Chancellor Strong Has Ap pointed Time for Class of '15 to Settle Questions TO DECIDE UPON MEMORIAL Chancellor Strong wishes to see every senior at 11:30 o'clock next Tuesday morning in the chapel. Seniors who have classes at that hour may be called to attend the order that they may attend the most important senior meeting of the year. Will Act on Proposed Plans for Gif to University—Consider Faculty Caps and Gowns, Too Don Joseph, president of the senior class, said this morning that those who are preparing to graduate this spring cannot miss the class meeting. Prof. J. N. Van der Vries and Chancellor Strong will talk on the matter of having a faculty as well as seniors and the question probably will be decided. Members of the senior class believe that the faculty will be robed Willis G. Whitten, chairman of the senior memorial committee, is ready to submit the committee's decision in writing to his board of trustees meeting, and he will have drawings, plans, specifications and an estimated cost of the concrete bulletin board that he will install. In any affair that has served as a place of notification for many years. Smoke Pipe of Peace? Petitions Are Being Circulated to Have Him Come Next Fall WANT TO HEAR ROBINS AGAIN? Joseph says that pipes have been ordered for the "pipe of peace smoker" with the juniors on class day but additional plans for that function will be discussed at a meeting while they will be held durign commencement week will receive some attention and seniors who do not attend the meeting will lose out in some information that may cost them much time and trouble to attain that reason it is essential that every senior be present, Joseph says. TALK ABOUT ESTES PARK AT Y. M. C. A. SUNDAY Do you want Raymond Robins to come back to the University when it opens next fall? You can go into Con Hoffmann's office and sign a petition which will be sent to him. Mr. Robins made such an appeal to the students during the March Museum visit, Ms. M.C. A. is trying to secure his services for a part of the first week of school next fall. A big mass meeting is being planned for the first Sunday after the opening. An Estes Park meeting will be held by the University Y. M. C. A, in Myers Hall at 4:30 o'clock Sunday afternoon. Con Hoffmann will outline a day's program at the annual Rocky Mountain Conference. Leland Thompson, Willard Burton, Leland Jenks, Ernest Blincoe, and Earl K. Nixon, have attended conferences in previous years, will make short talks. A delegation of at least thirty men is expected to represent K. U. at the conference. Representatives ofcol- universities in nine states will be there. No Penn Relay Team On account of the poor showing made by the Jayhawk track squad at Des Moines, Manager Hamilton did well against the Hawks. Penn Games at Philadelphia this week. Kansas, although breaking the former Drake record, was beaten by four teams only one of which, Michigan State, did not participate against the schools of the east. Hask t to be Sold J. R. Wise, superintendent of Haskell, denies that the government is to sell the school to the state for use as an agricultural school. He discredits the report coming from Manhattan, to the effect that the Haskell school will be sold to the state and combined with the University. The Plymouth Guild of the Congregational church will give a spring party tonight in the church parlor students of the University are invited. No "Sunken Read" Now Workmen have been busy this week liking the "sunken road" in front of the house. They've been new overeing it with blue grass soil. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 23, 1915. Misa Florence Jones, of Manhattan, is visiting Helen Hershberger at the Pier. HEALS BOTH BODY AND SOUL Dr. Naismith Preaches as Sideline To make a hobby of the ministry is unusual. But that is what Dr. James Naimish, professor of physical education, gives as his favorite Once upon a time the doctor hoped to enter the ministry and he attended seminars. The students feared it would be no financially successful career for a young man to pursue. So instead of curing the soul of a man with mental illness, has made a success of medicine. However, the doctor was never fully released from his first venture. He has always liked the ministry and today is able to address a congregation and make his personality felt. He met a friend of Arthur Capper as chaplain for the first infantry of Kansas National Guards. They Want College Day Following are the names of students who have pledged themselves to take part in the activities of College Day if, it is granted by the Universi- Francis H. Arnold Aileen Alderson Slyvia Adams Harold Brown Gladys Bitzer Ketel Dorothy Brown Marie Buchanan John E. Curran Erna Fischer Stephen Fahrring R. D. Friend Johann Loeffler Cela Gillett Pearl Gillock William M Glasc Mable Harper Pearl Hudson H. B. Hunt Ogden S. Jones Charlotte Kreek Helm Lock Mildred Light Perceived S. Krieg Francie McCall Inez M. McKimno Marjorie Rickord Mary J. Johnson J. M. Johnson Marion C. Reid L. H. Puckett Don Joseph W. Wingert Raymond Clappare Stella Bedell H. H. Johnson Jane Weaver A. Nordstrum L. D. Luckles Avery F. Olnley A. K. Pringle A. J. Treibelwood C. A. Randolph E. R. Arndt Lynn Shanton O. M. Larimore Barbara Abel Carolyn McNutt Helene Thomas Hugh Hill Eloise Stevenson Walter Gill Frank Beeson S. A. Johnson E. E. Young R. A. Hull John Thosno John D. Elliot Ward Barrel Helen Hempel Helen Coolidge Beulah Cress Florence Rhudy Frances McCune Amelina Babcock Herbert Howland Carrie Weaver Marion V. Barret H. B. Bagret L. Beamer D. Bigelow Camille Cochrane A. G. Barteldes C. F. Butcher R. H. Cassity R. C. Colley Frank White R. E. Busenark John G. Cope Will D. Fleiss Wil F. Reed J. P. Groh G. W. Jarrah At Morning Prayers Elected Principal E. Rex Moody, Junior College, has been the principal of the Bucyrus Kansas high school. Hareld Robinson Lena Zodgers Jane Sheets Jackie Mathieu R. O. Smith Lucile Sterling B. R. Taylor Mildred Thomas Theo Thompson Dick Treweenkorn R. O. Smith Frank Weknitz Tom Woodbury Ethel Bobury Jay Hargelt John M. Henry Dick Treweenkorn V. E. Timmins C. A. Ritter F. W. Koester R. O. Dyche Don Davis Clayton Moore Lacy Young J. C. Parker Fried Bowers, Jr. E. R. Brawer Gladys Henry Beck V. E. Timmins C. A. Ritter F. W. Koester R. O. Dyche Don Davis Clayton Moore Lacy Young J. C. Parker Fried Bowers, Jr. E. R. Brawer Gladys Henry Beck V. E. Timmins C. A. Ritter F. W. Koester R. O. Dyche Don Davis Clayton Moore Lacy Young J. C. Parker Fried Bowers, Jr. E. R. Brawer Gladys Henry Beck V. E. Timmins C. A. Ritter F. W. Koester R. O. Dyche Don Davis Clayton Moore Lacy Young J. C. Parker Fried Bowers, Jr. E. R. Brawer Gladys Henry Beck V. E. Timmins C. A. Ritter F. W. Koester R. O. Dyche Don Davis Clayton Moore Lacy Young J. C. Parker Fried Bowers, Jr. E. R. Brawer Gladys Henry Beck V. E. Timmins C. A. Ritter F. W. Koester R. O. Dyche Don Davis Clayton Moore Lacy Young J. C. Parker Fried Bowers, Jr. E. R. Brawer Gladys Henry Beck V. E. Timmins C. A. Ritter F. W. Koester R. O. Dyche Don Davis Clayton Moore Lacy Young J. C. Parker Fried Bowers, Jr. E. R. Brawer Gladys Henry Beck V. E. Timmins C. A. Ritter F. W. Koester R. O. Dyche Don Davis Clayton Moore Lacy Young J. C. Parker Fried Bowers, Jr. E. R. Brawer Gladys Henry Beck V. E. Timmins C. A. Ritter F. W. Koester R. O. Dyche Don Davis Clayton Moore Lacy Young J. C. Parker Fried Buff Speaker, Rev. E. B. Backus, pastor of Unitarian church, Lawrence. General Subject: "Neglected Viruses." Monday: "Symmetry" Tuesday: "Seriousness" Wednesday: "Insularity" Thursday: "Intellectual Integrity" Friday: "Appreciation." PLANS FOR SOPH HOP PROGRESSING RAPIDLY Informal Event of Second Year Class Taking Form— Comes Next Friday Night "SOPH HOP APRIL 30TH." Boldly emblazoned on a huge white canvass, in black letters three feet high, the above legend greets each student as he enters the campus. The sign has been up for a week, and is but one of the many devices being used by the Hop management to press it upon everybody's mind that this summer the gymnasium year is to occur in Robinson Gymnasium just a week from tonight. Preparations for the Hop goes forward rapidly each day, and, according to Larry Miller, sophomore president, the arrangements made thus far seem to indicate that the party will rival the rock star in decorations will be unique. Haley's orchestra is to furnish the music, and Wagstaff will cater. If that's not a guarantee of top-notch entertainment, says Miller, "I'll take a ride in the Engineer." It may be say that Wagstaff furnishes the music is like stamming 'stelleting on silver.' Rehearsals of he farce, "A Box of Monkeys," are held daily, under the direction of Don C. Burnett. The cast is as follows: Mrs. Ondie Jones, Ita Hillsman; Lady Guildhoney, Jill Heywood; Dora Lockett; T ted Rabin; Alton Gumbiner; Chancey Oglethper, Henry McCurdy. In addition to the farce, several surprise stunts are being planned to furnish amusement for the guests, the management, how-refreshs, refuses to state just what they are. Tickets for the Hop are being sold by a committee of thirty-two students, or they may be secured at the cheek stand in Fraser Hall between 8:30 and 9:30 daily. Seniors are requested to turn in their invitations at this time, in exchange for tickets to the Hop. PET, REX, AND MULL DELIVER YOUR LETTERS Team Work is Their Motto Pet and Rex are their names. Of course you have noticed them many times as they helped Grant Mull, the postman, deliver the mail on the Hill. The joringg black horse is known as jackson and chaggy brown and white collie as Rex. At 8:15 o'clock each morning they make their first delivery. Their approach is loudly heralded by Reks who will be on a walkway position in the government service, keeps an ever-watchful eye on Pet to see that she conducts herself as a trusted employee of Uncle Sam, sends the mail to the various buildings. Rex also acts as the official starter for Pet. He receives the signal from Mr. Mull and a gentle nip at the horse's legs means it is time to go. FINALE TO DEBATING SEASON K. U. Society Ends Work by Making Plans for Picnic A committee was chosen to make arrangements for a picnic later. The K. U. Debating Society held its last meeting of the year last night in Fraser Hall. The subject for discussion was: Resolved: That the home rule charter system should be adopted in Kansas cities over twenty-five thousand population. Affirmative: Railway Trust, negative: Frierer, Strong. The decision was unanimous in favor of the affirmative. O. H. Burns and Harold Mattoon made short talks on the triangular debate. The following officers were elected for the first term of next year: president, O. H. Burns; vice-president, Lyle Anderson; secretary, W. Angle; treasurer, Raymer M. Quistone The University Orchestra will give a concert in Fraser Hall Tuesday night, April 27, at 8 o'clock. Thirty students have been practicing for the entertainment since the fall conference, and the director, promises a good program. UNIVERSITY ORCHESTRA *GIVES CONCERT TUESDAY* Two solos are booked for the ever ing, one on the piano by Nim Kangan, senior Fine Arts and one by William Dalton, instructor in the School of Fine Arts, on the cello. Student tickets will admit. Applicants Exceed Scholarships So far only five scholarships for women have been received for the eighteen applicants. Those in charge are in hopes they will have more to offer soon. Applicants Exceed Scholarships CHICKEN PIE BRIGADE READY TO STORM GYM The Kanza Club announces the pledging of Eugene D. Afford, freshman, to serve as the director. Faculty Supper Will be Attended by 100 Professors on the Hill Eighty-three faculty members have confessed! That is, eighty-three masters of human destiny have confessed that their mouths are watering for chicken pie, such as will be served at the buffet tables in the cafeteria to be held Monday evening at 6 o'clock sharp in Robinson gymnasium. Prof. E. F. Engel, chairman of the invitation committee, said this morning that he is gratified by the fine response made by members of the faculty. He said, however, that the committee hopes to have at least 100 at the supper and that all members of the committee should do so before 8 o'clock tonight, as it will be practically impossible to accommodate anyone after that. Prof. H, F. Harrington is training the milk-fed, yellow-legged pullets that are born in a plum condition. In fact, he says that they are about the niftiest bunch of feathered bipes be ever found among those animals that he is some idude of fowls. The program which is to be presented between courses has been completed. A number of University young women, under the direction of Dr. Alice L. Goetz, will present some folk dances and minuets. Chancellor Frank Strong and Prof. A. T. Walker will be the speakers of the evening. Their talks will conceive democracy in multifidilitate, and will be followed by an open discussion of the subject by the other members of the faculty. Guests will assemble in the men's gymnasium shortly before supper is served. This function is the first of its kind ever held at the University of Kansas and those in charge hope to make it a successful event that it will become an annual event. ENOUGH GERMS AT K. U. TO KILL WORLD But They're Safe in Test Tubes It is just a prosaic-looking refrigerator, standing in the bacteriology laboratory on the top floor of Snow Hall, yet it holds enough bacteria of a disease in its little tubes to wipe out the entire population of the world. Typhoid, tuberculosis, malaria, dysentery, diphtheria and all the rest are represented in the collection. Housed in their labeled containers is a large collection of the cause of science. Gathered carefully by skillful hands these bacteria, whose ancestry have killed more men than have all the wars of history, are being used not to destroy them but for the manufacture of vaccines and serums. PLAYING GOLF TOURNAMENT "Call Your Club." Second of Series Being Given by Oread Club The "call your club" tournament, the second of a series of spring handicap tournaments held by the Oread Golf Club, will be held today and tomorrow. In this kind of tournament each player must announce to his opponent before each shot which club he will use on the next shot and he must use the club he has played during years that has always proved one of the most interesting of the novel golf tournaments. A large number of the club members will go over the eighteen holes today although the weather is not the most promising. The rain of yesterday made the turf soft and ideal for golfing in case the overhead conditions are favorable. No entry fee is charged for this tournament and the scores pete either today or tomorrow. The scores made in this tournament and the other preliminary tournaments will be used to figure up the handicap for the final tournament for the Carroll trophy which begins May 10 PROF, HULL SPEAKS ON "NEW MONROE DOCTRINE Prof. W. I. Hull, professor of international law at Swarthmore College, will speak in Fraser chapel on "The Fallout Lock on" The "New Monroe House." Professor Hull has written several books in international law subjects and is working for world peace. Her international Polity Club Tuesday night. Sigma Phi Sigma will entertain tomorrow night with its spring party at Eckert Hall. The group of town guests present some who were students on the Hill last year. Send the Daily Kansan home. SORORITY WOMN RESTRICT DATES No Steadies at This Place It's really true—winter has went and spring is here. And with the incoming of the warm weather and the outcoming of dog-tooth violets, low shoes and lower necked dresses one more time, University has passed a ruling that will create little commotion among some of the visitors at that place. Noting with pain and humiliation that all the members are getting married before finishing school, this is what we want to do of the members who do not live in Lawrence can have more than one date with the same fellow from now until June, 4. And, more than that, that date is not a week-and-week date rule are to be enforced. Later: All this certainly sounds very well and will make the hearts of the fond parents back in Whistleville bent with joy, but word comes suddenly that the ruling has been declared null and void for lack of an enforcing authority. "WITCHING HOUR" NEXT YEAR Dramatic Club Plans to Stage Play for Annual Production in 1916 "The Witching Hour" will be the featured performance by the University Dramatic Club next year if present plans of the management are approved. The club will under advisement by the committee, but final decision in the matter has not yet been made. "We want to attempt something really big next year," says Ms. Scalzi, head of the department of public speaking. "Our production of 'The Man From Home' seems to warrant that the club is capable of taking a step in advance—and 'The Witching Hour' looks like the play we are planning." "The Witching Hour" is a drama in four acts by Augustus Thomas. Jack Brookfield, the hero, is a Kentuckian, warm of heart, ready of purse, chivalrous. At his house the tragedy of murder takes place; a boy, frenzied by the sight of a cats eye wearing a crown, is driving cats. The cat's eye has exercised a distressing influence upon generations of his family. Thus begins the story, and it is carried forward with strength and dramatic power. It is filled with the light of a new idea; telepathy, mental suggestion, and hypnotism playing important parts. The story is gripping, and offers an excellent medium for the display of real dramatic ability. HOOFING OUT TO FRISCO Eastern Football Man Walks Across Continent on Wager Robert M. Herr, left halfback on last year's football team at the Baltimore Polytechnic School and a famous lacrosse player was in Lawrence last night on a "hike" he is leading the way for with a companion left Baltimore February 14, each taking a different route and if they reach San Francisco by July 4th they will each receive $500 from a Baltimore manufacturing firm, which made this offer to the men for advertising purposes. Should one of them fail to set and the other one fail, the successful man will receive $1000. Herv has lost all trace of the other man but thinks he is aheath of his own. THAT YELLOW WATER NOT AS BAD AS IT LOOK Lawrence city water won't hurt you. The water laboratory gave out the statement this morning that the water is free from any injurious bacteria. The color is due to ferric oxide of iron, or iron rust. When drawn from the ground the water is clear. It contains a large amount of ferrous oxide of iron which is colorless. When exposed to the air the iron oxidizes and becomes yellow. This iron could be removed with a water softening plant. DELIVER ANNOUNCEMENTS FROM THE CHECK STA The senior announcements which have been ordered during the week will be delivered Tuesday and Wednesday at the check stand in Fraser. No orders for announcements will be taken later than Tuesday. Still Postponing That Walk Still Postponing That Walk "Work on the proposed walk between Fraser and Hall has been postponed until the new entrance to Fraser Hall is completed," said John M. Shea, superintendent of buildings and grounds, this morning. "With this entrance to Fraser Hall, we have all the work we can attend to." Ames Game Called Off The Ames game scheduled for yesterday afternoon was canceled because of rain. The next games will be with the Aggies at Manhattan. MILITARISM A FEATURE OF ENGINEERS PARADE Krupp Guns and Armored Motor Cars Take Prominent Place in Pageant LAWS HAVE "MORNING WATCH" Daddy Haworth Plays "Tipperary" on Dish Pan While Riding in "Fierce Arrow" — Daddy Haworth a Star It was not so successful however, in keeping its neutrality on straight for in the procession of fourteen floats, three were decidedly militaristic. Aside from exhibiting a pickaninny garped with a smile taking his morning bath and the "rising sun" float perpetrated by the Laws, the Engineers' parade contained no startling breaches of etiquette. The procession left Marvin Hall with the band tooting three different tunes in unison. The dignity of the pageant was disposed of early by putting Mrs. Eustace Brown, Chancellor Strong and Dean P. F. Walker in the car and bunching the cars of a well-known make behind preliminaries out of the way, the "Beta Fierce-Arrow" came containing chiefly Daddy Haworth playing "Tipperary" on a dish-pan. Next the Civils pushed a bridge constructed of canvas. Four cars followed carrying the electrical freshmen and the mechanical freshmen float. "King Cole" was the name of the four-wheeled mine that kept two men busy reviving its victims with the "pullmotor." The architects, disdaining the frivolities of their brother Engineers, erected a pergola of Doric columns around which roses were twined. This float was easily the prettiest in the parade. Krupps Get Advertising Arthur Johnson's forty-pound progeny earned honorable mention by sitting in a bath tub under pretense of bathing in Lawrence city water. The Krupps violated American neutrality by allowing the chemicals, electricals, and mechanicals to show their armored cars and heavy gun models. The noise of the artillery however, failed to live up to its appraisal. The firing mechanism pearing mechanism worked excellently although sometimes the shots were fired before the gun barrel was elevated above the wall of the car. Mrs. Eustace Brown and Chancellor Frank Strong were considerably placed ahead of the Law's "Morning Watch" float in the procession. One of the horses pulling the float dropped dead at Thirteenth and Mississippi streets. No reason is given for its death. Three Hurt in Collision E. C. Arnold, F. A. Madden and George Kampert, Engineers, were all slightly bruised in a motor collision about 10 o'clock this morning at the corner of Ninth and Indiana. The men were returning from down town with gasoline for the electrical's float when the accident occurred. The car was completely overturned with two of the men pinned under it. They were seated and lined his shoulder, and Madden and Kampert received a few painful bruises. Sixty dollars will cover the damages done the car. The driver of the other car was uninjured and no damage done his machine. Two Hundred at Banquet Two hundred engineers were present at the big banquet in the Gym last night. Prof. Goldwin Goldsmith was toastmaster for the occasion and all the speakers scheduled were Santa Fe from Topanga. Each department contributed with a little stunt to the evening's entertainment. Dance Winds-up Day Tonight's dance in the Gym will be the grand finale of the Engineers' festivities. The music, furnished by Haley's orchestra of Kansas City will commence at 9 o'clock. The man-made feature of the program and decorations other than that an unusually good program is scheduled an dthat the setting for the Gym will be that of an Engineer's camp. Punch will be served during the intermission. The affair is to be held on Friday from 10 a.m. to being sold at 50 cents and will be on sale at the door for any who delayed buying their green tags earlier. Pi Kan Party Prevents Game The Pan-Hellenic baseball game between the Phi Psis and Pi Kappa Alphas which was to have been played on Hamilton Field this afternoon has been postponed because of the formal party which the latter is giving tonight. A date for the game will be set within a few days. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF EDITORIAL STAFF John M. Henry ... Editor-in-Chief Raymond Haupt ... Supervisor Editor Helen Hayes ... Associate Editor William Cady ... Exchange Editor BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS STAFF J. W. Dyche...Business Manager REPORTORIAL STAFF Leon Harsh Gilbert Clayton Charles Wheatley Charles Sweet Elmer Arndt Louis Dahlquist Louis Puckett Chasier Patterson GAL STAFF John M. Gilliamer John M. Glasermer Don Dawar Carolyn McNutt Moore Nieland Harry Murray C. A. Browne Bowie Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office 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. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate at UCI, to go further than merely printing the text of courses on the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be generous; to have more serious problems to wiser heads, in all, to help students identify the students of the University. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Fair Play and Accuracy Bureau Prof. H. T. Hill...Faculty Member Don Joseph...Student Member Judy Jayne...Secretary If you find a mistake in statement or impression in any of the columns of the Daily Mail, report it to the HR department of the Daily Mail. He will instruct you as to further procedure. FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1915 THE REASON WHY One of the reasons advanced by the Senate for turning down the College Day was that it thought a few students who wanted a holiday were the ones doing the agitating. These "agitators" have now spent more time in planning the proposition than the holiday itself would grant. Furthermore, if any group of students want a holiday what is to hinder their taking it? The rules regarding cuts are not so stringent as to prevent—their giving up one class. If it is true that but a part of our education comes from books, and the rest from association, then College Day, with its mixing, picnic spirit is a part of our University education. The view taken by the Senate is wrong. College Day is not being advocated to get out of four or five recitations, but for the purpose of cultivating unity and harmony in the big School. Leaving out the facts that the Engineers have two holidays apiece, and the Laws and Pharmics one apiece, the College, with the largest enrollment in the University, should be given a chance to get acquainted with itself. That is why College Day should be. (AN OFFICE DISAGREEMENT) Write an editorial showing the high school graduate and prospective first year men at the University the desirability and necessity of having a direct goal in view when entering the university. Explain how their minds about being lawyers, journalists, etc., before coming to K. U..J. M. H. I can't do it, John Henry, for it seems to me this is a thing that should be checked rather than encouraged. My idea of a college education is not that it should necessarily fit you to make a living the day you step out into the world with a sheepskin nailed on your back. Yet this is exactly what this plan would encourage the high school man to do. It would be inviting him to come into a little groove at the great University of Kansas and confine himself too narrowly to that groove. Too many K. U. men and women are in that apathetic, almost tragic condition right now. Too many of them are wearing a triangle between home, the library and the class room, seeing little or nothing of the Greater University, in the effort to commercialize their residence at this institution. In absorbing all this dollar-and-cent training which the University can give, many of us, probably the most of us, are allowing one of the greatest of opportunities to slip. We deliberately turn down the chance to study men and women and substitute for it a knowledge of formulae or "logs" or what not, so long as it is in our own particular curvature. We neglect communistic training for individualistic. In the words of James we do not, "Learn to know a good man when we see him." We go out into the world without the ability to analyze men. As a result many of us fall in our duties of citizens. If the college man is to become a constructive leader in the community he must have more than this specialized training. But it is not necessary to go out into the world to point to specific examples. If more were here for a general education and less for a technical training, the present problem of student government would not be so engrossing. At present, the University of Kansas students are the only ones in this wide country, who are seriously considering giving up student government—many admitting that they have made a failure of it, while at other institutions, such as Wisconsin it is a great success. No, John Henry, I'd advise every one of them to come here for at least a couple of years before specializing. If possible I'd urge them to take an A. B. first, but that is not always practicable. This isn't an idea shot at half cock. It is sound fact—witness the number of professional colleges which are being made graduate schools. Look at the number of law schools which require two, three and four years of college work before admission. Medical schools are in the same turn of mind and schools of journalism are rapidly moving in that direction. It is to be doubted whether there is more than one high school boy in a hundred, who at the age of 19, can aptly decide upon his life work E. R. C. The baseball season these days is mostly in the air. If once you fail remember the Braves. Chasing the Glooms Nor is the K. U. team so jitney either. Thaw may not be crazy, but we'll bet that by this time he is thoroughly peeved. And we didn't give Gen. Vic, a salute. Revenge is sweet. Bryan may be a prohibitionist but he will have some task in proving himself not intemperate. Perhaps the blindness of love is responsible for the numerous shocks accorded porch passersby since the event of spring. Pandora's Box "We have to be in by eight o'clock," you say as you are "idly paddling down." Even a canoe trip or an auto ride shows a man's pluck and the right kick. "By eight o'clock? Well, we have thirty-five minutes to do it in," the other man will say. "If you will just spend two minutes of those paddles, we can do it." The man who is paying no attention at all to you in his effort to reach the dock in time is really giving you lots more fun, not to mention keeping you on your toes with a strict landlady. And your breathless hurrying is lots of fun. He makes you carry the pillows and kodak and other paraphernalia up from the landing place while he carries the canoe. And your wild dash to the car and the run up the Hill is more engaging when you land on your north in time. TWO MEN "We can never do it," one man will say, the kind who feels much more inclined towards leaning back and enjoying the moonrise and the dark water than working his muscles and getting hot. The lazy man sits back in comfort and thinks you can't help but enjoy his conversation and witticisms more than you would a long silent pull for you. The boss's rules are more than compensated for by the pleasure of his company. And with that he takes off his coat, rolls up his sleeves, and bends to the work. Perhaps he'd rather enjoy the night air in idle drifting, but he doesn't let that interfere with his steady paddling. The lazy jaint up the Hill is so fraught with qualms of conscience at being late that you don't enjoy it at all. Student Opinion Manager W. O. Hamilton said yesterday that he is in favor of giving the freshmen baseball team sweaters and class numerals. This, of course, will be left for the committee to decide, but why shouldn't they give numerals? Numerals are given in all the other major sports. It gives the men an incentive to work harder and costs little but it. The university is demanding that you should make the most out of it when the only hindrance is a few dollars required to buy sweaters that the men have really earned. Editor Kansan: From the K. U. Zoo J. K. THE "COLLEGE" MAN The college wise man is a fearsome creature. Especially to the hopelessly ignorant girl student, he is a thing to wonder at. He is usually tall and lean and distinguished looking. He can come slouching into class and hunch up in a seat on the front row, and proceed to go to sleep. At least to the uninformed, he appears asleep. Then the professor can pounce upon him and fire the hardest question you ever heard of ever before. You see, in his vision, but no! His soul comes in from out of the tree tops, and he tells you something that not even the professor had heard about. Of course he gets . ONE in his quizzes, and when he sees the pitiful THREE that you tried so hard to get, and that you are feeling grateful for, he smiles a far up smile, and makes you feel that he thinks that is very good considering that you are only a girl. Some time when you make a fierce mistake in class, and are all covered with confusion, he smiles at you that same tolerating smile, and remarks, that are you trying to take this course or any way. Its too hard for a girl." The college wise man is all right, but he sure can make the plodding girl stude feel that perhaps higher for women is a mistake after all. With the Knowledge Seekers Elsewhere **Football is a Tame Game** Women at the University of Illinois have been crippling each other up in hockies and up in around with limps and bandages just like the football heroes' do in the fall. Many of them have been taken from behin deh a hockey club that slipped out of some fair partner's hand and brought the team down to the head of another player. Interclass games are being arranged. Kansas Alumni Might Wake Up Alumni of Ohio University have recently started a campaign for $30,000 to erect dormitories at that institution. Alumni at the University of Michigan have organized a one per cent club each member pledging to will one per cent of his property to the University when he dies. Alumni of the University of Iowa rose up in arms against the proposed cut in the appropriations and secured a re-hiring of the bible from the university. If the University of Kansas graduates would get together, the Administration Building might be completed some time within the next century and the mill tax passed. Compulsory Chapel at Penn As a result of a petition signed by bprominent undergraduates requesting it, the University of Pennsylvania is now holding compulsory chapel. The convocations are held on Friday. Each class attends the exercises on a certain day during the week, and the entire college on Friday. The plan is said to be very successful in creating a greater class spirit as well as a better unity of spirit in the university as a whole. Compulsory Chapel at Penn Certain students, dancers and otherwise, have circulated a petition among the student body of the University of Illinois, asking the faculty to command a return to the old-style waltz and two-step. Don't Like New Dances College Letter in Concern The charter school of Hill will be selected as the site of the concrete "K" which is to be built by the four classes of the Kansas State Agricultural College. The "K" which will be of concrete will be 60 by 75 feet in size and will fill the roadways on the railroads. The estimated cost is $150. H. H. Cox of Eakridge, chairman of the student committee, is in charge of the work. College Letter in Concrete Paper Starts Prettier Campus Move "Keep Off The Grass" yells the Syracuse Daily Orange to its subscribers. A Campus Improvement team visits all students at the University are going to co-operate for a more beautiful campus. Each class is going to give vines and trees and every member of the student body is being asked to walk around to walk around, nasted of across. Wonder how such a move would be received by some of "Kansas" shortstop Jeffery Jones. Manufacturer Will Pay Large number of college students and teachers $6 to $18 daily during summer vacation. Ear for music a help. Experience unnecessary—just energy. Give age and reference first letter. Samul C. Osborne, Masonic Temple, Chicago—Adv. Complexion powders and creams at Barber's.—Adv. Hyball Ginger Ale. The best by test. MeNish, Phone 198.—Adv. Subscribe for the Daily Kansan. Send the Daily Kansan home. Cap and gown pictures. Squires.— Adv. ___ Send the Daily Kansan home. "Egg"gives you "Some Shine" Houks Barber Shop Arrow Shirt Sale We are going to discontinue the selling of Arrow shirts so as to be able to give our customers the best possible value for the money. The announcement of our new lines will be made shortly. To close out the 655 Arrow shirts on hand we have made these startling reductions. $1.50 Arrow Shirts now $1.15 $2.00 Arrow Shirts now 1.55 $3.00 Arrow Shirts now 2.35 $2.50 Arrow Shirts now 1.95 $3.50 Arrow Shirts now 2.85 $1.00 Monarch Shirts now .75 Better buy a dozen, it will pay you "A little farther up the street, a little less to pay" Robert E. House 729 Massachusetts Street The Pleasure of School Life is Doubled If you are acquainted with the current happenings "on the hill'". The cheapest and easiest way to get acquainted is through the columns of the University Daily Kansan SUBSCRIBE NOW $1.00 for the rest of the year UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Reading for an Idle Hour "Twenty-one new volumes in Everyman's Library are announced for immediate publication by E. P. Dutton & Co., "The Life," butbon & Co., combines biography with critical interpretation of the poet's work. Two of the titles are concerned with famous essays—the second volume of James Joyce, and the third volume of which the first volume was reprinted some time ago in Everyman's Library under the title "Essays in Literature and History," and a two-volume collection of Carnegie's collection of a note by James Rowsell Lowell. There are several famous books of fiction, including "The Story of a Peasant," by Erckmann-Chartrinin, in two volumes, which deals with the French Revolution; two of Douroff's stories; "Poor Follies and Tamarins" by Ralph Haworth's romance of "Windsor Castle;" "The Subaltern," by the Rev. George Robert Gleig, which under a thin guise of fiction tells the author's reminiscences of the Peninsular War. "Tom Gringle's Log," by Michael Scott, is a farrago of exciting adventures and sea pictures supposed to be the diary of a midsidshipman in 1830, to which Peter Paul Rubert's Magazine, in 1829, Arthur Young's "Travels in France and Italy During the Years 1787-" still has social and historical as well as economic interest. The "Heimaskringia" of Snowe Sturlason, the epical history of the Kings of Norway, has an introduction and a foreword by John Bawer. By Sir George W. Cox, contains sixty-five stories of Grecian gods and heroes. Doesen's dramatic poem "Brand" has an introduction by Philip H. Wickleed, while for Emerson's "Poem" does not. The critical and interpretive introduction by George Jacob Holkyo to Thomas Paine's "The Rights of Man," and by G. W. Kitchin to Bacon's "Advancement of Learning." This book is one of the titles dealing with history, and "British Historical Speeches and Orations," compiled by Ernest Rhys, is another, while two famous old book are Josephus' and Emerson's introduction by Dr. Jacob Hart, and Caesar's "Gallic War and Other Commentaries," with De Quincey's introduction. Along Massachusetts The clerks in the Indian Store are wondering why a certain shipment of eardthen ware from Australia came to be soaked with salt water. The ware which bears the name Stellmacherwerk came from Australia and was put on paper and tied. When it was unpacked here it was found to be wet and salt crystals had formed on the paper and string, which had rotted, due to the salt. The ware is very unique both in shapes and designs. It may be used as vases or for potted plants. The inside of the ware is a sealing layer from seating through it. There are several different shapes, in colors, gray, green or brown with pictures of children and dogs on the sides. There is nothing slow about our business, the world moves and so do we, declares the manager of the Lawrence Transfer Company. Although April is rather early for butterflies, the Flower Shop has a new variety of sweet peas by that name which has become popular with gardeners. The largest order for rare and unusual wild flowers are sent from Chicago. Just as the horsecase gave way to the electric, so is the leather shoe giving way to the rubber composition shoe. Starkweather have just received a large number of rubber shoes. The sole is made of ground-up leather and rubber which has been vulcanized and the tops are made from the same kind of cotton fibre that is used in making autocollant shoes. The United States Tire Co., the largest manufacturer of rubber goods in the world. A half barrel of cocoa cola; that's the amount the customers of Lee's College Inn consume each week. A half barrel contains 25 gallons and a quarter barrel contains 10 gallons. During quiz week just double the amount of cocoa cola is sold at the Inn. It is interesting to observe the great number of high school and University students who are willing to walk as far as Anderson's restaurant for their meals. The dining room is filled three times a day with young men and women whose talk is mainly of school affairs. No matter how big a "kid" you grow to be you still have a hankering for a pocket knife—one a little better than the other fellow's. The Jaedie hardware store has built up a reputation among the boys and men of the city through its special attention to pocket knives. A customer went into Bricken's the other day and looking around said to the fountain man, "I see you have a new fraternity banner, Eta Bita Pie." Bricken says that half his customers ask about that banner. George Ware, down at Rowlands, surprised his friends the past week by getting. married. One of his friends saw an account of the wedding with the heading, "WearStarkweather." He clipped it out and wrote the word SHOES after the headline and sent it to the new firm. Among the greatest time-saving machinery invented in recent years are the harness sewing machines and the dies to cut the harness. The modern harness-maker makes the harness take 10 hours. Formerly it took a week or more, said Ed. Klein, local harness maker and dealer this morning. Things No Man Likes to Do Things No Man Likes to Do Introduce his very good looking roommate to the girl he has down to the crame. Have the spotlight reflected on him by a female davidylell artist. Have his fortune tied up in Mexican government bonds. govePment bonds. Tell her the reason he didn't get better seats was because he was broke.—Tiger. Friday and Saturday are fruit salad days at Wiedemann's—Adv. Now that it is picnic time we have all kinds of good things: hand-made cheeses, olive-piment cheese, blue label, olive salad, and potted tuna fish. At Dumfries."—Adv. The University of Kansas Offers over 200 courses BY MAIL through its Correspondence Study Department. Credit given for all college work. Address University Extension Division, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas. White Skirts and Dresses As a customer said yesterday, "They are quite fussy". White skirts in many new styles and in such fabrics as Bedford Cord. Poplin, Rice Ratine, Linen, Honey Comb and Elephant Skin. A new one, middy skirts for tennis or golf, each. $1.50. Now would be a good time to select a new white dress. We are showing a beautiful line in many new styles and fabrics. Prices range from $2.50 to $6.00. Priced from $3.50 to $20.00. The midday blouse dress for every day wear is proving a popular seller at $5.00 to $5.00. WEAVER'S Dormitory Fiction "I don't stand for that kind of picture myself, but you see, it belongs to my roommate."—Awgwan. Salary - June, July, August selling a new practical necessity. Reference for reliability required. Give name of street address. K. Dally Karsen. -- Adv. Dormitory Fiction At First Baptist Church, morning; "From Apostle to Apatote." Evening; "A Good Man Growing Better in Politics."—Adv. Peace ice cream, flavored with the Peace. Try ours. Wiedemann's— Adv. Mrs. Morgan up to date dressmaking and ladies' tailoring. Also party dresses. Prices very reasonable. 1321 Tennessee. Phone 1161 W. Send the Daily Kansan home. "Gentlemen are requested not to smoke on the campus." The wages of Gin is Breath.—Lampoon. Ladies' Tailoring how about the engineers?" — Minneaha. Cap and gown pictures. Squires.— Adv. Kodakers we develop and finish in one day. Squires' Studio—Adv. THEATRE VARSITY --and Today: Shubert Presents "THE ARRIVAL OF PERPETUA" Featuring VIVIAN MARTIN Starring this season with Lew Fields in "The High Cost of Loving" Tomorrow: Lord Tennyson's Poem, "Ench Arened," mutual master picture, featuring Lillian Gish and selected artist. Character FISCHER'S SHOES ARE GOOD SHOES The character in a Fischer Shoe is not a happening. We know what it is to be before the shoe is made. We have it put there. It's put there to our order, in our way, and we won't have a shoe unless it is there, either. The difference between ours and a maker's ordinary stock shoes is the difference between the lack of style and the finest expression of style. It counts in appearance as well as in the wear and is in our shoes at all prices. Otto Fischer Beautiful Arms BRACELET WATCHES BRAUCHTWATCHES GO TOGETHER. Each adds to the other's charm. If you have not as yet selected your watch, we cordially invite your inspection of the many other beautiful designs we have on display. Every month brings greater popularity and increased use of this convenient ornament among society leaders. We illustrate above one of the many patterns we carry. Graduation Gift An Ideal Gold Filled, $10 to $20 Solid Gold, $25 to $75 Leather, $2 to $15 Elegant Values The College Jeweler Gustafson A Chicago fan from the University of Chicago has found what the real hardships of war are. This freshman, William Beauchamp, has been capable of finding solutions to military prison and is now serving in Red Cross for the English army. Chicago Frosh Gets Taste of War At First Baptist Church, morning "From Apostle to Apostate." Evening; "A Good Man Growing Better in Politics."—Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. If you like fruit salad try ours. Wiedemann's—Adv. Front 28 in. B-1 CASTLE ROLL Front 2½ in. Back 1¼ in. BARKER CO. BRAND 2 FOR 25¢ 2 FOR 25¢ MANUFACTURERS: WILLIAM BARKER CO., TROY, N.Y. BANKERCO BRAND FOR 25¢ MARKETING MEMBERSHIP ONLY Only at Peckhams GREAT FIVE- STAR AGGREGATION BOWERSOCK TODAY SHUBERT Wed. Mat. 500 to 1.60 Nights and Sat. Mat. ARROW SHIRTS Sold exclusively by *WM_H CRANE *THOS_W ROSS *BUSKLE *AMELIA BINGHAM *MABEL TALIAFERRO in the NEW HENRIETTA NEXT—HIGH JINKS Have a soda fountain in your home by ordering a case of soda water from McNish. Phones 198—Adv. A Paramount Photoplay Presenting VICTOR MOORE The Famous Comedian in "Snobs" Send the Daily Kansan home. Newhouse Symphony Orchestra Matinee Daily 2.45 All seats 100 Johnson & Carl AT Notice, Fraternities! KENNEDY & ERNST Stubbs Bldg., Opposite Court House—Phone, Bell 384 Notice, Please I have for lease some of the nicest rooms in town, with light, heat, hot and cold water—both furnished and unfurnished. If interested, call J. M. NEVILLE Stubbs Ride—Opposite Company-House-Bell 384 Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE 12 W. Ninth Lawrence Pantatorium Phones 508 arty Flowers Are Always Appreciated When They Come From THE FLOWER SHOP and We Are Always Pleased to Fill Your Orders PHONE SM Those Party Flowers Are Always Appreciated When They Come From DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squirrels studio. Both phones. 825½ MASS. PHONES 621 A. J. ANDERSON, M. D., Office 715 Vt. St. Phones 124. Call McNish for quantity rates on water.—Adv. Subscribe for the Daily Kansan G, W JONES, A. M, M. D. Disease of Walter B. Jones, 2014, Residence 1201 Osf St, Boston, MA 02138 HARRY LEDING M. D. Eyes, ear, oar nose, L. Bidg, Phones, Bell 113, Homs U. Bidg, Phones, Bell 113, Homs Professional Cards Bamboo scalp comba, bath caps, and rubber gloves at Barber's Drug Strips. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D. D. O. $22 Bathroom. Both phones, office and residence. PHONE KNOWNLY PLUMBING CO. for gas and Mazda lamps. 987-645-1022. Plumbers DR. PETER D. PAULS, Osteopath Office and residence, 7% East 7th St General practice. Both phones $81 General practice, 2 to 5, to 7 and 8 by appointment. DR. N. HAYES, 2029 Mass. St. General practice. Also treat the ey and ear. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, ear and scalp protection. Guaranteed. Dick Blig Barber Shops Insurance Classified Jewelers ED. W. PAISONS, Engraver, Watch- er, Jewelry. Bell Phone 717. 717 Mass. Bell Phone 717. FIRE INSURANCE, LOANS, and ab- business Building. Bell 156; Home 2293. FRANK E. BANKS, Ins., and abstracts of Title. Room 2, F. A. U. Building. Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK, 913 Mass. PROTSCH "The Tailor" SPRING SUITING Box Stationery All Grades-All Prices McColloch's DrugStore BURT WADHAM'S "College Inn Barber Shop" LAWRENCE B LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas Largest and best ourd business college with 500 students. We teach business business banking. We teach business administration. We teach business sample of student type notenums a catalog. WATKINS' NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depository. FRANK KOCH "THE TAILOR" Full Line of Spring Suitings Full Line of Spring Sultage STUDENT HEADQUARTERS THESIS BINDING THESIS BINDING Engraved and Printed Cards. Sheaffer's Self-silling Fountain Pens. 744 Mass. Street. A. G. ALRICH 744 Mass. Street. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WHEN A FELLER NEEDS A FRIEND No one to Answer at Roll Call Uncle Jimmy Green was carefully calling the roll one day in one of his classes. There were only fifteen young gentlemen present out of a class of six, and when the name was read out, a manly voice from where sheouted on boldly. "Here." Finally, however, an astonishing thing happened. As one name was called there was a dead silence in the room. Then the looked up and gazed sadly at it. "How is this poor young man a single friend in the world," he asked, reproachfully. Salary—June, July, August selling a new practical necessity. Reference for reliability required. Give name street address. K. Daily Kansas -Adv. Those nut chocolate sclairs, try them at Wiedemann's—Adv. COOKING BY PRESSURE IS LATEST TIME SAVER Cooking by steam pressure is the latest kitchen fad. A large aluminum kettle with a steam tight cover, allowing no evaporation, is the newest kitchen utensil that the housewife can now show she can do without, any longer." This new method of cooking is a great time and fuel saver. For example, beans and peas which according to the old way of cooking require 15 minutes in the oven or ten or fifteen minutes in the pressure cooker. A roast, ordinarily requiring three hours cooking, may be beautifully browned and deliciously flavored in fifty-five minutes under a pressure of fifteen or twenty pounds. A safety valve makes the use of the pressure cooker safe, and since there is always steam in the cooker it needs to be burning. Several different kinds of food can be cooked in the pressure cooker at one time, by placing the different substances in separate dishes, such as baking powder cans. a hot fire is required to run the pressure up to fifteen or twenty pounds whic his average amount required in the use of this unique "aid to the housewife". Here's a Chance to be a Diana Here's a Chance to be a Diana Any junior woman may become a follower or a rival to Diana this spring. All she needs to do is to practise with the junior gym class which practises archery on Tuesday and wednesday at 12:00 p.m. The class is planning to hold a contest at the May Fete. Ten women are expected to compete. Anyone wishing to enroll in the archery class may do so by seeing Dr. Alice Goetz at the Gym. They are new but they are good, the nut chocolate eclairs and chocolate nut sundaes. At Wiedemann's—Adv. Kodakers we develop and finish in one day. Squires' Studio...Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. Hash House League Schedule DIVISION I. | | Co-op | Ulrich | Martin | Neal | Hayes | Willis | Kinney | K K | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Co-op | | Sat A 10 Hw-2 | Sat A 17 N1-4 | Sat A 24 N1-10:30 | Sat M 1 Hw-2 | Sat M 8 Hw-2 | Sat M 15 N2-8:30 | Sat M 22 N1-10:30 | | Ulrich | | | Sat A 24 He-4 | Sat A 17 N2-4 | Sat M 8 N2-10:30 | Sat M 1 N2- 8:30 | Sat M 22 He-10:30 | Sat M 15 Hw-2 | Sat M 8 Hw TO HOLD HIGH SCHOOL TENNIS MEET MAY Tournament Will Take Place at Same Time as Invitation Track Meet In connection with the interscholastic track meet the annual high school tennis tournament will be held in August and May 1. Invitations have been sent to the four high schools in Kansas City as well as to all the high schools in Kansas and Manager Hammer expects year's entries to be the largest ever. The entertainment of the visitors for this tournament and the track meet will be left in the hands of the University students as far as possible. Several fraternities and clubs have already signified their intentions of taking care of some of the visitors whose classes will be taken care of as fast as they can is the only time the teams will visit the University this year and the plan is to show them the best possible time while they are here. "This is a splendid time to get a line on prospective students for next year and I don't think the students Hamilton this morning, " I hope to问学生 visitors taken care of by the students during their short stay and I think we can rely on the students to do their part. The visitors want to see the University and the student and this is what we should show 'hem.' Anyone desiring to take care of any number of visitors on this occasion should notify Manager Hamitson so that there will be no complication and no one will be left out. A list of entrants in the track meet and the tennis tournament will be ready at the manager's office on Monday. Tomorrow's H. H. Game Co-op vs. Neal, Ulrich vs. Martin, Hayes vs. K.K. Willis vs. 1038 Tenn. Daniels vs. Custer, M. M. Dad's, 1538 vs. 's' w.'s' Stevenson vs. Franklin, Hope vs. Dunakin Co-op, Midway vs. College Campus, Los Amigos vs. Moody, Oread vs. Track Training. Hash House League Standing Division I. Won Lost Pct. Martin 2 0 1.000 Kenney 2 0 1.000 Willis 2 0 1.000 Ulrich 2 0 1.000 Co-op 0 2 .000 Hawes 0 2 .000 K. K. 0 2 .000 Neal 0 2 .000 Division II. Won Lost Pct. Custer 2 0 1,000 Daniel 2 0 1,000 1328 Ohio 2 0 1,000 Stevenson 1 1 1,500 Lee'S 1 1 500 Y.M. 0 2 .000 Dad's 0 2 .000 Franklin's 0 2 .000 Franklin Division III Won Lost Pct. "You look tired, Bill. What's the matter?" Division III. Won Lost Pct. Track Training 2 0 1,000 Dunakin 2 0 1,000 Hope 2 0 1,000 Jose Amigos 1 1 1,500 Oread 1 1 1,500 Midway 0 2 0,000 Moody 0 0 0,000 College Campus 0 2 0,000 "Been studying for a make-up examination." Prof. Shaad Writes Article The April number of the Electrical World contains a technical article by Prof. George C. Shaad, of the department of electrical engineering, on "Small Electric Generating Stations". Professor Shaad's article takes the power plants of Kiowa and Cold Lake to tell the stories of its equipment of these plants and the manner of their management and operation. The article contains several cuts of the plants and numerous designs of the ground plan. "That's so? When did you start in?" "Tomorrow."—Jester. We have nivec imported 's in 25 cent boxes. Dunnimeir's -Adv. If you like the flavor of peach ice cream, try ours. Wiedemann's—Ana. "Waiter, bring me a large demi-tasse." → Judge. KODAKS STATIONERY PERFUMES Evans Drug Store Successor to Raymonds' 819 Mass. St. RADNOR RADNOR THE NEW ARROW COLLAR "Business is Business" so attend a "Perplexing Situation" and hear The Orchestra at the Christian Church Friday, April 23, & p.m. Friday, April 23, 8 p. m. See our grape fruit. We have especially good values at 5 cents. Dumplings are $2.99. A. B. K. Co., 1912 The Eldmere— Strictly a Young Man's model—made with patch pockets, unlined coat and vest, straight cut trousers—It's a popular model with us.—You'll like it—Lots of good patterns at it $17 Johnson & Carl Monday --- Tuesday --- Wednesday April 26,27,28 Extraordinary Special Any Book in the Store AT COST Now Is the Time to Get Those Reference Books Hundreds of titles to select from: Engineering, Mathematics, History, Chemistry, Botany, Zoology, Economics, Physiology, Psychology, Philosophy, Banking, Education, English, German, French, Spanish, Italian, Latin, Pharmacy, Sociology, etc. Medical books and a few Engineering texts not included. SENIORS Rowland's College Book Store WHERE STUDENTS GO" A picture of yourself in Cap and Gown is almost the same as a degree as it shows you are a College Grad. SQUIRES' STUDIO The SophHopOneWeekfromTonight Make That Date Now UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII. "TAKE'EM OR NOT TAKE 'EM" WILL BE DECIDED Senior Class Will Settle Ques tion of Examination Exemptions Tomorrow SHALL THE PROFS DON ROBES* NUMBER 138. Matter of Faculty Caps and Gown Will be Threshed Out Also— Free Speech Guaranteed Just whether or not seniors having a grade of above 80%, that is, having a I or II, will be exempt from examinations will be given out to the seniors tomorrow at the class meeting called by Chancellor Strong in April, asking for such exemption have been circulated among the fourth year students, and their results will be threshed out in the meeting chapel. Since there are but about four hundred seniors the chapel hall will afford for the month. All seniors are excused from classes for the meeting. Prof. L, N. Flint will tell the plans for Class Day, and the reason for it. Prof. Goldwin Goldsmith will explain to the Engineers what the commencement exercise should do for, and mean to them. The matter of caps and gowns for faculty members will be decided Chancellor Strong and Prof. J. N Van der Vries will lead the study. The class will pass on an assessment for business at the same time. Willis Whitten, chairman of the senior memorial committee, will have a blue print, with an estimated expense of the proposed bulletin board to be erected back of the campus corner mail box. In fact the whole meeting will take the place of a lot of smaller ones for the winding up of the senior class's business. The meeting will have lunch, dinner and every student will have a seat and opportunity to express himself. OIL FROM "DEVIL'S CLAWS" The cap and gown committee will be at the check stair in Fraser this week. K. U. Chemist Discovers That Seed Has Food Value The discovery that oil from the "Devil's Claws," a hitherto worthless weed, can be utilized for food may result in making it a valuable industrial product for the semi-aid regions of Kansas. (An article by Dr. Joseph M. Klawis, the University Kansas food chemist. Laboratory investigations showed that this weed, now growing abundantly on the waste land of Western Kansas, Colo-rado, Texas and New Mexico, produces a seed from which an edible oil is extracted that may take the place of wheat oil. The cake from the oil is also valuable for stock food as it has a high protein value. Another point which favors the production of the plant is that the ordinary cotton seed oil machinery, with a few modifications, may be used for extracting the oil. The Department of Agriculture at Washington is now making a study from the information furnished by Professor Bailey. It is probable that the yield of this plant, botanically named Martyna Louisiana, can be increased greatly by cultivation. Professor Bailey estates the cultivation of a seed, containing 60 per cent oil, can be readily raised and that the cultivation will be much larger. The weed has a very long tap root like the alfaffa. Being a succulent plant, it is adapted to a very rainy region. Sigma Phis Give Party Sigma Phi Sigma gave their annual spring party at Ecke's Hall Saturday night. The out of town guests were: Miss Francis Holeman, of Topeka; Miss Mildred Stanton, of Topeka; Miss Farrin Close, of Baldwin; Miss Sarah Ransom, of Wick; Miss Florence Flechter, of Kansas City; Miss Naida Stevenson of Emporia; Miss Mr. Boyd Prugh, of Kansas City. To Talk About Maples o 'Talk About' Maples The Botany Club meets in Room 203 Snow Trench Wednesday evening Helen Trant will talk on "Maple Trees." Boyd Prugh who was a student on the Hill last year and a member of the Sigma Phi Sigma fraternity at Ecke's Saturday night. Fraternities Will Not Play The scheduled baseball game between the Pbi Beta Pis and the Sig Phis in the Inter-fraternity league which was to be played this afternoon on Hamilton Field was postponed on account of a wet field. ARE THERE NO GALLANTS AT K. U.? Jayhawker Men Can't Find Cases Early chapel may be a success insofar as more chapel services are concerned, but it is certainly the death blow of "chapel dates," according to Edward Blair Hackney. Mr. Hackney, you remember, is the gentleman who took the gentle process of making the 1915 Jayhawker pay out. "Yessir," says Edward Blair, "the ain't n呵 so nich animule as chapel dates this year. Our photographers have been on the job all year, trying to snap a few cases as they stepped forth from morning prayers; but there's n呵ary a case in sight." "I'm afraid people will be disappointed in the Annual," says Leon Harsh, editor. "Because it sucks on a fact case, I didn't believe we have had five photographers working since last fall, but judging from the results they secured, the old K. U. lover is as much of a fossil jamboswarens in the Museum." DRESS AS YOU LIKE FOR SOPHOMORE HOP Manager George Yeokum Wil Wear "Pair of Old Gray Hand-me Downs" The fact that white trousers and blue coats constitute the main items of male attire, which custom decrees shall be worn to the Hop Soph, need cause no worry on the part of those students who do not possess ice cream duds, according to George Yeokum, manager of the Hop. "Personally," said Yeokum this morning, "I'm going to wear a pair of old gray hand-me-downs, and I wouldn't advise anyone to stay away from them." A sort of informal attire will get by successfully. "I've another suggestion to make, too," continued Yeokum. "The earlier a fellow makes a donation, the girl will have in which to pay her gift." A word to the wise is sufficient. Seniors who have not yet turned in their invitations in exchange for tickets are requested to do so before Wednesday. A representative of the management will be at the check stand in Fraser only from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in E. R. Rofls, Annette Ashone, Geneempel, Albert Irwin, John Miller Lucien Dyche, Doe Barhard, Hilmar Appel, Gladys Luckan, Fred McEwen Frank Haithnick, Newt Dilley, Bess Ulrich, Russ Cowill, George Kampert, Margaret Heizer, William Glass Henry McCurd, Edgar Van Cleef W. R. Davis, Fred Rodkey, M Booth, J. M. Scott, Jas. Carter, Marion Reid, A. N. Murphey, John Niles SENDS VISCERA TO K. U. SENDS VISCERA TO K. U. FOR POISON EXAMINATION The University of Kansas has been asked to aid in determining whether Milton Peters, a farmer living near Ablene, came to his death in January 2016. Peters sits in the neighborhood of Peters' home led Coronel Lockart of Dickinson county to order the body exhumed yesterday and the stomach and heart will be sent to the University for traces of strychnine poisoning. Prof. H. P. Cady will deliver an address before the Missouri section of the American Chemical Society on Thursday, Nov. 25, to be "Heium and Natural Gas." Miss Ferris Close, or Topeka, who is attending Baker University this year was a guest at the Sigma Phi SIGma party Saturday night. - Some time will be required to complete the analysis. If traces of poisoning are found developments may which will make the case sensational. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, MONDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 26, 1915. At Morning Prayers Prof. Cady to Lecture Everett Fitz, freshman College, old Nickerson, has been elected prin- cipal president. General Subject: "Neglected Viruses" Speaker, Rev. E. B, Backus, pas- tor of Uitvijzer abhuv Lawrence Tuesday: "Seriousness." Wednesday: "Responsibility." Thursday: "Intellectual Integrity." Friday: "Appreciation." ORCHESTRA WILL GIVE CONCERT IN FRASER Musicians of J. C. McCaule Appear in Chapel Tuesday day Night The University orchestra will give a concert Tuesday in Fraser Hall at 8:15 o'clock. Student tickets will admit. The program is as follows: “March of the Elephants.” Canevue Overture, “Pique Dume.” Supple Piano Solo, “Flederman’s Walk” Strauss “Sizziliana.” Franz von Blon “Roma.” Clander “Scene de Ballet.” A Cizubika “五分钟 intermission” The Water. Watson Selection from Comic Opera, "Marriage Market", Victor Jacobi Cello Solo, "Adagio", ... W. Bargiel William B. Dalton Gavotte, "Glow Worm" ... Linda GET YOUR YELLOW RECEIPT! Jayhawk Manager Sends Blanl Good for One 1915 Annual Gavette, "Glow Worm" . . . Lincke "Danse Anne" . . . M. H. Maquet Persons ordering copies of the 1915 Jayhawker have been mailed yellow receipts which, when turned in to the management with $2.50, are posted on their year's Annual. Manager Blair Hackey mailied out the orders last week, and those who have ordered Annuals, but not yet received their receipts are requested to make known to the manager Manager Hackey at 444 Bell. "I hesitate to set the exact date upon which the Jayhawk will first be placed on sale," said Hackney this morning, "but the book will probably be out next week because greater part of printing is available at present, and the books are not ready to be sent to the bindery. Some unaccountable delay may occur at the last minute, however, that will make necessary a postponement of the date of issue. In the meantime, all training Annuals may not be ordered. Annuals do not received receipts for them should see that they secure one. The cash price of the book, when it is placed on sale, will be $2.75. PIPE ORGAN A MAN'S WORK This part of Musical Profession Appeals More to Men Than Women Ten students are taking pipe organ in the School of Fine Arts. This is a profession especially adapted to men musicians according to Dean Jillian Patterson, the School of Arts. None of the ten now taking it will graduate this spring. Hazel Rigg, a graduate last year, is organist in the First Christian church of Topkea, and Carl Krueger, a student from the Rock in the New England Conservatory. "Operating an organ is largely a matter of judgment and this appeals to men," says Dean Skilton. "Organists are never expected to play without music so this eliminates the memory test; also the physical strain is generally very taxing on a woman so men are given the preference. In many cases, the organist is usually chair conductor. With this and the conducting of choral unions any man may find plenty to keep him busy. "Since pipe organs are being placed in many cities and towns there is a new field opening up. The American organ school is sending out concert performers and because of the rigid requirements a good class of musicians is being sent out. There is a chapter of this organization with members all over the state." The Very Idea W. A. McKeeney, professor of child welfare at the University of Kansas, this morning received an appointment from Governor Capper as the Child Labor Congress, to be held in San Francisco, May 29, 30 and 31. McKeever Appointed Hazel Gould, junior Fine Arts, has a vanity case suspended from a silver ring, which she carries with her constantly. At intervals of every ten minutes she hides behind the tiny mirror of the little case and dabs, gently but firmly, some of the contents of the box upon her nose. Last week end returning from Kansas City the lady sitting opposite casually remarked, "Oh, my dear, I do you enjoy our taking cup with you. Do you drink much on the train?" On account of rain, the scheduled game between Sigma Phi Sigma and Phi Alpha Delta in the Inter-Frater League was called off Friday afternoon. Send the Daily Kansan home. ENGINEERS TEACH TWO CLASSES OF MEXICANS Conduct Classes in English for Foreign Laborers in Lawrence Good progress is being made by the Engineers in their social service work among the Mexicans and laborers of the Lawrence bottoms, according to Harlan Russell, secretary of the organization. The University of Texas also raised English among the Mexicans. They meet every Tuesday and Friday nights; one group receiving its instruction at the home of one of the laborers on New Jersey street and the other in a Mexico cabin across the street. Third class was started but the Mexicans were moved to another town. Secretary Boltz of the City Y. M. C. A. is the supervisor of all the work and is directly in charge of the "Big Brother" work among the white officers, as well as working among the men of the shops during the noon hour, securing speakers to talk to the men for fifteen or twenty minutes. Numerous stalkers have taken a part in this work by providing music for these no talk events. Wednesday night work will be commenced with the negro boys of the town of school age and particularly those in high school. An effort will be made to interest them in school and teach them to do for themselves. PHYSICIANS GO TO ROSEDALE University Hospital is Host to Visit ing Medical Men This Week Twenty-six physicians and health officers from various parts of the state are devoting the week to lectures and clinics at the University of Oklahoma, where they serve a Proof. John Sundwall of the department of anatomy. Most of the visiting physicians come from the remotest parts of the state and the faculty was pleased with the interest which brought them to Lawrence last week, to acquaint themselves with the latter's contribution to the medical sciences. "Such interest," says Professor Sundwall "certainly beaks for the high ideals of the medical profession. The majority express themselves as determined to return next year bringing along other co-workers." "To the faculty of the medical school the success has a far reaching significance. In the first place, genuine service to the state is contributing to the success of the medical sciences are so rapid that ordinarily the busy practitioner cannot acquaint himself with these numerous new contributions. It is the aim therefore of each department to preface this task by providing a summary of the year's contribution in its respective sciences. Is not such a procedure of infinite value to the people of Kansas? Will they not receive, as a consequence, the best medical attention that can be given?" And in the initiation and realization of this plan, it is anticipated that the medical school will be of great service to the state. The medical school should be at the head of the field of practice and found a source of knowledge pertaining to health and disease." Dick Burton, Leland Thompson, Ernest Blincoe, Earl Nixon, Fred Poas and Hugo Wedell gave their impressions of the annual Rocky M'aintain conference of the Y. M. C. A. at a college in Durham, NC; versity Y. M. yesterday afternoon in Myers Hall. Con Hoffmann outlined a day's program at the conference. LIVE ESTES CONFERENCE OVER AGAIN AT Y. M. A delegation of more than twenty-five men is expected to represent K. U. this year. Last summer the University had the largest representation of any school taking part in the conference. A vocal solo by Clydq Smith and a number by the Y. M. quartet were performed in 1975. Y. W. Program Tomorrow Y. W. Program Tomorrow At the Y. W. C. A. meeting tomorrow afternoon at 4:30 at Myers Hall the program will consist of the following numbers: Talk to Marie Russ. Solo, Josephine Stimpson. Year's Work in Social Settlement by Y. W. Eleanor Myers. Y. M. C. A. quartet. Song, Ednah Hopkins. Mott Committee Meet The Mott campaign committee will meet at 9 o'clock this evening in New York and that business will be transmitted and all attendance is absolutely necessary. HE WANTED HIS WIFE NOT JAYHAWKERS She Was Down in Library Stacks Miss Carrie Watson, suitfulness of young woman going over long list of book cards A timid man stepped up to her and asked if he might be shown to the sanctuary where the old files of Jay Hawkers, a former officer in the scone, always obedient to the rules of the Library could not let him go into the stacks but she dispatched an assistant down to get the books. The man was distressed and amid a confusion of stammerns and blushes she made out that he didn't want to see the Jayhawkers, but someone who was supposed to be using the 'books in the seminar, "Why—a—would you know the proxy if you saw her?" Miss Watson knows. "Well I rather guess I would. She is my wife." Just then the assistant returned with the Jayhawkers but no wife. Aunt Carrie told him of this sophomore who had a wife down there and wanted her. Then those two sedates laughed over the affair like two young freshmen. They had never heard of Mr. and Mrs. Doub. GRAND OPERA SOLOIST IN FIRST POP CONCERT Miss Irene Jonani, on Successful Tour, Will Assist Lawrence Choral Union Miss Irene Jonani, featured soloist with the Lawrence Choral Union at its first "pop" concert in Robinsen Gymnastium on Wednesday night of this week, appeared at Baker University last Friday, and delighted the music lovers of Baldwin. The Baldwin Ledger, in commenting upon Miss Jonani's recital, says that the auditorium was the magnetism of the woman, and captivated by her rare and beautiful voice." Miss Jonani is to sing several numbers at the first appearance of the Choral Union Wednesday, her services being especially engaged for the occasion. In addition, the memorial service will present a varied program of classical and semi-classical numbers. The best musical talent in Lawrence, both from the city and the University, will take part. The entertainment is under the direction of William B. Downing, professor of voice in the School of Music, with an o'clock. The admission is 25 cents; no seats reserved. OUESTIONS TYPHUS CURE Dr. Sundwall Wants More Evidence Before Endorsing Plotz Discovery Dr. Sundwall today expressed his doubts concerning the recent discovery of an anti-taphyn vaccine by Dr. Harry Plotz of Mount San Juan Hospital. The sudden extensive advertising of the vaccine seems somewhat similar to the fake Friedman cure for tuberculosis, published a few years ago. "While it is entirely possible that Dr. Plotz has actually discovered a real cure for this dreaded disease, I don't know if accepting any newspaper article as authentic. We would first see it in some authoritative medical journal. At present I can make no definite conclusions in regard to this dis Typhus is believed to be spread by the louse in the same way that malaria is spread by the mosquito. The disease is fatal in Mexico, Servia and Austria-Hungary. It is brought to this country by the lower class of immigrants in a somewhat milder form known as Brill's disease. The following persons were elected to membership: Prof. Geo. N. Watson, from the faculty; Herman H Conwell of Lawrence; LaurenEs E Whitmorete of Topeka; Miss Elizbeth Fleeson of Sterling; Wilbur W Swingle, of Lawrence; and Henry O'Brien of Lawrence. SIGMA XI, SCIENTIFIC FRATERNITY, ELECTS SIX A meeting of the Sigma Xi honorary scientific society, was held Friday night at the home of Prof. W. J. Baumgartner. Talks were made by newly elected members, W. A. Stacey, Austin Bailey, John D. Elliott, and B. J. Claasen, on scientific subjects. No Hash House Games Because of wet grounds, no games in the Hash House League were played Saturday. Games next Saturday will be played as scheduled and the postponed games will be arranged individually. DR. HULL TO DISCUSS THE MONROE DOCTRINE Lectures in Chapel Tomorrow Afternoon; Was Twice Delegate to Hague Conference SPEAKS TO POLITY CLUB ALSO Addresses Meeting at Beta House at Night Under Auspices of International Organization Dr. William Isaac Hull, twice United States delegate to the Hague conference and author of several books on international Peace, will lecture in chapel, Tuesday, April 27, at New York University; object: "The New Monroe Doctrine" During March, 1915, Doctor Hull toured the New England states, debating the question: "What Constitutes Adequate Armament?" with Boards of trade and economic clubs in the larger cities, and carrying on a special controversy on the subject with Congressman Gardner of Massachusetts. In Missouri University where he be has lectured on armaments, "America's Destiny: Sparta or the Hague" and the "New Monroe Doctrine." Doctor Hull is a graduate student of history and politics from Johns Hopkins University, and the universities of Berlin and Leyden. He was secretary of the United States Commission on the Limitation of Arms in 1903, and served as Peace Foundation at Boston in 1911; lecturer of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace of 1914. In these capacities he gleaned from his investigations the information upon which his lecture is built, and from which he derived the arguments for the doctrine of National or International^27. Doctor Hull will go from here to the Pacific coast, lecturing and debating in several cities on the way. Dr. Hull will speak before the International Polity Club at 7 o'clock to testify against the meeting. The meeting will begin promptly at 7 o'clock so that Dr. Hull can leave Lrence on an evening train. U. S. WAITS ON K. U. MAN Holding up Publication of Document Until Prof. Haworth Investigates Prof. Erasmus Haworth, state geologist, has been successful in temporarily holding up the publication of a report in the United States Geological Survey, regarding the Zeandale oil wells, which had it been published, would have virtually condemned thousands of acres of land that were harvested by which Professor Haworth thinks will prove to be first class oil and gas land. Further investigation is now being made before releasing the report. The report contained the information that a strata of granite had been struck by the oil drillers at Zeadale, in Wabauaen county. Professor Haworth's opinions on the matter differed in the set forth he proposed report and he wrote to Washington immediately asking that the article be withheld from publication until a thorough investigation has been made. Had the report been published it would probably have resulted in a heavy loss to property owners in that section of the state as large acreages have already been leased to oil companies to invest in prospective so that they would not risk their money in developing that country. Professor Haworth is now engaged in investigations into the matter but has not as yet obtained any definite results. IF STUDENTS SIGN UP ROBINS MAY RETURN There is a chance that the University Y. M. C. A. will be able to secure Raymond Robins' services for the first Sunday in next semester, to men's mass meeting, if enough students signify their desire to have him. Petitions may be signed at Con Hoffmann's office in Merys Hall. Pledge Five Delta Sigma Rho, honorary debating fraternity, announces the pledging of Hugo T. Wedell, C. E. Williamson, Ed. Kaufman, W. H. Dodds and Odis H. Burns. The men are those who took part in the recent intercollegiate debates who were not already members of the fraternity. Rug Club Meets The Zoology Club will meet Tuesday evening in Snow Hall. The speakers will be Miss Altina Elliott and Mr. Alexander Culbertson. Miss Florence Fletcher, of Kansas City, a student at the University last year, spent Friday and Saturday in Lawrence. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas PRIMORPHIC GEAR EDITORIAL STAFF John M. Murray...Associate/Chief Raymond McInery...Managing Editor Helen Hayes...Associate Editor William Cady...Exchange Editor BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS STAFF J. W. Dyche...Business Manager REPORTORIAL STAFF Leon Harah Ames Rogers Nathaniel Gleisner Guy Scrivner J. O. M. Miller Charles Sweet Don Davis Elmer Arndt Carolyn McNutt Rex Meyer Paul Bridgelund Harry Paulett Herbert Harrison Glendon Allvine C. A. Ritter Chester Patterson Fred Bowera Subscription price $2.50 per year if advance; one term, $1.50. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office 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. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate in to go further than merely printing the book or taking the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be chable; to be courragious. To solve problems to wiser heads, in all, to serve the best of its ability the most. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone. Bell K.U. 25. Fair Play and Accuracy Burenu Prof. H. T. Hill...Faculty Member Don Joseph...Student Member Johan Karya...For you if I find a mistake in statement or impression in any of the columns of the Dally Karan, report it to the Chairman, Don Karya. He will instruct you as to further procedure. MONDAY,APRIL 26,1915. OUR LOOK AT IT I'm sorry you fell down on the assignment, Earl, for I just supposed you knew enough of history to realize that the men that get there are those that know where they are going. They may not have been educated to earn their living as soon as they stepped from the campus, but they know what is going to give them their bread and butter when it does come, and through the university they have been training themselves to get a hold on that slice of sustenance when it is offered them. I supposed you knew. Ideas of Greater Universities, Greater Democracies, Greater States, and Greater Worlds have been brought forth since time was young, but never a one of them got out of its swaddling clothes unless it had some definite working program hitched to it. No. Earl Crabble, your idea of a man coming to Mount Oread or Berkeley, or any other university campus and just browsing around, letting knowledge just kindo soak into him is wrong. He may go out and through some good streak of luck, or his ability as a Jack of All Trades, stumble into some line of endeavor that he should have figured out years before. The chances are that he will not, but he may if he is that "hundredth," say. But if he doesn't he will grow up to be just the average citizen, pictured by the cartoonist as the little man with the big hat who gets excited over a neighbor's hens in his garden, and vote the ticket his newspaper tells him to, and gaze with big wide eyes at the picture on the front page of the man that knew where he was going when he went through school. No, Earl, the man that wears the pants is the one that back in school knew a lot about one thing. Show me the man that in school sat around with his mouth open and with blind eyes, taking in that which was offered him from astronomy to zoology without salting it down, analyzing, or partitioning it, who is now leading men, and I will show you a dozen times as many who in school had a lower jaw that stayed up where Nature first put it, thought while he was listening, and forgot what he knew would not benefit him, that is leading the same number of men. Old men balance the world's machine, but it is the young men that furnish the steam. The man that hangs around the university for four years talking the points of a bull pup, reading Horace and executing geometrical figures with the same ease is going to dinkey away his time until he will just balance the machine that his more direct brother will control. Perhaps it is best that but one man lead ninety-nine, Earl, and that is why but the hundredth at 19 years of age can "aptly decide his life work," as you say, but it's a cinch if he does and the ninety and nine do not, that he will boss all of them sometime. BOOST THE UNION No, this isn't a plea for labor unions or the W. C. T. U. or anything like that. It is just a reminder that on Wednesday night a new musical organization is going to burst into bloom in the Gymnasium, and that all good students owe it to themselves to go over and give it a hearing. Some of them are already particeps criminis, so to speak, having consented to assist the people of Lawrence in organizing a choral society and putting on a concert. With the further assistance of a real, honest-to-grandma prima donna, the promoters expect to put on a classy show. This concert will be unique in not including any Italian arias, any selections from Tannhauser, or any comic opera stuff. The seven or eight chorus numbers are all standard works, some of which we have all known and loved for years. Such well known writers of part songs as Frederic Field Bullard will be represented, and Moszkowski will contribute a vocal arrangement of one of his prettiest waltzes. Best of all, the soloist is going to give most of her songs in English. From this it is seen that the backers of the new venture have spared no effort to make this a real popular concert. Their idea is to have as many folks as possible take part, and all the rest come out to hear them. And so they have put the price down until it is almost invisible, to make it possible for everybody to come. This concert is for low-brows, high-brows, and students and anyone who misses it is cheating himself. Chasing the Glooms The cub wonders if they will beef at that beefsteak supper. K. U. students now make it "Give us this day our daily grade." All England is adopting the Epworth motto of "Look up." True friendship, like a well-brushed tooth never decays. Leander would have a real job if he swam the Hellesponnt now. It is not John Bull that is in the China shop this time. There is a certain class of professors on the Hill which makes a good match to the bluffing grafter of the class room. This prof is the bane of the existence of some of the real blue-stocked students up here, the Phi Beta Kappa kind, don't you know. Pandora's Box At last he finds an opportunity to shut off the enthusiastic professor. He makes a dash for the door and all the way across his mouth is full of *words* for the professor who takes so much of his valuable time. "Won't you please inform me," he asks professor Long Wind, "just how to atomical diabosis of the mechanical gynickishaw takes place?" Now, Mr. Phi Beta Kappa has absorbed all the lesson into the cramies of his fertile brain except one tiny point. Wishing to be made clear on this one particle of the lesson, he drops around to the desk of the instructor. He is in a hurry, for he must pass the campus and a prof waiting for him who always begins as soon as he gets there. "Well, you see," says Professor Long Wind."—and then he goes into a long discussion not of the point in question at all, but of this, that and the other thing which has no bearing on the argument. And Mr. Student anxiously stands, first on one foot and then the other, wipes his glasses from his nose, impatiently through his poetical hair, while he thinks all the time of that class waiting him across the campus—miles and miles away. LONG-WINDED PROFS - * *—deleted by censor. The chances are that he gets a "two" in the course because he made that break for liberty. Shots at Half-Cock Or Foolishment in Verse TIME TO TOYH* Now is the time all men agree. To send the garden on a spree, And women raise a raucous shout To have the heater lifted out, The little chickies blithely peep. But students vainly pray for sleep. *Take off your heavies.* TIME TO TOYH* THE VARSITY MAN From the K. U. Zoo You have seen him all over the campus, and when you were a freshman, he was pointed out to you for your admiration, as the famous goal thrower of the basketball team, or the star quarterback for the Varsity. Then do you remember the time you went to College dance? Do you remember the thrills that raced through you as he took you up and started you off in a hesitation that made your heart nearly stop? Of course you told me that you could go on and that you were so glad to get to meet him and how wonderful you thought his playing was, and so on. Then when he asked you for a date, you remember how you wrote home to the folks and the girls and told them what they were so grateful and flattered that you couldn't sleep at night. Remember it all? Of course you do. And you remember how you used to go to the basketball or the football games and watch him and decide in your own mind that the Greek Gods have to speed to get anything on him. If you are a man, your freshman feelings were different. Did you crave a speaking acquaintance with him? Did you decide that you would be just like him? Didn't you look at his K and resolve that you would take one and take our life or you count your college life a failure? Phi Beta Kappa is an excellent thing to have attained, the office of chancellor is indeed an honor, the school's reputation goes way, but for honest-to-gooodness fame, celebrity and homage, there is no man that ever comes to college or wins a degree that can hold the position. Phi Beta Kappa does the BIG athlete of the Varsity. STUDENT OPINION Editor Kansan: What is going to be done about College Day? This is a question often heard on the campus during the past week, and the consensus of the faculty is opposed to a day's vacation for the students of the College on the ground that they will not use it if it is granted. We must grant that College Day was not last year and that students of the College will not students of the College. But should the fact that, because students in the College in the year 1914 made a failure of College Day, be a criterion which shall forbid such a day ever being held, or it seems especially logical and it seems only fair that the students in the School at present be given another chance. Possibly the bunch is live enough this year that they could put a real College Day across that campus, but we are not but why not give them a chance and find out for sure? Getting Freshmen's Number Uppercaseclassen at the University of Minnesota are counting the number of freshman caps appearing on the floor during a pattern soddled daily. Each day the Minnesota Daily comes out with a box head telling the number of pony lids seen on the campus. The number Monday was 302. The yearlings are protecting against the minute dome-covers on the ground that they cannot tip their hats in time to play down their books and going through quite a tedious process. Uppercaseclassen remain stone hearted and the first-years comply with their superiors' demands. Getting Freshmen's Number Senior Kodakers We want your bis. Developing and printing in one day. Squares" Studio. Did you get an "original?" You owe it to her—take her to the Hop.— Adv. There is still time to make that date for the Hop.—Adv. It is never too late to ask her to go to the Hop. She will go if asked. What your Tatter? PRESIDENT OF J. B. PAT. OCT. 1836. REAL Y. PAGE & CO. The Little Schoolmaster Says: No two of you college men are of the same dimensions. Nine out of ten have their irregularity of form which can only be fitted by skillful measurements, and if COPYRIGHT BY FOLK FASHION 1890-1905 Samuel G. Clarke 707 Mass. Street Bell Phone 505 measures you for your new Spring Clothes, you have our word for it that you'll be pleased in every way. Why not express your personality-bring out your best lines-be absolutely true to yourself? Prices like you like to pay! Largest tailors in the world of GOOD made-to-order clothes Price Building Chicago, U. S. A. E V Grice C The Pleasure of School Life is Doubled If you are acquainted with the current happenings "on the hill" The cheapest and easiest way to get acquainted is through the columns of the University Daily Kansan SUBSCRIBE NOW $1.00 for the rest of the year > UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN They Want College Dav Following are the names of students who have pledged themselves to take part in the activities of College Day if it is granted by the Universi- Francis H. Arnold I Aileen H Arnold II Slyvia Adams I Bethadine Bitzer II Betty Betts I Dorothy Brown I Marie Buchanan I J. E Curran I Erna Fischer I Stephen Finderinger I Ildea Fuller I Ildea Fuller I Pearl Gillard I Mariell Glasco I Mable Harper J Male Harper J Olgden Krych I Olgden H. Fry I Charlotte Kreek I Helfer Kreek I Mildred Kreek I Frank McKnight I Frannie McKnight I Marjorie Rickord A. V. Grady I M. J. Johnson I Marion C. Reid I L. Huckett I Don J. Wimpey I Ron Wright A Raymond Crappin Roland Barnes Stella Bedell H. H. Morgan Jane Weaver A. Norkerdrun I Joan Wimpey I F芳 Olyne I K. W. Pringle A. J. Trueblood C. L. Coffin C. A. Randold E. R. Arndt I E. R. Arndt I M. Mar灵杞e Barbara Abel Carolyn McNutt Helene孝 I Hillec Steveons I S. E. Johnson I S. A. Young I R. A. Hall I W. John Thomson I John D. Elliot I John E. Elliot I Healen Coudre I Florence Rhudy Frances McCune Amelia Babock Herbert Babock Hewan Cweaver I Marion V. Barrett I H. B. Bagby I L. Beamer I D. Bigelow I Oscar Brownlee A. G. Bartheke I A. G. Bartheke I R. H. Cassity I R. C. Colley I Frank White I R. E. Buenbark I John G. Cope R. D. Edwards I J. P. Groh I G. W. Jarboe I G. V. Scriven I Rex Miller I C. E. William Hammer Zetha Hammer I L. M. Hull I R. W. German I R. E. Ellis I H. C. Miller I Alice Rice I V. E. Timmels I T. E. Bell I E. M. Johnston I H. L. Willson I Lloyd Whiteside I H. Appel I J. T. O'Bray I J. D. Pace I John M. Pearl I C. M. Hunter I M. McElvain I W. C. Sproull I W. J. Johnson I H. N. Wallis I Alice Davis I Cora Shinn I Borra Clarke I C. S. Pitrat I Mary McClure I Wint Smith I R. L. Dillenbeck I E. D. Eoleck I W. R. Liggett I H. DeBham I W. K. Shane I H. Chandler I Clara Kent I Dewey Cooper I Grace Wedd I LaVerne Stanton I C. E. Stoneton I E. B. Anderson I Haize Quick I Sarah Rowe I Ruth A. Kelley I Emily Miller I Sara Traffant I Cam J. Thiele I Salia Balltte Ralph V. Fritts I W. W. Watles E. S. Stateler Edna Swanson Henry Shinn Elva Stoll C. W. Boughton Elton Rhine Reading for an Idle Hour George W. Goath, s. U. S. A. has written a book on "Government of the Canal Zone," which the Princeton University Press will publish within a week or two. It will outline and explain the work of the civil administration of the Zone through its various changes and the forms by Congress of the form which now exists, and will also draw attention to such branches of the work of the building of the Canal as the recruiting of labor; the preserving of order; and the housing and feeding of the people which have been gradually overlooked at the interest. in the more spectacular phases of the sanitary work and the engineering difficulties. "Ethics in Service" is the title of a book by the Hon. William H. Taft to be published soon by the Yale University Press. It is a plan for better ethics in business with factorial and government service and reminiscences and anecdotes of affairs and people connected with his own public career. McBride, Nast & Co. have ready for early publication "The Sociology of Political Parties in Modern Democracy," which is a study of the oligarchical tendencies of political organizations by Robert Michels, Professor of Political Economy and Statistics at the University of Basle. The work, which has attracted much attention, in Europe, was first published translated into Italian and afterlised in Germany, then enlarged KODAKS STATIONERY PERFUMES Evans Drug Store Successor to Raymonds' 819 Mass. St. RADNOR RADNOR THE NEW ARROW COLLAR ward into French and Japanese. This English translation is from the Italian edition to which the author has added a supplementary chapter dealing with events just previous to the breaking out of the war. A. C. McClurg & Co., are publishing this week two new volumes in their National Social Science Series, "The Cost of Living," by Walter E. Clark, describes and elucidates the steady increase in the cost of food staples during the last twenty years, while "Trusts and Competition," by John F. Crowell, considers the nature of trusts, their development and attempted restriction and other ponts of importance. Funk and Wargnalls have ready John Foster Fraser's new work, "The Conquering Jew," which contains the results of the novelist's studies in his adaptable and vitality, in many nations, and discusses his future. "Citizens in Industry," a work by Charles Richmond Henderson, of the University of Chicago, which the peltos lists as its core activities, all of these activities generally described as "welfare work," and discusses them as an essential and organic factor in the democratic movement. In its Childhood and Youth Series the Robbs-Merrill Company has ready Mrs. Frederic Schofs "The Wayward Child," in which the author bases her discussion and recommendations upon her own long experience in juvenile court, probation, and educational work. Small, Maynard & Co., in their Welfare Library Series, will publish shortly "A Message to the Middle Class," by Seymour Deming, an appeal for sanity and logical thinking on the part of the great body of citizens who do not belong definitely in the ranks of either capital or labor. Stude—I can't do that problem, sir. I'm no Phi Beta Kappa man. Young Instructor—It doesn't matter whether you're a fraternity man or not. You ought to be able to do it.—Record. Kodakers We want your biz. Developing and printing in one day. Squires' Studio. Adv. There is still time to make that date for the Hop—Adv. Remember the Golden Rule Since you wish your friends to send you presents from Gustafson's, why not do likewise? Do Unto Others, as You Would Have Them Do Unto You. Gustafson The College Jeweler The University of Kansas Offers over 200 courses BY MAIL through its Correspondence Study Department. Credit given for all college work. Address University Extension Division The University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas. The High School Student who feels an interest in such a vocation as Mechanical Engineering A four-year course in mechanical engineering with the advantages of fully equipped shops and laboratories, prepares the student to enter this broad field under the best conditions. should be encouraged in knowing that the growth of industry, and the modern striving after efficiency, open a broad way of opportunity to the able mechanical engineer. He is always in demand. His position is often one of large responsibility. He is well paid. Lawrence, Kansas University Daily Kansan VOCATION EDITOR It is never too late to ask her to go to the Hop. She will go if asked. —Adv. A flapper, a flapper, A Phi Beta Kapper, How did you get your key? By grinding away Eight hours a day At a desk in the li-bier-aarlee. —Widow. Boys—there are just as good fish in the sea as ever were caught. Get that date for the Hop.-Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. CASTLE ROLL Front 2 3/4 in. Back 1 3/4 in. 2 FOR 25¢ BARKER CO BRAND MANUFACTURERS: WILLIAM BARKER CO., TROY, N.Y. Only at Peckhams The Captive A Paramount feature play in five parts presenting Blanche Sweet in a pictorization of the Balkan War Drama Matinee Daily 2.45 All seats 10c Newhouse Symphony Orchestra TODAY BOWERSOCK COMING SOON: The eminent actor, Dustin Farnum Captain Courtesy SHUBERT Wed. Mat. 50c to $1.60 Nights and Sat. Mat. GREAT FIVE- STAR AGGRE- GATION *WOM. H. CRANE* *THOUS. W. ROSS* *KARLEN CABLE* *AMELIA BINGHAM* *MABEL TALIAFERRO* in the NEW HENRIETTA NEXT—HIGH JINKS "Egg"gives you "Some Shine" Houks Barber Shop Imperial Shining Parlor and Hat Works Reserved Chairs for Ladies We Clean and Polish White Canvas, Satin Slippers, and all Colors of Buckskin Shoes Notice, Fraternities! AT BASEBALL GOODS Notice, Fraternities! I have for lease some of the nicest rooms in town, with light, heat, hot and cold water—both furnished and unfurnished. If interested, call J. M. NEVILLE Phone Bell 384 KENNEDY & ERNST J. M. NIEVLE Stubbs Bldg., Opposite Court House—Phone, Bell 384 THE FLOWER SHOP Willkommen. Warmest to Fill Your Orders Those Party Flowers Are Always Appreciated, When They Come From THE FLOWER SHOP and We Are Always Pleased to Fill Your Guest 825½% MASS. PHONES 621 Subscribe for the Daily Kansan Professional Cards J. F. BROCK, Optometrist, and Speech Coordinator 803 Mass. St., Bell Phonce 650. HARRY REDING M. D Eye, ear, nose, and throat. Glasses fitted, Office,F. A. U. Bigg. Phones, Bell 513. Home 512. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D. D. D. O. 832 Massaset street. Both phones on line. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diseases of surgery, and gynecology. Suite 1, F. A. U. Bldg. Residence 1251 Ohio St. Both phones. 35. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires studio. Both phones. A. J. ANDERSON, M. D., Office 715 Vt. St. Phones 124. DR. PETER D. PAULS, Osteopath, Office and residence, 7½ East 7th St. General practice. Both phones Houses of 12,30 to 5, 4 and 7 to 8 by telephone. DR. N. HAYES, 232 Mass. St. General drama. Also treats the eye and the face G. A, HAMMAN, M. D, Eye, ear and chin implant. Intravenous guarded. Dick Bldg. Institution Guarded. Plumbers Classified Jewelers ED, W. PARSONS, Engraver, Watch Store, Bell Phone 711-717. 714 Mass PHONE IKNENEDY PLIMBING CO., QO. fax glaa. 6543 Mada laims. fax glaa. 6543 Mada laims. WANTED-By a student, secondhand mackinaw and overcoat. Call Bell K. U. 25 or address J., care Kansan. 183-*3* Insurance Barber Shops FIRE INSURANCE LOANS, and ah- surance. Building. Build 155. Home 2508. Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK. 912 Mass. FITANK E. BANKS, Inc., and abstracts of TITLE. Room 2. F. A. U. Building Want Ads PROTSCH "The Tailor" SPRING SUITING Box Stationery All Grades-All Prices McColloch's DrugStore BURT WADHAM'S "College Inn Barber Shop" LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. Largest and best equipped business college (Kansas. 86000 occupies 2 hrs law TYPE or shrank by machine. Write for sample of Showtype note and a catalog. WATKINS' NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profts $100,000 The Student Depository. FRANK KOCH THE TAILOR Full Line of Spring Sufflage STUDENT HEADQUARTERS THESIS BINDING Engraved and Printed Cards. Sheaffer's Self-filling Fountain Pen. 744, Maas, Street. A. G. ALRICH 744 Mass. Street. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SAYS SCHOOLS SHOULD TEACH CITY MANAGERS Dean Blackmar Sees Hopes in Commission Form if University Trains Men A state law requiring efficient city managers and the establishment of courses in all universities to fit men for these positions are deemed necessary, he added, by a form of government by Prof. F. W. Blackmar of the University of Kansas. He also advocates the election of a commission which will serve the city management. A general way supervision the work of the hired manager. Dean Blackmar says; "The city manager plan of government will fail like other methods of popular government unless we can have experts to fill the position of manager. Eventually I believe this will be as much a profession as engineering, medicine, or law, and a person will not be chosen for such a position until he has the requisite preparation. He will still take a tremendous amount of education to convince the people on this point, even though a number of cities have already begun to experiment with the municipal manager plan. "Certainly a man cannot manage a business without having a thorough understanding of its nature. A city manager ought to understand sanitary engineering, sufficient civil and constructive engineering to know what constitutes a good water system; sidewalk, and how to build them; what housing facilities are sewage system and how to construct it; what constitutes a good water system and how to maintain it; a general knowledge of methods of lighting and transportation and other public utilities; and a good knowledge of government and business administration. He should know municipal law and the administration of the principles of the government applied to the population; a knowledge of civil government and the administration of the city as it relates to public welfare. "In brief, he must know thoroughly the physical structure of the city and how to build it and maintain it, the political and social organization of the city and their administration, the population so that he may can survive, since it is the function of municipal administration to care not only for the physical plant, but for the whole population. And the administrator must know how to manage all of this information and economy. There must be no waste in the logical administration or through the by-products of social activity. "Evidently men with such qualifications are not now available. The two things that would make them available would be a law requiring efficiency, which would increase the demand for such candidates, and the number of universities and schools giving people appropriate efficiency. Plainly the university should take the initiative in this matter of planning courses for the training of municipal managers as well as other positions requiring expert administration. A specific course of instruction involving all the subjects named above together with a required history work in the actual study of municipal education should be placed in every university. By so doing we may help to extricate modern reforms from their present chaotic conditions." Just received a letter from Haley. Says his orchestra is "Setting Purty" for the Hop—Adv. Subscribe for the Daily Kansan. Hash House League Standing Division I. Won Lost Pct. Martin 2 0 1,000 Kenney 2 0 1,000 Willis 2 0 1,000 Ullrich 2 0 1,000 Co-op 0 2 .000 Hayes 0 2 .000 K. K. 0 2 .000 Neal 0 2 .000 Division II. Won Lost Pct. Custer 2 0 1,000 Daniel 2 0 1,000 1328 Ohio 2 0 1,000 Stevenson 1 1 1 .500 Lee's 1 1 .500 Y. M. 0 2 .000 Dad's 0 2 .000 Franklins 0 2 .000 Division III. Won Lost Pct. Track Training 2 0 1,000 Dunakin 2 0 1,000 Hope 2 0 1,000 Joseph Amigos 1 1 .500 Oread 1 1 .500 Midway 0 2 .000 Moody 0 0 .000 College Campus 0 2 .000 Just received a letter from Haley Says his orchestra is "Setting Purty for her." Strong of limb and clear of eye True of heart, of sturdy courage Soldiers marching forth to die. Soldiers marching—splendid manhood— Soldiers Marching Cool and straight and brave eager. Splendid manhood made to mar, Made to rot on fields forgotten In the glorious name of War. Soldiers Marcheing Soldiers marching-sweethearts, husbands. Pan-Hellenic Baseball Schedule DIVISION I. Southern marching—sweethearts, hus *Sons and fathers—good to kill, Good to furnish food for vultures— And the world is Christian still! James Loo Duff in Life. **Fraternity Spirit?** "Who thee, took my rain coat?" "A rauhta?" "Oh, they'll so home in the rai DIVISION I. | | Acacia | Σ AE | ATΩ | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Acacia | | | | | Σ AE | April 13 | | | | ATΩ | April 8 | April 27 | | | Σ N | April 29 | May 3 | April 20 | DIVISION II. | | Κ Σ | Δ TΔ | Φ Δ Θ | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | κ Σ | | | | | Δ TΔ | April 14 | | | | Φ Δ Θ | April 30 | April 9 | | | Β Θ Η | April 7 | May 5 | April 26 | DIVISION III. | Σ Α | Σ Λ | Φ ΓΔ | Φ KV | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Φ ΓΔ | | | | | ΠKA | April 19 | | | | Φ KV | April 10 | May 6 | | | | April 28 | May 4 | April 23 | Inter-fraternity Baseball League Schedule "Oh, then I'll go home in the rain without one." - Sphinx.
Phi BetaSigma PhiPi UAlpha ChiP A. D.
Phi BetaREA D THEApril 7 April 26April 17 May 8April 24 May 15April 10 May 1
Sigma PhiApril 7 April 26DAILY KANSANApril 13 May 4April 20 May 11April 23 May 14
Pi U.April 17 May 8April 13 May 4FOR THEApril 8 April 29April 21 May 12
Alpha Chi SigmaApril 24 May 15April 20 May 11April 8 April 29LATEST OFApril 15 May 6
Phi Alpha DeltaApril 10 May 1April 23 May 14April 15 May 6April 15 May 6SPORT DOPE
Says Schools Must Train City Managers Boys--there are just as good fish in the sea as ever were caught. Gettys Did you get an "original?" You owe it to her—take her to the Hop—Adv. P. W. H. L. DEAN F. W. BLACKMAR, of the Graduate School and professor of sociology. RAIN STOPPED HOLIDAY STUNTS FOR ENGINEERS But J. Pluvius Did Not Hinder Their Big Annual Dance When the rain stopped the Engineers' athletic stunts on McCook Field Friday afternoon the miners were taking the honors in the track and field meet and the chemicals and electricals were playing the third induction of a courageous baseball game. The athletic events were not held. All the track events were finished before the rain drove the contestants in but none of the field events were attempted. The individual winners were: 50yd dash, Gary, miner; first; Yeokum, cid, second. 880-yd run, miner; first; Yeokum, cid, second. 100-yard dash, Crum, miner; first; Yeokum, civil, second. Low hurdles, Cress, miner; first; Metcalf, mechanical, second. Mile run, Fisk, miner; first; Boltz,机械, second. 220-yd dash, Crum, miner; first; Gibson, electrical, second. 440-yard dash, Elmore, electrical, second. High burial, Barelym, civil, first; Urhlaub, architect, second. In the spectacular relay the miners' team, composed of Cress, Crum, Fisk and Gary won first and second. The miners won nine firsts. The Engineers' big day closed with the dance in the Gym Friday night, when over one hundred couples danced to the strains of Halley's orchestra at a clock room in the school. School were represented in the decoration scheme. The civils had two tents erected in the west end of the hall, in which punch was served. The electricals had an original decoration, in a sign that read "E. E. Exposition." Lighted up one letter at a time and then flashed off and on intermittently. In addition to this they had a rose covered retreat, furnished with a table, student lamp and electric lighting. They also planned for furnishing the light for the evening which they generated by means of a water fall. The architects contributed to the decorations with their dainty pergola of Doric wood. A wall made such a hit in the parade because of its artistic appearance. CORNELL RUNS DINING HALLS Has Three Now and is Building Another One other One From the Chicago Herald. Ihaca, N. Y.-Cornell University is well abreast in other American universities of the matter of supervising college club meals to students. The university has already three dining halls and is about to begin building another large dining hall in connection with the new dormitories for men. Besides, the university will in the fall take over the management of a lunch room, which has for some time been run under private auspices The University of Chicago LAW SCHOOL The Summer Quarter offers special oppo- tions. First term 1915, June 21 — July 28 Three-year course leading to degree of Doe's degree. Course may be completed in one-courthold semester, may be completed in two and one-fourth calendar year. College education required for the degree. County counted toward college degree. Law library Second in the nation to admit all departments of the University during the Summer Quarter. The first in the nation to admit a woman president. Dean of Law School, Univ. of Chicago in the basement of Sibley college. Two of these three dining halls are large halls in connection with the women's dormitories. These halls promote between 400 and 500 persons each day. In connection with its one dormitory for men there is a large dining room which furnishes cafeteria service between 600 and 700 persons All three of these are under the direct management of the university and the service is done by student waiters. In the women's dining hall both men and women student waiters are employed. The management of the new hall, which is to be built in partnership with the other residential halls for the men, will also occupy in the hands of the university and all dining halls will be managed as a unit. ARROW SHIRTS Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl Irene Jonani AND THE Lawrence Choral Union 150 students, Lawrence folks and an opera singer in a varied program of good music. Robinson Gym Wednesday Night Admission 25 cents Monday---Tuesday----Wednesday April 26,27,28 Extraordinary Special Any Book in the Store AT COST Now Is the Time to Get Those Reference Books Hundreds of titles to select from: Engineering, Mathematics, History, Chemistry, Botany, Zoology, Economics, Physiology, Psychology, Philosophy, Banking, Education, English, German, French, Spanish, Italian, Latin, Pharmacy, Sociology, etc. Medical books and a few Engineering texts not included. Rowland's College Book Store "WHERE STUDENTS GO" The "Borso" A new shape in a late spring soft hat. Pearl gray—with gray trimmings. In our south window $3 Johnson & Carl Inter-class Track Meet, Friday, 4:00 o'Clock. Tickets 25c. Student Coupon No.2 Entries should be made by Thursday noon 12th Annual Interscholastic Meet, Saturday May 1st, 1:30 o'Clock 49 Exclusive Track Events and 6 Field Events. Tickets 50c. Student ticket and 25c. 8th High School Tennis Tournament, Friday and Saturday No Admission Charged. FIFTY SCHOOLS EXPECTED IN HIGH SCHOOL MEETS. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII PROGRAM COMPLETE FOR FESTIVAL OF MAY DAY Queen, Robin Hood, Mil Maids, Bo Peep, to skip on Oread Green OLMORALITY PLAY ALSO and Popcorn NUMBER 139 Juniors to Give "Castle of Persever The annual Fete, May 14, is to be a different fete from any that has ever been staged on the University of Kansas campus. Unique, enjoy- ing, and interactive from the first procession of the seniors to the last bleat of Mary's little lamb. For the first time the May Fete is going to be staged in the grassy natural amphitheater on the golf links in Metchoupin, a sunny and sunshine, a true old English affair with dainty milk maids, yeomen, little Bo Peeps and dancing dryads. The Old English idea of a summer green is to be observed throughout. Robin Escorts Queen The May Queen is chosen, Robin Hood will be there to accompany her, Mary will find her little lamb, and the king will find his nobly horses all ready for the dance. The program is now complete It will be carried out thus: The senior class accompanied by the orchestra comes over the Hill singing the farewell song to college life. From their number they choose a May Queen and after dance around her conduct her to her mother. A chorus of mudens enter who around and deck her with flowers. The Queen then calls for Spring who enters with a chorus and dance the Spirit of Spring, petaling old Winnipeg flowers and chasing him away. Daisies and Buttercups The Flowers then follow, all group around the Queen and seat themselves beside her. Only their heads with the little flower hats will be visible. Sohmore girls will be dressed as Daisies and Mayflowers. Freshmen girls will be dressed as Roses and Buttercups. Then Little Bo Peep As soon as the Queen is fully attended youths enter dressed in Lincoln Green bearing the May pole. They dance with a group of maids weaving the green bands around the pole. During this time the Queen has perceived Robin Hood and call's him to her. Weary of the dance a number of junior women take bows and arrows and shoot at an apple suspended from a vine. Other groups play Blind Man's Buff,舞 the Milk Maids Dance, the Dance of Fools and Clowns and the Morris Dance. Fifteen engineers illusion the Dance of Hobby Horses. The call of the Shepherds is the beard. The Shepherds appear and are called, "shepherd". Then Peter Pumpkin Eater appears with his wife and ali his fami- Little Bo Peep enters, weeping, because she has lost her sheep, and begs Dryads dance in and proceed to dance the Joy of the Day. At last the Spirits of Song come sheer over the Hill and lead away the process. In the evening the senior women will go through the torch ceremony, where the musicians mea gathered around. The juniors will give an old morality play, "The Castle of Perseverance." There will be a drama in music plays and the band concert. The different sororities will each have a booth and sell ice-cream soda water, candy, popcorn and peanuts. These boots will be located on the walk leading from the steps by Marvin Hall to the site of the Fete. All the girls in the University are welcome to take part in the Fete. More girls are needed, and all who desire to be in the Fete should let Dr. Alice L. Goetz know of their intentions. Plant Trees on Campus The department of botany received a number of trees last week which will be set out to make shade on the Hill. These trees were set out Saturday morning under the supervision of Prof. W. C. Stevens and were set at places on the campus which were most likely to receive shade, were mostly of the hard maple species and the kind that thrive in this locality best. The Geology Club meets tomorrow at 4:30 o'clock in Room 263, Hauser Building. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 2 7, 1915. PROFS SEEK SOLACE IN OWN ROSE GARDENS Blossoming Beds Adorn Yards Tired of teaching curves and dimensions, English poets and Latin roots, many professors are turning in their leisure moments to raising flowers. Two mathematics professors, C. H. Ahnison and J. W. Vanderbilt, are learning the knowledge of lines and curves in making two of the prettiest gardens in Lawrence. Professor Van der Vries has built an arbor 50x7 feet, painted white. Later on in the season, however, little of the arbor will show. Vines of clematis, red ramblers, wisteria and white ramblers will completely cover the frame work, making a shady, sweet-smelling retreat in the center of the backyard. Built with light-colored seeds of shasta daisies, pixie and old fashioned garden flowers. Maiden lilies will soon be in bloom. For many years Professor Ashton has given his flowers the greater part of his sparse time. He takes care of them as many people take care of their flowers, but they are especially interested in roses, and his backyard will riot in everything from pink tea roses to red Richmonds. Another year all varieties of sweet violets will come in for his care, and he will submerge into the background. This year he delights in wonderful tulips - red ones, yellow ones, and those mottled in different shades. Besides these he has had his own assortments and later on poppies will give added color to the yard. GRADES VARY WITH PROFS According to a report that has been compiled by Dean Doin Templin, grades from departments in the College show that students in some departments are much better than in others or that the teachers in these departments are much worse than in grading than in the divisions from whence low grades came. Report Shows High Marks Not All ways Due to Best Students "For example," said Dean Templin, "There is a department which reported 49.1 per cent Is, 39.2 per cent IIs, 0.6 per IIIs, 1.1 per cent did not take examinations and the department did not report a single flunk." "But wait a minute," and the dean scrutinized the report again with the following results: "One department students 13.1 per cent IIIs, 13 per cent IIIs, 0.8 per cent did not take examinations, 4.2 per cent conditions and 17.9 per cent flunks." One professor gave 53.8 of his students Is and the remaining 46.2 received IIs. No conditions, flunks or errors were turned in by that professor." The difference in grades does not show better students in all cases Dean Templin said. "It may be liberal professors and poor students. It may be hard professors and poor students; or it may be just good students that cause the good grades." Denn Templin was unwilling to give the names of any profs who gave the best grades for fear of enuance. Neither he nor the team year. Neither was he willing to say which department turned in the lowest grades. "So it will take a good guesser to obtain an advantage from these professors' 'soft' profits are concerned," he said. LATE DANCING NOT GOOD FOR ANYBODY Advisor of Women Would Stop it Mrs. Brown intends to start a campaign next fall to have the fraternities and sororities as well as all associations, start their dances promptly at 8 o'clock and close at 12 o'clock. At the University of Missouri dances for the past year have been required to wear black and the plan has proven successful. "Two nights of late dancing until 1 or 2 o'clock every week is not goo for any K. U. woman" declared Mrs Escher, daughter, advisor of women this morning. "Women are worn out after dancing so late," said the advisor of women, "and seven have asked me that they should wear less than the dancing hours more reasonable." The Pi K. A.s defeated the Phi Pis yesterday evening at Woodland and so Owain to another game scheduled at 10. The game ate only five innings. Beat the Phi Psis At Morning Prayers Speaker, Rev. E. B. Backus, pas General Subject: "Neglected Virtues." Wednesday: "Responsibility." Thursday: "Intellectual Integrity.' Friday: "Appreciation." Wednesday: "Responsibility." Ogden Jones, president of the College, has outlined a tentative pro program for College Day. Some changes may have to be made but in general, the following program will be carried out if the University Senate grants it holiday. Program for College Day 11 a. m. Track Events. Inter-class contests on McCook Field. Committee: Grady, Hillock, Ridley, John Niles. 2 p. m. Baseball at Woodland Park. Interclass games. Committee: Hugo Wedell and assistants. 3 p. m. Stunts. Avery Ohney, Henry Shinn, McCurdy, Crowell. 4 p. m. Band Concert at Woodland Park, K. U. Band, J. C. McCanes. 5 p. m. Girls' Events. Tug-of-war. Committee on Stunts. 6 p. m. Fruit Supply at Woodland Park. 7 p. m. Dance in Woodland Pavilion. Stanley Jones. FINAL REHEARSAL FOR POP CONCERT TONIGHT Singers Put on Finishih Touches for Program Tomorrow Night IRENE JONANI SINGS ALSO Lyric Soprane is to Assist Chorus of Languages. Visit it in its book. the finishing touches will be put upon the local part of the "pop" concert program at the rehearsal in the Lawrence Choral. The concert which is to be given by the Lawrence Choral Union under the direction of Prof. William B. Downing of the School of Fine Arts at the University of Gymnaseium. Miss Irene Jeonani, a lyric Appearance 1. Richards Mozkowski 2. The Anvil Chiclet 3. Verdi 4. Forget-me not (Ladies) CORONA IRENE JONANI Sings With Choral Union Tomorrow IRENE JONANI soprano from the Chicago-Philadelphia Grand Opera Company will be the soloist of the evening. Mrs. Arthur J. Anderson, organist at the Plymouth Congregational church, is the accompanist. CHICKEN PIE VANISHES AT BIG FACULTY FEED The program follows: 1. Please use not (Andres Chorus) . . . . . 4. a. Tha Beaming Eyes, MacDowell b. A Midsize Light and a. The Stage Rose Low c. To a Wild Rose d. O Sole Mio. , . . . . . Di Capus d. O Sole Mio . . . . . . Di Capua Irene Jonani 5. Lul'aby . . . . . ever (Men's Chorus)...Sousa Intermission a. The Charm of Spring...Clar. b. I Wish I Were a Tiny Bird. Lohs c. Down in the Forest...Ronalds d. Love I Love You...Ronalds e. Jenani (Double Chorus) . . . . . Bullard 9. Robert of Lincoln. (Women's (Chorus). . . . . . . . . . . Bartlett 10. Bridal Chorus. . . . . . . . . . . Cowie Eva Bell Anderson Charlotte L. A Bierbower Gladys A. Chaplin Myrle M. Crose Margaret R. Davis Dorothy E. Diver Florence E. Dunigan Marcelia M. Hansome Edna M. Ingels Hester M. Lamb Mary M. Linn Fredericka F. Miller Ivine Moser Ospreyim Shayos Ruby Whitecroft George Berg Vincent Brainard Lee E. Clark Gola W. Coffelt Olin E. Darby Harry W. Dixon Stephen S. Walker Leonard A. Farris A. C. Faulk The following University students will take part in the program: 8. Love's Horn Doth Blow Affair is Grand.Grand Success and Professors Want it to Occur Annually (Continued on page 4) Occur Annually SETTING WAS LIKE CABARET Violets, Ferns, Lilacs and Pretty Maidens Help Make Evening Enjoyable Ninety faculty members, led by Captain Frank Strong and Lieutenant William L. Burdick, stormed Robinson Gymnasium at 6 o'clock, last evening, devoured ninety chicken pies, amid speeches and air dances, and retreated to their homes at 8:30 o'clock. Today the Faculty Chicken Pie Supper is safely entrenched in the social calendar of the University and the community, and are wearing smiles of satisfaction. Everybody Liked the Experiment Everybody Liked the Experiment It was a success. Devoid of formality and the pump that usually features social functions of the faculty, the supper appealed to everyone who attended and broke up in the morning. Understandably it should become an annual or semi-annual event. Unlike most faculty social events there were proportionately more women present than men. The guests entered the west wing of the Gymnasium and were seated according to tickets bearing the table number which they received at the door. In keeping with the purpose of the dinner the tables were arranged so that the guests sat in the center of which sat the toastmaster for the evening, Doctor Bardick. In the hub a circular space was left for the dancers. The dinner was decidedly progressive and the spokes of the wheel kept turning between cochins when the guests at the various tables shifted to other tables to meet other guests. Members of the domestic science classes acted as the host and kept the wheel jugging along during the four course banquet. Real Cabaret Setting Huge boquettes of fragrant iliacs formed a procession at the end of the tables. Members of Dr. Alice L. Brown, women in dresses of violet lace, and iliacs to the dinners while dancing the "Humoresque" in many colored and veiled costumes of the Spring. The Poppy Society concluded the frolic of the dancers. The University orchestra will give a concert tonight in Fraser Hall at 8:15 o'clock. Student tickets will admit. The two speakers of the evening were Chancellor Frank强和 Paul Kendall. ANNUAL CONCERT TONIGHT ORCHESTRA GIVES ITS The program is as follows: "March of the Elephants". Czaneuve Overture, "Pique Dame". . . Suppie Piano Solo, "Flederman's Waltz" . . . Strause "Siziletta", . . . Franz von Blon "Roma". . . Clander "Scene de Ballet". A Cibuki'a Idyl, "Evening on the Water"... ... Watson Five minutes intermission. Idyl. "Evening on the Water" "Marriage Market", Victor Jacobi Cello Soli "Baltimore," W. Bargte William R. Dallis Gavotte, "Glow Worm" . . . Lincke "Darse Annamite" . . . H. Maquet OFFERED TOASTS OF SALT AND PEPPER AT BANQUET OFFERED TOASTS OF SALT Salt, pepper, mustard, thyme, cinnamon, and allspice are unusual ingredients for toasts with but the combined skill of Syrah, Woolfruff, Gerttu and Marjoram getter. Edith Babb, 'Alberta Cady and Elizabeth Sprague the impossible was accomplished at the banquet of the Home Economics Club on Saturday evening. Moreover the toastmistresses, Barbara and Norman, performed these toasts into a spicy relish. Prof. Joseph E. Welker, of the School of Engineering, will give an illustrated lecture on water purification at Humboldt Friday night. TO SCHOOL AGAIN AFTER 23 YEARS A Freshman at the Age of Forty "Yes, I am forty years old and am not a bit sensitive about my age," says Paul Swynez, a freshman in the being of the oldest student. "I've always thought I would go to college some time," he said, "but I taught school for seven years, and I worked on a construction project. I was time two-four till I was thirty-five, working in machine shops, on the railroads, as a traveling salesman, at most anything. There are many places where I have not seen. I made up my mind for sure to go to college when I was thirty-five, and I thought it would be the University of California, but I taught school for three more years. "I am coming to the University purely as a business proposition," was his declaration. "When I have applied for a position, what business college I graduated from, or what normal training I had had. It was always 'Have you had any university work?' So now I'm即 my education idea into capital with a college education." Swaize is paying special attention to English, as being a most valuable asset to a commercial education, and intends to teach common English. He wears his postage stamp cap, and enters into University activities with as much spirit as any other freshman on the HIJ. ELECT REPRESENTATIVES TO WOMEN'S COUNTIL Three Mass Meetings Selects Members of W. S. G. A. at 12:30 o'Clock Today With but one exception every woman who was a candidate for an office at the meetings was elected, three juniors being out for the two places open to senior women next year. Two representatives will be elected from next year's freshman class early in the fall. Naomi Simpson, Opal Holmes, Katherine Reding, Edery Gibbs, Mona Clare Hoffman, and Cora Williams will head sophomore and junior classes in the Woman's Student Government Association council next year. This is the result of the three mass meetings held on Thursday at the University at 12:30 o'clock today. The following will make up the Council for the next school year with the exception of the two representatives at the beginning of the school year: President, Blanche Mullen; vice-president, College, Nellie Kennedy; vice-pres., Fine Arts, Ada Harper; secretary, Maureen McKernan; treasurer, Bertha Smith. Class representer, Simpson and Olal Holmes; junior, Hoffman and Cora Shinn; sophomore, Katherine Reding and Esther Gibbs. ENTRIES COMING FOR MEET High Schools Are Sending Lists of Men Who Compete Saturday Entries for the twelfth annual interscholastic track and field meet are coming in to Manager Hamilton's office fast these days. Up to the present time only 17 teams have entered Wednesday night. Not all the teams entered are sending full teams but in most cases only the stars are coming. The teams entered up to the present time are: Horton, Syracuse, LaHarp, Elmore, Sterling, Scranton, Meridan, Perry, Humboldt, Maple Hill, Kansas City, Kansas, Lawrence, Takena and Baldwin. Students are to have the entertainment of the visitors Saturday in their own hands as much as possible. As an additional feature Coach Hamilton expects to use the Varsity track man to manage the meet except for the starting which will be done by Jack Grower of Kansas City. The visitors must attend all meetings and meet on Friday and this will be their chance to see the Varsity in action. The tack is in excellent shape since the heavy rains and will be in the best possible shape by Saturday unless Jupiter Pluvius spills too much water between now and time for the snow to melt. It will be established each year and with good climatic conditions this year should prove no exception. Goes to Neodesha Prof. F. H. Hesser, of the department of sanitary engineering, will make a trip t o neodesha the latter part of the week to continue his experiments there with a sewage disposal plant he designed for disposing of some of the wastes of the oil refineries. SENIOR CLASS VOTES FOR STONE BULLETIN In Mass Meeting, Plan of Having Permanent Secretary is Also Carried MAKE GIFT TO CLASS BABY Each Member to Pay Five Cents To ward Purchasing Present for Jerry Riseley's Boy Elect Permanent Secretary Chancellor Strong talked first, on the subject of class spirit. Enhough seniors to nearly fill the main floor of the chapel! attended the meeting of the class this morning at a faculty evening in The Chancellor Strong, Prof. Goldwin Goldsmith, Prof. J. N. Van der Vries, Prof. Flint, Willis G. Whitten and Prof. Hunt Professor Flint talked on the commencement season in relation to the alumni, especially those who will return this year. We should try to meet them and be their teacher, and to treat them as we will want to be treated, in a few years when we come back as alumni. This year automobiles will be provided for the alumni and among other things junior play will be repeated for them. Professor Flint also advocated the election of a permanent class secretary for a period of five years and a year in the faculty of the interests of the University among the members of the class. The class adopted Professor Flint's plan later in the meeting and will make nominees for the class breakfast during commencement. Build Memorial Immediately Willis G. Whitten, chairman of the senior memorial committee, spoke upon the proposed senior memorial. Mr. Whitten showed a plan of the bulletin board, which the class will present to the University, and estimated it's total cost at $300. The board will be built of stone with three faces, in the form of a triangle, two of these faces are used by building the third is to contain the class inscription. The class voted to build the board by a unanimous vote and work will be begun upon it at once. Professor Van der Vries thinks that the class of '14 made a mistake by leaving out the annual class breakfast. "This feature of commencement week is familiar to the alumni and when it is left out they," he said, "and I hope that the class this year will revile the custom." - Caps and gowns are also favored by Professor Van der Vries. Hairy Hackney, manager of the 1914 Jayhawkner, thanked the seniors for their service. The year which had enabled the year book to be a financial success. When Mr. Hackney appeared upon the platium, he presented it to the men of the class rise and cheer. The matter of finances caused argument. Last year only about one third of the seniors paid their dues of 75 cents, which was to be applied to the class memorial, and Harold Mattoon, chairman of last year's memorial committee, objected to assessing them as much as the members of the class had not paid up last year. After much discussion a motion that all seniors who had paid their last year's dues be assessed, fifty cents and those who had not paid be assessed $1.00, carried unanimously. Assess Class for Jerry's Boy The 'last business to be taken care of was jerry Riseley's baby. Upon the motion of Harry S. Willson, who said that the first duty of all seniors should be to take care of the future of his children, he told students to enter the school, an assessment of five cents was levied upon each member of the class to pay for a suitable memento for its first baby. Harry Willson, Miles Vaughn, John Smart, Madeline Lochmann, John Koehler, and R. R. Rader were appointed a committee to collect the money and buy a present for the coming student. Frank Harris Coming to Lecture Frank Harris, an English author, wrote a book about the poet Lapeere 'have caused him to be recognized as one of the foremost authorities on the life and literature of Lapeere', in chapel, Thursday at 4:30 o'clock. The theme of his address will be, "The Personal Shakespeare and Dramatic Literature." Dr. Hull Speaks Tonight Dr. Huff Speaks Tonight Dr. William I. Hull, speaks before the Beta house club's Tongue at the Beta house. The meeting begins at 7 o'clock. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF EDITORIAL STORY John M. Henry Editor-in-Chief Hargen and Managing Editor Hayes Associate Editor William Cady Exchange Editor BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS STAFF J. W. Dyche ... Business Manage REPORTORIAL STAFF Leon Harsh Ames Rogers Gilbert Clayton John M. Gliesner Guy Coyle J. M. Willis Sweet Sweet Don Davis Elmer Arndt Carolyn McNutt Rex Miller Paul Brindel Louis Huet Harvey Kurtz Chester Allvine C. A. Ritter Chandler Patterson Fred Bowens Subscriptions price $2.50 per year in advance, one term, $1.50. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kanaas, from the press of the Department of Journalism. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phone. Bell K. U. 25. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate life of the more than 10,000 students ther than they print; the news by standing up for them; the play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be curious; to have serious problems to wiser heads; in all, to satisfy the needs of the University. Fair Play and Accuracy Bureau Prof. H. T. Hill...Faculty Member Don Joseph...Student Member John Sherman...Secretary You find a mistake in statement or impression in any of the columns of the Daily Kanran, report it in the secretary at the Daily Kanran office. He interrupts you as to further procedure. TUESDAY, APRIL 27,1915. ARE YOU A PITCHER? "Yes, Missouri, we have a school or nearly three-thousand, but there is only one eligible man who can pitch winning ball for our team." That's what Couch McCarty will have to tell the Tigers when he takes his team of clouters to Columbia soon. That is, if someone doesn't turn up between now and then. Craig appears to have the class and the other men seem to be hard workers but can't get by with any stuff. A first baseman, and three other men have claim to have little stuff compose the second pitcher of the team. "Red," winning all his games could only place his team at the half-way mark, unless we find a miracle man for the other job soon. Before it is too late, pitchers, get out and let "Mac" look at you. Yet, some forty teams battle each week in the Fraternity, Pan-Hellenic and Hash House leagues, with some of them having real pitchers' battles. That means at least forty pitches, or near pitches, in these organizations alone. And yet the Varsity is wanting a pitcher and can't find one and a third successive championship which is looming up before us must pass to some other team. THE EIGHTH COMMANDMENT It is more or less true that everybody's business is nobody's business, and it seems equally true that everybody's property is nobody's property. The lilac hedge on the east border of the campus is a gorgeous mass of bloom. It is the most beautiful thing on the campus, or in all Lawrence, for that matter. But it won't be very long, i thieves continue to rob the bushes of their blossoms. Sunday afternoon a daily Kansan reporter counted no fewer than eighteen persons taking flowers by the armfault. Most of them were from down town, and several brought automobiles to better enable them to carry away their pluder. These last employed their entire families to assist in the gathering. The loss of a few flowers makes little difference, but when the people come in crowds, all day long, the loss is considerable, and the hedge won't last long. The University should take measures to safeguard its property. COLLEGE FOR DEAF MUTES? COLLEGE FOR DEAF MUTES. This is not the college for the Deaf Mutes at Olaathe. This is the Uni- versity of Kansas for supposably live and wide awake people. But if you have been at the three opening ball games of the season you might have suspected it was the former place from the noise that was there. In the opener, with Craig pitching air-tight bail and the team outhitting the terribe "Chinks," the crowd sat there as glum as an oyster. in the second game, a losing team got not one bit of support from the bleachers, while in the third game—the first Ames game—a person two blocks away wouldn't have known there was*a ball game going on, so silent was the multitude. We have "pep" rallies during the football season and we yell spontaneously for the basketball artists. Yet we expect our baseball team to fight and what's more to win without out help. It's reasonable, isn't it? Chasing the Glooms If the statement made by the Kansas man who died at 103 years of age to the effect that he attained his age by attending to his own business is true, how in the world are newspapermen ever born? Chicago is selling "Billy Sunday" stock. A good way of capitalizing those who take stock in him. There are prostrations from the weather at K. U., but it isn't because of the heat. Back on the farm now the little kid brother is wanting to take off his shoes and stockings, and mother afraid he will afraid he will take his death of cold. Just because Isaac Walton could get away with "the fish he didn't get" story is no sign that University week-end fishers can do it. A recent edition of the University Kansas conveys the information in one of its headlines that the "zooology Clubs Meets in Snow." They certainly be up against it for as many years as the Hill - Minneapolis Better Way. It has been suggested that some students change courses because their physicians prescribe a change of air. We don't remember any such weather under a Republican administration. The new Kansas religion: nitrate for an eye, a brush for a tooth. Some men eat onions because they are engaged, and some are merely in dependent cuses. Would you call the freshman who wears his cap a neutral? In onion there is strength. "Many fashionable girls are carrying canes this spring." The abominable luck of those Laws, always stumbling right into the fashions. PANDORA GETS POETIC Just leave from our campus of K.U. There you go. the boys. I must pay But the boys will pay "Nay, nay, I needs must just see who you won." Pandora's Box About this time, when there aren't many more days of school left, there's a certain class of student most prevalent about the campus. He goes up after class, leans confidentially over the desk, and converses most intimately with his professor. Sometimes the teacher admonishes to the conversation it is made by a reason to the fact that he had studied so hard on the lesson of the day, but still didn't quite see through such and such a statement. Maybe, too, he'll take some of his scanty allowance and buy an expensive cigar, and proffer this to his dear teacher—while he cheerfully五-fiveent one himself and joying the ofer of the one too far above him. APPLIED DIPLOMACY Now this isn't such a bad way to graft if the prof doesn't catch on, but woe to the unucky student who doesn't do it diplomatically. In this case, you want someone with well schmooze smoke your cigar, explain the one hazy point in the lesson, and even allow himself to win a set of tennis from the martyr-like student. And with that, you are gliding himself on the façade that he not by with the goods. Sometimes, if he has found out what this prof likes, he may suggest to him that they have a game of tennis or golf some of these days. He might just side as he thinks how he will let his elder win the set or the match. He goes home in the fresh June days, and tells his folks that he's gotten by in everything, and he labors under this sad delusion for sometime. Then one fine day, the postman brings him a man with a monkey. Professor Easy-Bluffed has just flunked him in that course of Astronomical Sociology. Shots at Half-Cock Or Foolishment in Verse "Blankety-blank." he says, "think of the money I wasted on him." APROPOS OF FISHING There's a fever that's devouring A longing that's o'erpowering me, a gern that's running rampy in my I have visions of a fishing pole A limpid, dark, secluded hole. A crawdad digging trenches in the mud. That's calling, begging, wanting ... But the specter that is haunting me. Will find his tail a-dragging in the tree. When I've labored 'till the hot sweet run sweat ran, And found one worm to grace my can. can. I'll have had enough of fishing for a year. Student Opinion WANTS TO WORK It is very evident that if something is not done in the very near future all of the blue grass on our campus will be choked out by the dandelions. Superintendent Shea is fighting a losing fight with the dandelions and it is evident that if the present stand is not dug up before they go to seed our campus will be nothing but dandelions by June. Why would it not be well for classes to be dismissed from nine till twelve some morning this week and we should dig up the dandelions and burn them. Surely our campus is well worth keeping in a presentable condition. DANDELIONS The campus on the golf links looks like—well, finish it with any work or phrase; none can be too bad. In the past few years dandelions have spread until today the once beautiful slopes are an unstightly smear of yellow. Dandelions are so thick that they threaten to kill the grass entirely. Now at some schools the students have worked hard covering football fields so that games might be played on dry earth; at other schools they have cleaned the campus. Let everybody in this school go out some afternoon and work for a half hour two and take most of their dances. It ought to be if the campus is to look even respectable in five or six years from now, and it can hardly be done by the ground keeping force. Surely all students, women and men, have enough love for K. U. to work just a little while to keep the Hill as beautiful as it is now. If every person would be with a few minutes afternoon with a few and a smile, it would not be work, but just a real "all-University" lark. r t anyone agrees with this suggestion, let's have the opinions of the frat houses, clubs, etc., reaf soon, for the flowers will turn to seed in a few A Lover of The Hill. With the Knowledge Seekers Elsewhere A Valuable College Course $1,079.111 is the amount that Bachelor Degrees have cost the class of 1915 at Yale. In another student man the more advanced student man to spend $4500 while the poorest student, with equally good management turned in another direction, managed to get through on $200. The average cost per student in the sophomore year was $1076. To turb the tendency toward soo-bishness and high-browism, the faculty at Harvard has orained that all freshmen must eat in the commons and have their rooms in the new dormitories. The dormitory rooms are furnished with no wide doors, which the宿舍 will prevent the development of anything resembling a caste system. A Valuable College Course For Greater College Democracy Realizing the power of advertising and the "magic of the oft-repeated name," students of DePauw University have established a sure-enough press bureau and a publicity methods approach to publicity agent. The idea is of place DePauw before the public in an interesting and instructive way. The members of the Press Club have adopted the title, "Old Gold Bureau," and the slogan, "My News Nose Works White You Sneeze." Incidentally, many of these wide- DePauw Advertises Self Incidentally, many of these wideawake youths intend to enter the workforce. MACAULAY'S STYLE INDIVIDUA Edit an Unprinted Paper Edit in Unidirected Journalist at the Kansas State Agricultural College taking the course in copy-reading are required to edit and write heads for the entire United Press news service each day. This copy, amounting to about 25,000 pages, is free of the condition that none of it is used outside of the class room. Subscribe for the Daily Kansan Gladstone Liked it but Advised Writers Not it to Imitate it From the Chicago Herald. Just received a letter from Haley, Says his orchestra is “Setting Purty” for the Hop—Adv. from the Chicago Herald. Macaulay's style is less messy when in public, but when wrought up to palpable excess, one attempted to criticise. It was felt to be a thing," writes Mr. Gladstone, "above the heads of common mortals." "However true it may be that" Macauley said, "we have no man in the manner than in the matter of his works, we do not doubt that the works contain, in multitudes, passages of high emotion and ennobling sentiment, just awards of praise and blame, and solid exertions of strength and constitution. They are pervaded by a generous love of liberty; and their atmosphere is pure and bracing, their general aim and basis morally sound. Of the qualifications of this eulogy we have spoken, and of the reasons for speaking of the style of the works with little' qualification. We do not, indeed, venture to assert that his style ought to be imitated. Yet this is not because it was one of those gifts, of which, when it had been conferred, Nature broke the mould. That it is the head of all literary style we do not alligece, and that its forms perhaps more different from them all than they are usually different from one another. We speak only of natural styles, or styles upon the manner waits upon the matter, and not merely upon the subject. We be reined either to hide or to make up for poverty of substance." Kodakers We want your biz. Developing and printing on one day Squares' Studio. There is still time to make that date for the Hop.—Adv. Did you get an "original?" You owe it to her—take her to the Hop.— Adv. Just received a letter from Haley Says his orchestra is "Setting Party" for the Hop—Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. Send the Daily Kansan home. A Good Place To Eat At Anderson's Old Stand Johnson & Tuttle, Proprietors 715 Massachusetts Street The University of Chicago LAW SCHOOL Second term July 29 - Sept. 1 Competition during the Summer Quarter. University of Texas. The Summer Quarter *o* offers special oppor- tions. First term 1915, June 21 - July 28 First term 1916, June 21 - July 28 Three-year course leading to degree of Doctorate in College Education. The Quarter System, may be completed in two calendar years. College degree required 120 hours of college coursework counted toward college degree. Law library. The Summer Quarter offers special opportunities to students, teachers and practitioners. Dean of Law School, Univ. of Chicago For warm days WHEN you buy a thin suit, you should be careful to see that you get reliable fabrics and good tailoring. The easiest way to be sure of these things is to come here and ask for one of our Hart Schaffner & Marx suits. Varsity Fifty Five is a good model to ask for; $25 is an economy price. Peckham's The home of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes Copyright Hast Schaffner & Marx The Pleasure of School Life is Doubled If you are acquainted with the current happenings "on the hill". The cheapest and easiest way to get acquainted is through the columns of the University Daily Kansan SUBSCRIBE NOW $1.00 for the rest of the year --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A May Fete Scene From the Past FIRST INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY DANCER CONGRESLATION They Want College Day Following are the names of students who have pledged themselves to take part in the activities of College Day if it is granted by the Univer- Frances K. Hinson Aileen Alderson Sylvia Adams Harold Brown Gladys Bitzer Betty Betts Marie Buchanan John E. Curran Erna Fischer Stephen Fahringer R. D. Fried Illade Fuller Frank Benton Pearl Gillock William M. Glasco Mable Harper Pearl Hudson H. B Hunt Ogden H. S Jones Frank Kane Martineke Kreisk J. M. Johnson Marion C. Reid L. H.uckett Don Joseph W. Wingert Raymond Clapper Stellia Kresk Bella Bell H. H. Morgan Jane Weaver A. Nordstrum D. L Buckles Avery F. Olney A. F. Trueblood C. L. Coffin C. A. Randolph Lyn R. Ashton O. M. Larmire Barbara Abel S. A. Jungung A. H Zeeth Hammer L. M. Hull W. A. German R. Ellis H. C. Miller H. C. Miller T. E. Timmins T. E. Bell E. M. Johnson Ruby Stout H. L. Willson Leon Harsh W. C. Wilson H. Appel J. T. O'Bryan J. D. Pace John M. Miller C. D. Hunter W. C. Elvain W. C. Elvain J. W. Johnson H. N. Wallis Alice Davis Cora Shinn Miles Crouse W. C. Elvain Mary McClure Wint Smith R. E. Dillenbeck R. E. Doleck R. R. Liggett H. Dehappman H. W. Shane H. Chandler Clara Kent Dewey Cooper Grace Webb W. C. Hillstone C. L. Firestone E. B. Anderson Hazel Quick sarah Rowe Ruth A. Kelley Emily Miller Sara Trant Edna M. Davis Geo H. Thiele Sallie Battaille W. W. Mattles W. W. Mattles Elva Stoll C. W. Boughton Elton Rhine Ernest Reser G. R. Gear Howard Adams G. Cummins G. H. Howard J. E. Jones F. S. Rodkey Mac. H. Warren H. C. Smith Carl Swanson Helen Streeter Chet C. Covey David Fordward Henry Shimn Baltzer Virginia Lucas H. Richardson Ethel Scott Mermiam Jones M. Goldsworthy Helen Gallagher B. D. Palmer Mary Nicholson Bernice Metsker E. M. Rummel; F. W. Salvesen R. P. Spencer Ruth Stout G. Hizmertone Uhl E. S. Staterle Edna Swanson Henry Shintt K. H. Lott K. D. Bower A. E. Creighton G. W. Strong L. E. Welтмер R. M. McQuistrion May Anderson Ida Perry Josephine Jaqua Nellie Kennedy Corinne Crowley Elisa Hawkins John Gliesener Merritt V. Carr Mary McCure Clara Burnett Grace Beckley Edna Wallmann M. B. Oldridge Marcella Kennedy Louise Hedrick Elizabeth Morrow Jessie Dixon Osee Hughes Edith Phenice Frances Skinner Pauine Hildering Russel Cowgill Josephine Sharp Mabel Anderson Helen Magill Dorothy Miller M. C. Huffman Milred Rose Katherine Keizer Aleta Brownlee F. Eagle A. Johnson Harry Blasdel A. Nordstrum C. M. Patterson V. Weatherhog Lillian Swanson Madge Parrish C. J. Eldridge Cevt Dilley, Jr. F. Ierker J. V. Frieser Kjirkendall Marie Dent Rust Castles Dorothy Markhan Ola F. Guier Dena A. Seller W. Anderson Victor Bottomly Stella Simmons Helen Ritter Naomi Simpson V. G. E. Smith Louise H. Craig Lenora Jones Gina Kee Gula Finch Kodakers We want your bis. Developing and printing in one day. Squires" Studio. There is still time to make that late for the Hop-Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. Tickets for the Choral Union concert are on sale at the Round Corner drug store Admission twenty-five cents; no seats reserved 1 Choose aSpring Suit on Wednesday, Suburban Day and save one third to one fourth Wool Suits that were $13.50 and $15.00 priced at ... $10.75 Wool Suits that were $25.00 at ... $18.75 Wool Suits that were $18.00 and $20.00 priced at ... $13.75 Wool Suits that were $22.50 at ... $15.00 Wool Suits that were $27.50 at ... $21.75 Wool Suits that were $20.00 to $55.00 priced at ... $25.00 PARASOLS, 50 in the lot. They are the prettiest of silk in many colorings and combinations, and "Parasol" is a Greek word for shade. HANDBAGS in assorted leathers and trimming, 81.25 value. 98e S SHIRT WAIST PINS in colored enamel or gold front, 2 on card. 10c STATE SOUVENIR SPONDS of guaranteed silver plate arm ... 10c RIBBONS, up to 1.5 inch, fancies, stripes, floral and main taffeta for hair bows; 25c inches, at a 9 New Skirt Styles Showing complete line of Wool Skirts in Poplin, sereg or shearped checks new flare models, so a susper- ward style, in $68.00. $54.80 Specially Priced for Wednesday, Suburban Day. Serge Skirts of all wool navy or black, button trimmed, $3.50 value at $2.75 Onwrs; Bulline & Hackman Petticoats of Sateen, with wide fluted floures, black and colors, $1.00 value. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79c Shirt Waisps of new wash materials, Volles, Tissues and Lawns, $1.25 value. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80c Morning gowns q q q q q A ticket to the AURORA Theatre FREE with each purchase of one dollar on Wednesday **ANDKERCHIEFS** Swiss hematised and embroidered corner, 20cen 50c, each... **5c** **WHITE GOODS**, Dimities, Crepes, Flaxons, 12½c value, yard... **9c** **27-IN. FLOUNCINGS** in deep work, scalloped or hematised, 25c value, yard... **19c** ARROW SHIRTS Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl FISCHER'S SHOES ARE GOOD SHOES Anyone who trades here knows that we know shoes, and no matter how low the price, they are first, last and all the time good shoes that come from this store. Get the Habit of Buying Your Shoes from Us May we show you these new models soon? We are showing smart, new patterns in both shiny and dull leather. Low shoes and pumps for women in all the latest heels, from the simple Cuban and medium low heels to the graceful Spanish types. Otto Fischer Special Sale Undermuslins Counter after counter piled high with new dainty undermuslins Table No. 1, Choice ... 25c Table No. 2, Choice ... 50c Table No. 3, Choice ... 75c Table No. 4, Choice ... $1.00 Table No. 5, Choice ... $1.25 No. 6, Choice ... $1.50 Weaver's Notice, Fraternities! 1 nave tor lease some of the nicest rooms in town, with light, heat, hot and cold water—both furnished and unfurnished. If interest- ed call. J.M.NEVILLE Stubbs Bldg., Opposite Court House—Phone, Bell 384 STUDENTS- For Shines that last see "Egg" at HOUKS BARBER SHOP Professional Cards J, F BROCK, Optometrist and Spec- tist 822 Mass. St., Bell Phone $59. Bell Phone $69. HAIRY HEDING, M. D. Eyes, ear, nose B. Duck, Phone, Bell, 113, Heone U. Bldg. Phones, Bell, 113, Heone J. H. BCBETHIL, M. D. D. O. 832 Bachett. Both phones, office and residence G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diseasea Suite 206 Staff, 18th floor, residence 181 116th phone DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires studio. Both phones. A. J. ANDERSON, M. D., Office 715 Vt St. Phone 124. DR*PETER D. PAILS, Osteopathe, Office and residence. 7½ East 7th St. General practice. Both phones with iPhone, iPad, 3, 2 to 5, and 7 to 8 by appointment. DR. N. HAYES, 2029 Mass. St. Gener- ature Also treats the eye and eyelids G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, ear at throat sore. F. G. Bentley, guardian. Dick Blig. Classified Jewelers ED. W. PARISSONS Engraver, Watch- and Jewelry, Belfast Phone 711, 717 Plumbers PHONE KENNEDY PLUMBING CO. QA, Mazda Phones. Mazda 650a lamps. MQA, Phones. Mazda 650a lamps. Barber Shops FRANK E. BANKS, Ina., and abstracts of Title, Room 2. F. A. U. Building. FIRE INSURANCE, LOANS, and abut- tures Ballard 145; Home 2091. Baili 155; Home 2091. Harbor Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK, 912 Mose Want Ads LOST_ Conklin . self-filling fountain pen. Return to Kansan office. WANTED—By a student, secondhand mackinaw and overcoat. Call Bell K. U. 25 or address J. care Kansan. PROTSCH "The Tailor" SPRING SUITING Box Stationery All Grades—All Prices McColloch's DrugStore BURT WADHAM'S "College Inn Barber Shop" LAWRENCE Business College Largest and best equipped business college *Kansas.* School occupies 2 schools Law- TYPE or shortend by machines. Write for sample of Stenotype noteana a catalog. WATKINS' NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depository. FRANK KOCH "THE TAILOR" Full Line of Spring Suitings STUDENT HEADQUARTERS THESIS BINDING THEISIS BINDING Engraved and Printed Cards. Sheaffer's Self-filling Fountain Pens. 741 Magn. Street A. G. ALRICH 744 Mesa. Street. Send the Dally Kansan home. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Silk Shirts Dancing Oxfords TUXEDO Oh! Hip-pe-ty Hop, Before the "Soph" Hop. To our store for that suit of Palm Beach. And a straw hat, too. In a shape that is new. Will complete your costume that night. We have them galore. Right down in our store. In a style that you'll say is a peach. What ever you choose. From your hat to your shoes. You'll find priced exceedingly light. Extra Palm Beach Trousers $3 Palm Beach Suits $7.50 to $10 Kool Kloth Suits $10 to $20 Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUT FITTERS FINAL REHEARSAL FOR POP CONCERT TONIGHT (Continued from page 1) Harry Harlan Abraham M. Lohrentz George E. Maroney Hugh H. Samuel W. Mickey Frederick McNeil Homer H. Paul Paul H. Sautter Austin S. Bailey Pamela P. Paulins Clyde R. Gelyin L. M. Hule Charles A. Ilkewhaus E. E. Lamb Pauline C. Neil Pauline C. Patton Clara H. Scheurer Etta Smith Ruby Stout Oana Ten Eyck Isabella Thornburrow Florence Totten Thomas Toth Lucy Young Helen Bocker Orillie Bourassa Edna Davis Cellier D. H. A. Lorenz H. C. Mitchell Waldo R. Oechsli Frank J. Porter D. M. Rankin W. Scalspino W. Sp. Dick Williams Fliirt—If we were not in the machine I should kiss you. Choice Cigars at Barber's.—Adv. Hybail Ginger Ale. The best by test, McPhil. Phone 198.-Adv. Pert—Let me out at once, sir!— Chaparral. Limeade, 5c at Barber's—Adv Safety razors, blades and strop pers at Barber's-Adv. Boys--there are just as good fish in the sea as ever were caught. Get them. "I am RED PEP Live Wire Philosopher I've been hired for 52 weeks. Take my advice each week. be cheerful." BENNETH J. ROWLAND Watch this Space LIEBKNECHT'S SOLITARY "NO" Stands Out for Peace Against All Germany From the Boston Transcript. Kenneth R. Reichstay, the attention of the whole civilized world by his courageous "No" in the Reichstag on December 2, when the kaiser for a second time demanded popular support in financing the war. When the two sides agreed to him for his action on December 2 he defended himself as follows: "I voted against the war credits because, according to my conviction, they were sharply opposed not only to the interim program of the party and the resolutions of the international socialist congresses, and because the socialist Reichstaz group has no right to deal with the program and of party resolution." In trying to suppress Lieknecht, the socialist party machine will doubtless meet the same difficulties as has the German government, which has been persecuting him for years. It is true that the Nazi regime was a brilliant, but extremely systematic and cautious lawyer, with a large practice among the people, and the highest reputation with friends and enemies alike. The government has perscribed him because he has been the most formidable leader and organizer of the antiimmiliteratist movement in Germany. He had been imprisoned him once, and then only by the most extraordinary stretching even of the extremely severe German law Ever since his early youth Liel Knecht has "specialized" on antimilitarism. He has made a study of militarism and the means to combat it and he has become a master of the practical methods necessary for such work in semiabsolute German territory. His antimilitarism has been carried on largely through the organization of German youth for the purposes of general culture. Having led in this difficult and dangerous work for 20 years, Karl Liebknecht is the ideal of the majority of the German state. When we were taken there would be little question that he would get at least half of the suffractions of socialists under middle age, though it is possible that his brilliant opponent, Erhard Hirschfeld, treasoned in the present war, might have divided the vote evenly with him. Liebknecht first came before the world at the time of his prosecution for the publication of his pamphlet, "Antimilitarismus." It need not be said that Liebknecht by no means indies the insurrectionary militarism of Constantin I. He became the attack at the beginning of a war to be altogether the most costly and least promising method of fighting militarism. * Andrew Lang says that, like all Scotch people, he had a vague family connection with Stevenson but that he and never had about 1873, when he was in Mentone. "Here," he goes on, "met Mr. Sidney Colvin, now of the British Museum, and with Mr. Ransom, who is among my eyes, he always did look, more like a less than a lad, with a rather long, smooth oval face, brown hair worn at great length, but whether blue or brown, certainly if brown, certainly light brown." HOW STEVENSON APPEARED Andrew Long Relates First Impressions of Writer in Odd Costume MINE HOST VIC ONCE FED THE HUNGRY From the N.Y. Times Students Knew no Date Rule ne not do as the Italians do? It would have been well for me if I could have imitated the wearing of the cloak! I shall not deny that my first impression was not wholly favorable. "Here," I thought, "is one of your esteemed young men, though a little bit more than what the teller about I forget; probably about books." He had just written his essay, "Ordered Seed," and says Mr. Lang, "on reading 'Ordered Seed' I saw, at once, that here was a new writer, a writer indeed; one who could do what none of us, nous autres, could rival or approach." Then he ended of an article, and how devout was our belief, how happy our pride, in the young one! I have known no man in whom the preeminently manly virtues of kindness, courage, sympathy, generosity, helpfulness, were more beautifully conspicuous than in Mr. Steinberg, a man we know not too strongly in word—by many, such various people. He was as unique in character as in literary genius." The old order has changed, yielding place to the new. Hungry dates do not flock there as once they did, to cluster around the tables in the back part of the store, approached by a wee flight of steps. "His cloak and Tyroles hat (he would admit the innocent impeachment) were decidedly dear to him. On the frontier of Italy, why should Have you ever wondered who supplied soft drinks and hamburgers to students before Lee and Brick or kindly undertook the job? In case you haven't here's the answer. It was Vic. Victor Keller was his whole name, but it was used about as much as Lee Bryant's is now. His place of business was with the Company and Fourteenth, but it is no longer "Vic." The sign over the door informs the passerbys that John Morgan holds forth there, and that his company has other functions, and various other delicacies. A good many people here, and not very old people either, remember Vic's with a good deal of pleasure. They smile reminiscently whenever they pass "John Morgan's" as they think of past ages. Prof. E. W. Murray of the department of Latin, is one of these. According to his own confession, he was a star patron of Vic's. } "There wasn't any mid-week date rule to trouble us in those days," says the professor, "So Vie had a fine trade. He lived above his store, and no hour did not go out of bed and down to the kitchen to feed belated customers. We used to get up a crowd of five or six couples after a dance, go around to Vic's at about two a. m., and pound on his door, yelling and shouting to him unkindly. You weren't like it, too, and would have been hurt if we hadn't done it." Vic began to lose his popularity with the students, seven or eight years ago, and it was time the stairs to his little balcony-like dining room. He stayed at the old stand until a few years ago, however, when he so'd out and left, perhaps discouraged him, to ask *student* checks. Quien sahe? It is never too late to ask her to go to the Hop. She will go if asked. Reading for an Idle Hour FOR RENT - Two rooms, windows on three sides. Can be had separately or together. Outside, private entrance. Modern. 1132 Room 159-3 "South of Panama," by Professor Edward A. Ross, which the Century Company published April 24, is the result of a journey by the author through South America, which carried him to all the well-known and many of the less known regions of the world to interpret the life, people and commercial possibilities of the various countries of South America. The Putnamms have ready for immediate publication four books dealing with the European War. "Why Europe is at War" is a collection of essays on the conflict from the points of view of France, England, Germany, Japan and the United States. The authors of the several chapters are Frederic L. Jenkins, Sir Derek von Mach, Dr. Iyenga and General F. V. Greene. "The Third Great War," by Laurie Magnus, shows why the treaties of 1713 and 1815 failed to prevent the present conflict and India from gaining control, which a lasting peace can be built. "America and the New World State," by Norman Angell, is a plea for American leadership in international organization. In "Paris Waits," M. E. Clark describes the moments and the happenings in Paris between August and Christmas of last year. On April 30, McBride, Nast & Co will publish Dr. Armgaed Karl Graves's new book, "The Secrets of the Hohenzollers," which is in the nature of a continuation of the revival of the novel, book last Fall on "The Secrets of the German War Office." It tells the inner history of the Hohenzollern House for the last twenty-five years or more, the subteranean diplomacy, its intrigue and personal animosities that culminated in the present war. The Macmillan will bring out this week two new novels. Arthur Stringer's "The Hand of Perin" is a detective novel dealing with a woman accused of killing her mother and vise detected. By St. John G. Ervine, whose recent story, "Mrs. Martin's Man," attracted favorable attention, is a different kind of book, "Alice and the Killer," which is aroused by a roseful girl in her teens keeps a beehive running smoothly. The J. B. Lippincott Company has ready for this week "The White Alley," by Carolyn Wells, a detective novel which will continue the exploits of Fleming Stone, whose genius for ferencing out criminals she has celebrated in several previous novels. Grace L. H. Lutz tells in his book *The Sister of Murda* a vividly personality and the achievements of that Miranda who showed herself in "Marcin Schuyler" to be a resourceful young woman. "The Princess Cecilia," which the Appletons will publish shortly, is a story by Elmer Davis of Americans in the Far East, in which a younger American who is secretary to a Malay Sultan becomes involved in a revolution. A new novel by George Randolph Chester and Lillian Chester is promised for this week by Heart's International Library Company. It is a work of fiction, the results of too much strong drink in the gay life of New York City. For April publication the John Lane Company announces "The CASTLE ROLL Front 2 1/4 in. Back 1 3/8 in. BARKER CO. BRAND 2 FOR 25¢ 2 FOR 25¢ MANUFACTURERS: WILLIAM BARKER CO., TROY, N.Y. Only at Peckhams Snare, by George Vare, who is a Portuguese, although he writes in English, whose real name is Visconde de Sarmento. It is a tae of mystery and intrigue. “Grover Greatheart,” a dainty island named after the story of people upon a desert island said to strike a variation of that theme. "The Yellow Claw," which McBride, Nast & Co have ready, deans with the pursuit of a mysterious criminal in London which leads the reader among weird characters and environments. It is by Sax Rohmer. Devoetes of baseball, whether young or old, will be interested in the new volume of the series of baseball stories which Christy Mathewson is writing and Dodd, Mead, & Co. are publishing. It is called "Catcher Craig," and is to be published at once. HAUCER A LEARNED MAN? Scholars Debate Whether Writer o "Canterbury Tales" Was Educated From the Chicago Herald. "Is Chaucer a learned man? For many years this question was answered in a decided affirmative, but modern scholarship hesitates to call him learned, though in denying this attribute no disparagement of his potency. But his reading, Winatt Watts in his new "Masters of English Literature." Dr. Chubb proceeds to review the opinions of Chaucer's early biographers "who placed no limit to his profound and comprehensive learning," as he describes the university's logician, orator, poet, philosopher and mathematician, as well as a "devout theologian," in all these departments of study. "But," contended Dr. Chubb, "we outlawed that this great learning is rather a matter of tradition than of fact, "But we must not infer that Chaucer was unacquainted with the learning of his age. Latin and French were known to a.l educated them." "In addition to these, he also knew Italian; but his knowledge was that of a man of letters, of the artist who loved literature, of the art of the writer, and for insight into life. The French writers whom he knew are now forgotten save by the specialist in literature, but the Italian are Petruch, Dionis, and Bocacca." As to Chaucer's acquaintance with Dante, Dr. Chubb thinks it was not as extensive as has been supposed. The only three references in the third three references. In Trollius and Criseye occur three remindings us of that passage in Dante which Tennyson has made familiar through his works. For example, "But as Dante followed Boethius, and as Chaucer was more familiar with Boehius than with Dante, it is hardly fair to assume that Chaucer's acquaintance with Dante." "Chaucer's acquaintance with an ancient writers ranges from the familiar names of Vergil, Ovid and Virgil to more famous Florentius Valerius Maximus and Macrobius. He names Clecro but twice, and Livy but five times, and then always in connection with the same story by the great center he connected with the great centers of heroic deeds—Alexander the Great, charlemagne, King Arthur and above all, with the Trojan war, with the Trojan allies, with the to have been thoroughly familiar." Did you get an "original?" You ouit it to her- take it to the Hop- on? See McNish **feu** quantity rates on aerated distilled water -Adv Pan-Hellenic Baseball Schedule DIVISION I. Acacia Σ A E Α Τ Ω April 13 April 8 May 3 April 20 DIVISION II. Κ Σ Δ T Δ Φ Δ Θ April 14 April 30 May 5 April 26 DIVISION III. Σ Α Φ Γ Δ Π Κ Λ Φ Κ Ψ April 19 April 10 May 4 April 23 Irene Jonani AND THE Lawrence Choral Union 150 students, Lawrence folks and an opera singer in a varied program of good music. Robinson Gym Wednesday Night Admission 25 cents The "Borso" In our south window A new shape in a late spring soft hat. Pearl gray—with gray trimmings. $3 Johnson & Carl UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII. NUMBER 140 K. U. MAY EXCHANGE PLAYS WITH NEBRASKA Only Permission From Authorities of Both Schools Necessary Now MERELY EXPERIMENTING NOW If Plan Works, Prof. Mac Murray Hopes to See All M. V. Schools in Dramatic Exchange That K. U. will enter into some sort of a contract with the University of Nebraska whereby the dramatic productions of the two schools will be exchanged seems now to be possible. Dr. Jonathan Prof. Arthur MacMurray, head of the department of public speaking, an invitation to conduct such an exchanga has already been issued to the Cornhusher school, subject to the approval of its university senate. Permission from the University of Nebraska schools is the only thing that now stands in the way of a realization of the scheme. "We plan to inaugurate the exchange merely as an experiment," says Professor MacMurray, "and later, if it meets with success, to enlarge the scope of the affair and include several Missouri Valley schools in the organization. The prices charged at these auditoriums play a large role and seventy-five cents—will make it possible to secure a large audience at each production, consequently the plan should not fail to go through." "It will be the policy of the Dramatic Club here in the University to give the public as much as possible for their money; to spare no expense and cost them anything, instead of making money. Art, not profit, will be the purpose of our dramatics. It cost $250 to stage 'The Man From Home'; we paid $4 alone for the theatre reit and our scenery, but still spent a lot of amounts. But the play was certainly a success from the producer's point of view; and I believe that is what the students want, plays that comfortablely with professional productions." Wayne E. Wingart, secretary of Phi Alpha Tau, national dramatic fraternity, is highly in favor of Professor MacMurray's scheme. "As a means of elevating the general standard of dramatics here at K. U.," he says, "the dramatic exchange with other schools would be an excellent thing, and would give those who take part in amateur dramatics a better chance to put their training into actual practice than heretofore. It isn't an easy thing to appear in an amateur play before it can be played, but it never still to act before strangers. That is what the dramatic exchange would imply, and therein would lie its immense value." According to Wingart, Phi Alpha Tan, as a unit, is backing the new scheme and will do everything possible to secure its inauguration. "We want dramatics recognized as a legitimate University activity," says Wingart, "with nothing of the hapiness that the past in it. Previous to this year, interest in dramatics has been short lived and nonproductive, there was very little real work done. But with the dramatic exchange effected, casts would have to be well nigh perfect in technique and execution to 'get by' with a student audience at another school, because this year's biggest step forward ever taken by the devotees of the drama in the University." SENIORS GET TEACHING JOBS FOR NEXT YEAR The following seniors have been elected to teaching positions for next year: Charles F. Grabke, superintendent of schools at Pawnee Rock; Millie Mann, instructor in Latin at Wamgoo; Sylvia McConnell; instructor in domestic science and English at Linwood. Arthur Duston, '13, who is now superintendent of schools at Kensington has been elected superintendent at Waterville and Mary E. Wolterton '13, has been re-elected as superintendent at Llangford. Appointed Dispenser UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 28, 1915. J. B. Early, pharmic, '14, was recently appointed city dispenser at Detroit. The selection was made through the competitive civil service Mr. Early achieved the highest grade in a class of twenty. Prof. Haskins on Tour Prof. C. A. Haskins of the department of sanitary engineering left yesterday for a tour through Oklahoma and Texas, where he will make investigations of various water purification methods until the latter part of the week. Send the Daily Kansan home. WAGGING TONGUES BRING TROUBLE Student Learn3 Truth of Axiom You have heard of wagging tongues sticking to lamp posts and door knobs when the temperature drops below the freezing point. Have you ever heard of a crabberry sticking to a similar tongue? That is what happened to a curious young student on Tuesday afternoon on the Prof. H. P., Caddy was demonstrating liquid air, Professor Cady had just dropped the berry into the air and passed it around to the students with the precaution not to put it in their mouths. Of course such a precaution created curiosity. So the teacher asked him to pick up his tongue to the frozen dainty. Much to his dismay the crabberry liked the situation so well that it remained fast. OUTDOOR INTER-CLASS TRACK MEET ON FRIDAY Every Student in University Eligible to Take Part in Annual Event The annual outdoor inter-class track meet will be held on McCook Field Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock. The meet is open to all University students and every one in eligible to take part in any event.Varsity men will be in the interclass one event as they were in the interclass meet held in the fall. This is the only open outdoor meet held at K. U. and comes at a time when new material is needed for the Varsity track team. Several big meets are on the spring track schedule, so if you want to be found by this means will have a good chance to get into some fast competition before school is out. The entries for the Missouri Valley meet at Columbia May 29 and those for the Western Conference meet in Urbana, Ill., June 5, must be sent in on Monday, so it is highly important that you attend themselves themselves in the interclass meet. Medals will be given for the first four places in all events and they are a high grade of medal, according to Coach Hamilton. Although Varsity men can run in as many events as they choose there are not near enough regulars to win all the places and Coach Hamilton expects to see some new men run the regulars some hard work. All entrances would be placed in the hands of the respective class captains so that they will be in the manager's hands by Thursday noon or they can be handed direct of the coach "I wish the presidents of the various classes would see to it that the captains of their teams put forth every effort to get their men out for training," he said on Friday. "I believe we will be able to find some new material from the entries of this meet and no one should miss this chance to get into track work. I will enter anyone in the Missouri Valley and Western Conference meets that makes a showing which I will warrant my entering them." Much interest is being shown among the regulars over this event for the classes are evenly divided and each one will try to place their men to the best advantage. However, they must depend on a great extent on the new men who will take lots of places and the class which has the largest number of men to join the meet. The relay will be one of the big events of the meet and gold medals will be given to four men on the winning relay team. The meet starts at 4 o'clock and will be conducted as a regular Varsity meet. No one will be allowed on campus, except those who testants. Student tickets or 25 cents will admit spectators to the meet. High school students who are to take part in the intercolastic meet the next day will be admitted free. Con Hoffmann, secretary of the University, Y. M. C. A., will go to William Jewell College, Liberty, Mo., one day next week to help in a religious campaign to be conducted by Raymond Robins, of Chicago. The Sachems will meet at 9 o'clock evening at the Phi Alpha Delta box. Sachems to Meet Going to William Jewell At Morning Prayers Thursday: "Intellectual Integrity." Friday: "Appreciation." Speaker, Rev. E. B. Backus, pastor of Unitarian church, Lawrence. General Subject: "Neglected Virtues." YOU'LL HEAR THE OLD SONGS SUNG TOMORROW To be the First Get-Togethe Chapel Since Last Fall. Everybody to Sing I hope that every student of the University of Kansas will attend the Old Songs Convocation tomorrow morning and join in the singing. Classes are dismissed at 10:30 o'clock Frank Strong Chancellor. The first real, old-time, get-to-gether chapel since the football season son will be held in Fraser tomorrow They'll all be there—Chancellor and his solo, the men's glee club, the women's glee club, and the old-time music student in the University. It's tomorrow morning at 10:30 o'clock. Both glee clubs, under the supervision of Prof. W. B. Downing, will be on the platform of Fraser chapel tomorrow morning to lead the singing which will initiate the first all-age choir. Strong will sing his favorite song just as he likes it. Then there will be a revival of honest-to-gooodness-melodies, just the very ones you like, sung as real music. They always come to your heart at least, and Old Song Day will bring them into their own day. There will be "Suwanee River," "Old Kentucky Home," "Star Spangled Banner," "Tenting on the Old Camp Ground," "Dixie," and others. Chancellor Strong will . . . "The Ten Commandments." Bob Suhnu, in Irene Jonani, the lyric soprano star, will remain over from 'light's concert to sing one or two, as tomorrow. Classes are to be excused at 10:20 o'clock ORCHESTRA A CITY'S PRIDE Minneapolis Symphony Organization Carefully Selected by Director The Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra which will appear in Robinson Gymnasium on the evening of May 5, is regarded as one of the leading orchestras in the United States, and one of the best orchestras ever assembled. The orchestra which is the pride of Minneapolis is one that has been chosen with the greatest of care and experience from Ph. C. Sull, the School of Fine Arts says that all who hear this orchestra will not be disappointed in the least and that it will be worth one's time to hear it. The leader is Emel Oberhoffer who has had musical training all his life and has been associated with some of the best orchestras in America. Under his training and direction are the two musicians trained in country and most of the time in addition to these the company carries two women who are in a quartet of soloists. Each member of the orchestra is noted in his particular line of music ability and every one of the company is a skilled artist in himself. The first straw hat appeared on Oread today. Prof. H, F. Harrington, weight 218 plus, found the Kansas temperature too high and when he went home at noon today, he pulled his last year's Panama out of the closet and wore it up the Hill this afternoon. OLD SOL BRINGS OUT FIRST STRAW-HAT OLD SOL BRINGS OUT The Jurisprudence Club will meet tonight at the Phi Alpha Delta house. The speaker will be Captain E. D. Scott, of Fort Leavenworth, who will give an illustrated lecture on artillery. Professor Harrington says he didn't exactly enjoy the stores of the multitude but that Panama surely lid feel good. Geo. O. Peterson, Engineer, '13 has accepted a position in the chemical laboratories of Sears, Roebuck & Co., at Chicago. Y. M. MEN TO HIKE SUNDAY AFTERNOON Jurisprudence Club Meets Gets Chemical Job SUNDAY AFTERNOON A hike will take the place of the regular meeting of the Y. M. C. A next Sunday afternoon. The start will be from Myers Hall at 3 o'clock in the afternoon. Every man who is willing to work together with him to pay the social committee for the feed which will be supplied. The direction of the hike has not been definitely decided, but it will probably be to the Wakaraus. The The direction of the hike has not been definitely decided, but it will primarily be to the Wakarua. The hikers will return home about 6 o'clock. CHORAL UNION MAKES SWEET MUSIC TONIGHT Irene Jonani to Help Local Singers With Solos and Chorus The Choral Union, an association of 150 students and Lawrence people, will give a concert tonight at 8:15 clock in the Gym. The event is on the plan of the popular concert lately introduced in Kansas City, the object of which is to get as many people as possible to cooperate in putting on a program for the public. The people who are genuinely fond of music cannot be induced to attend a concert of strictly classical music, For them, and for everybody else, the Pop concert is intended. The music is all good, most of it having stood the test of time, and at the end of that season though it is nothing like rythm or the moral song with a blessing. The choral numbers will be inter- spened with songs by Miss Irene Jonani, lyric soprano, who made a name as a concert singer before joining the ranks of the Chicago- Chicagos. During her last visit Miss Jonani attended rehearsal last night and practised the obligatories she s to sing with the chorus. In order to make it possible for everyone to attend, and so to give cooperative community music a boost, the price of admission has been fixed at 25 cents. No seats will be reserved, and those who come with an adult ticket are forced to face the concert will begin at 8:15 o'clock. The program follows; 1. The Dance Waltz... ...Richards Moszkowski 2. The Anvil Chorus. ...Verdi 3. Forget-me-not (Ladies' Chorus) ...Giese 4. The Green Eyes. MacDowell b. A Maid Sings Light and a Maids Sings Low c. To a Wild Rose. d. O Sole Mio. ...Di Capua d. O Sole Mio, . . . . . . Di Capua Irene Jonani 5. Lullaby. . . . . ever (Men's Chorus)...Sousa Interlinear Intermission 7. a. The Charm of Spring... Clark b. I Wish I Were a Tiny Bird. Lloh c. Down in the Forest... Ronalds d. Love I Have Won You... Ronalds Irene Jonani 8. Love's Horn Doth Blow. (Double Chorus) ... Bullard 0. Roberts of Lichfield (Wa.) men's (Chorus), . . . . . Bartlett 10. Bridal Chorus, . . . . . Cowen ENGLISH AUTHOR IN CHAPEL Noted Lecturer and Essayist Will Talk on Shakespeare's Personality Frank Harris, English author, late editor of "Vanity Fair," "The Fortnightly" and "The Saturday Review" will lecture in chapel Thursday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock. The theme of his address will be the "Personal Shapeppeare and the Dark Lady of the Sonnets." Mr. Harris' recent essays on "The Man Shakespeare" have entitled him to recognition as one of the foremost authorities on the life and literature of the bard of Avon. He has collected these essays in a book published in 1909, and two years later wrote "Shakespeare." He is also written a play, "Shakespeare and His Love," that is becoming popular. Mr. Harris is a lover of books and men; he takes pleasure in the past by travelling, and in the future by dreaming. The "call! your club" golf tournament which is to have been held Friday and Saturday, April 23 and 24, was postponed because of the bad weather. The members are playing the matches off this week at whatever time they can be arranged. They hope to have this tournament out of the way so that it will be played in a regular tournament which is to be held on this Friday and Saturday. LAYING OFF POSTPONED GOLF TOURNAMENT MATCHES No scores for the tournament have been turned in to the tournament committee yet, although several matches were played off yesterday afternoon. These scores will be collected as an annual tournament score and the handicaps for the final cup tournament will be figured from these. Orill Club Hunts Geniuses The provisions of the prizes offered by the Quill Club are that all manuscripts shall be in by May 24. The book for the first best story, $2 for the best poem, and honorable mention for the second best of each. Only sophomores and freshmen may contribute. Contributions in the quill box in Prasser Hall. LOST LITTLE BROWN DOG; CAN'T GET DEGREE Student's Experiment Walked off "I've lost my brown dog and now I can't get my master's degree," Vivian Strahm, a graduate student said this morning. Miss Strahm said that she has bee- working eight months on psychological experiments with her little dog and was just about ready to draw her own. "But last night someone cut the chain and turned him loose," she said "and now my experiment is gone and I can't find my thesis. "He was just a little fellow, only about 8 inches high. I hope one finds him and brings him back so that I can get my degree." WE DON'T USE MONROE DOCTRINE BOTH WAYS' Prof. Hull Says U. S. Has Extended Influence in Western Hemisphere "The United States has not regarded the Monroe Doctrine as a rule which works both ways," said William Isaac Hall, professor of international law at Swarthmore College, in Fraser Hall yesterday afternoon. "Numerous expressions have come from prominent persons which indicate that in time of military necessity, the United States would attempt to annex territory. In time of war, I have no doubt we would repeat the attempt to annex Canada. Col. Henry Watterson insists that the natural boundary of the United States is the Panama Canal. Others say why not at the south of America? Why not at the south of America? Others maintain that it is the manifest destiny of the United States to control the Western Hemisphere." Professor Hull then traced the effect of the Monroe Doctrine on popular government in the western hemisphere. "By the Monroe Doctrine the United States stands sponsor for popular government in the western continent. In 1895 Secretary of State, Olney said that the fat of the American people must be plundered. Then we prevent Cuba making loans which would entangle her with foreign powers. We suppressed a rebellion in the Dominican Republic in Roosevelt's administration and established the practice of sending petitions to the United States there. In the present administration, we have had two gunboats off the coasts of Haiti and now supervise elections there. We have a treaty pending with Nicaragua giving us the power to suppress uprisings against our protectorate over that country." "In Mexico we have refused to recognize Huerta; demanded a general election; refused to let him run in the presidential accept him when elected as president. "We have been marvellously lucky in the past in the enforcement of the Monroe Doctrine. The problem is how we are to treat it as we become, constantly graver America must pin her faith to an international solution of the problem; BASEBALL TEAM STARTS ON FIRST TRIOMORROW A surplus of moisture prevented McCarty's Jayhawker aggregation of ball tossers from practicing day afternoon on McCook Field. But Mau was not discouraged and added the rehearsal to the North Field. The team has a hard week's workout in preparation for its first trip of the season. The Kansas Aggies will be played tomorrow and Friday at Manhattan and Saturday Umpire's St. Marys nine will be the Carolina State opponents. St. Marys. The men return early Saturday night. TO PLANT IIVY AROUND CAMPUS BUILDINGS The small cedar trees along the walk to Marvin Hall have been taken up and arbor vitae, evergreens have been set out. Most of the cedar trees in our own field will be planted in some other suitable spot on the campus. Plans are being made for planting ivy around some of the University buildings and some evergreens are planted in the east approach to Fraser Hall. Frank H. Storms, of the Babson Statistical Organization of Boston, will speak before the advanced economics classes. Friday morning at Administration Building. The lecture is open to all interested. Daily Kannan Meeting Kannan Board meets in the office of the board. BOARD RETIRES DEANS OF TWO K. U. SCHOOLS Dean C. S. Skilton and Dean Arvin Olin to Return to Teaching "TOO MUCH FOR ONE MAN" Separate Administrative and Teaching Functions—Both to Remain— No Successors Chosen The Daily Kansan withheld publication of rumors concerning changes in the University's policy on the facts. Though knowing that changes were likely to occur, it preferred, in justice to those most concerned, to wait until it could verify the stuatesments. Following rumors that changes were to be made in connection with the faculties of the School of Fine Arts and of Education, the Board of Administration came to Lawrence to make final decision in the matter. It is now certain that the deans of these schools will be retired and allowed to devote more attention to teaching. They will both remain on the University faculty. No successors have been chosen yet. Following is the statement given out by the Board of Administration that The Board's Statement "Dean Charles S. Skilton of the University of Kansas has been relieved of his administrative duties in connection with the School of Fine Arts and will confine himself to the field of work to which he has given most of his time, that of teaching, or both. He was also on the Board of Administration last night, and was satisfactory to Dean Skilton. "At the same time the Board divided the work that has hitherto been carried by the Dean of the School of Oilin to devote more attention to the Summer Session, which the Board announces will be made into a ten weeks" "fourth quarter" after the开学 University of Chicago next summer. "These changes were inspired by the feeling that the University will have a much greater demand on it for the training of teachers since the Certification law has gone into effect, and therefore the graduate courses of the School of Education, and that a strengthening of the work was necessary. "The man who will be appointed to take up Dean Skilton's administration, he should plassee more than ever before the problem of stimulating the musical activities not only of the University but to organize and develop the music." "The Board points out that this is not a new idea but that it has been successfully carried out in Wisconsin and California." PROM BENEFIT DANCE, MAY 6 Ray Hall's Orchestra Will Play For the Big Occasion The benefit dance to recuperate the loss incurred by the Junior Prom, has been announced for the evening of May 6. Owing to the elaboratness of the big social event, the management, went in debt about $50. The dance has been arranged to clear up this financial haze. Ray Hall, the premier dance musician, with his orchestra has been hired to dispense the music for the occasion. 'This announcement should alone guarantee a large crowd.' The dance will be given in Robinson Gymnasium and will be open for the whole University. FIVE HUNDRED WANT ROBINS TO COME BACK Signatures are coming in fast for the petition to secure the services of Raymond Robins to lead the opening meetings of the University Y. M. C. A. next fall. Seventy faculty signatures were secured at the Chicken Pie supper Monday night not all of the patients have been turned in at the Y. M. office, it is thought that at least 500 students have signed. Those wishing to sign will find petitions at Con Hoffmann's office. Sigma Delta Chi, journalistic fraternity, announces the pledging of John Miller of Atchison, and Ross Clayton of Hill City. Y. The M. C. A. cabinet will meet the move in a crowd even at Con Hoffman's厂房. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas John M. Henry...Editor-in-Chile Raymond Clapper...Managing Editor Helen Hayes...Associate Editor William Cady...Exchange Edit EMPTORIAL STAFF BUSINESS STAFF J. W. Dyche...Business Manager DEPORTORIAL STAFF Subscription price $2.50 per year in advance; one term, $1.50. Leon Harsh Gilbert Clayton Guy Schwarzer Elmer Arndt Elmer Arndt Louis Puckett Glendon Alpine Glendon Alpine Ames Rogers Bassler, Bassler J. M. Miller Don Davis Paul Brindel N Paul Brindel Harry Morgan Fred Bower Fred Bower Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office 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. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone, Bell K. U. 35. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate life of the new class, further than merely printing the news. The new class is University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful to be charitable; to be courteous and to solve problems to wiser heads, in all, to serve the best of its ability the students. Fair Play and Accuracy Bureau Fair Play and Accuracy Bureau Prof. H. T. Hill...Faculty Member Don Joseph...Student Member John M. Henry...Secretary If you find a mistake in statement or impression, in any column or report, you should report the secretary at the Daily Kansan office. He will instruct you as to further action. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28, 1915. We hate to have to say it but— Have you made that Soph Hop date A work that deserves encouragement is that of the Engineers among the Mexicans and negroes of the city; bottoms. Whatever else may be said as t the International Polity Club it is furnishing some very good convocation material of the kind that the students like. Mez, Hull and the others are as good as the average student can hope to hear. PULL THE DANDELIONS Some public-spirited students would have the University excused from a couple of classes and go out and dig dandelions. While this is hardly the time for asking for a holiday, just when the College Day is up there is sense in the proposal. Students may be lazy, and have spring fever, and be born tired, but it's in the Kansan's nature to play square. If the University authorities really want the dandelions pulled we know about 1617 men, and some women, that would make great inroads on the ranks of the pest. Perhaps a part of College Day could be used for the work if it is granted in time. SPRING FEVER Spring fever is a condition—it is also a force, and yet a status. Regarded as a force, it is hard to classify further; it is not a physical force, nor chemical; rather it is atmospheric, psychic, and erratic. It is also one of the strongest and most subtle forces of nature; it causes human beings who are unusually sane to forsake all their usual customs and habits, to wander in new fields, and to disregard their duties and obligations. Spring fever causes sober householders to spade up their premises and to implant therein sundry bushes and shrubs which they fondly imagine will one day bear fruit; it drives the small boy to the crick, there to dispart himself like a young cannibal, to cast aside his clothing and to leap into the frigid depths of the stream; it causes the overworked student to forego his labors and to dedicate his time and funds to the entertainment of some maiden, likewise affected by the abnormal climatic conditions, and to lead the damsel to believe that the future years of his young life shall be devoted to supplying her with happiness in large chunks. In its effects upon the human animal the condition or force of spring may be regarded as a strange malady. Its earliest symptoms appear with the first hint of approaching spring in the air; with the coming of the ducks and the geese it reaches the acute stage, during which the patient is to be regarded as largely irresponsible, and then dwindles down during the progress of the early summer to mere intermittent attacks. No cure for the malady has been discovered, and scientists despair of ever finding one, because of the difficulty presented by the different phases of the disease. Student Opinion RETURN POWER Editor Kansan; We are about to vote on the question of returning the disciplinary power of the men students to the court. What does that mean, that have precipitated this action? First, the personnel of the present Council lacks in moral courage and the present regime is not conducive to getting better men to come out for places. Second, the faculty has the final veto power anyway. Third, it is a matter of common knowledge that there is as much misinformation in the media as in reality. Fourth, the faculty started the poker clean up, let it die a natural death and then blame the Council for its outcome. Fifth, invariably when there is any dirty work to be done in the way of investigation followed by expulsion from the office, and then does not take the credit for it. Sixth, every senior at the University knows that the personnel of the Student Council has been getting older than year it was the year before. Seventh, that student discipline has been a decided failure from almost every year. Reformer Chasing the Glooms Speaking of keen competition, die you ever hear two members of a victorious hash house baseball team comparing notes? Get out some of the tintypes of years ago, then criticize the present ones. It's amusing to hear a profession who never had an intoxicating thought talk about the sober second thought. Now the state of Georgia claims to have a language all its own. They say it sounds like the howl of a lynch mob. Some men's wills are broken before they are dead. The woman that says "Excuse my glove" when shaking hands we can excuse, but the woman that says "Excuse my veil" when kissing never. Give us this day our daily laugh and lead us not into a grouch. The office boy now wishes he had a dozen grandmothers to die on Sat. Pandora's Box Well, by the combined efforts of himself, his tutor, and all the former quiz books in the house on the subject, our man passes the final. True, it is just barely a passing mark, but, he makes his five hours of work in this certain group, and his chest and head swell accordingly. There is an unusual pronemonon in the person who has taken some very difficult course on the Hill. No, the phenomenon lies not in the fact that he took the course, for there is probably some good reason for his doing it. Perhaps he needed five hours to fill a group, and had exhausted all the resources before he went through this course when he was a boy, and wanted his son to suffer likewise, and possibly some shark had told him that this identical course was easy—dead soft, and he had unwittenly been lead into taking it. But here comes the unusualness of it all. Mr. Snap-Seeker labors through a semester of terror. He frankly amits that he has never had to study before, and his body is anything quite so heavy. And there upon he burns the midnight oil, he uses his spending money for a tutor, he cuts out more than three dates a week, and really digs. Sometimes he even loses weight with the process, and then she's less likely to sulcifyiously telling him not to sacrificise his health for the lowly pursuit of knowledge. THE DECEIVER But as sure as my name isn't Snapskeer, next year when you ask our hero about this course does he tell you that he wouldn't take it if he were you? No, air. He forge all the weapons he thought would with vive who whole-heartedly the same agony for you as he himself underwent. Therefore, oh, ye of much faith, take not the words of such students as these, for verily, they are deceiving. IN TERMS OF ZOO She was an outdoor girl. Shots at Half-Cock Of Fealishment in Yarga Or 1 Consumment in Versus Athletic and undaunted, Who dearly loved to walk into A house that might be haunted. She knew about all animals, From dinosaur to ion, But she always shuddder at. but she always shudders at A rampant dandelion. From the K. U. Zoo THE MEANEST MAN There is one kind of man that the K. U. Zoo holds (he's found in zoos of other colleges also) to whom a girl must be met with success. The treatment that he most deserves is to fall in love with some girl that will treat him just as she has been treating other girls all his life. If you have a torture could be meted out to him. The meenest man in the world is the man that will call a girl up late and ask her for a date, and then break it. That may sound fishy, but truth is over stranger than fiction, and he has always small souls. This man has a whole list of similar tricks. He's the man that will come ambiling to his date about a half hour late and then act bored because you are a woman. Another little trick of his is to take you to a dance and then rave about the way a passing girl can "hitate," while he is hesitating with you. But the most interesting part is how he admires golden hair while he looks at your own brown tresses. You ask how he gets away with it? Well, he can be so nice when he wants to be, and he has such a way of making you feel that your fault isn't really a big deal. VERY good looking, and there are always so many girls wild to take him if you let him go that you don't have the nerve. And so he goes on in his cruel, nerve wracking way, until he either falls in love with some woman or lives with his presence, or until he moves out of town, or leaves school. You wont believe that there is such a man unless you have met him, but as I said before, Truth is stranger than Fiction. THE "OLD WOMAN" Uncle: Ira, in Chanute Tribune "I'll get the money from the 'old woman,'" said a boy of eighteen, as he came out of the pool hall the other evening. I happen to be acquainted with his mother; one of those little women whom any man would have needed for years ago. I had been a visitor at her home. She was sorting over a lot of clothes to send to some poor children, and among the rest was a little baby shirt. She held it up and looked at it, and putting it to one side said, "No I can't send that, it was my boy's when he was a little tad. You know how strong we're great chums, my boy and I. Boy, boy, and you can call a woman like that the 'old woman.' I know you think it has a manly sound but you are far from right; there is not a thing manly about it, and there is not a thing manly about playing pool on other people's money. Play if you want to but pay with your own money, don't move when you get out among real men that they don't refer to their mothers as 'old women,' and that the man who does looms up like a dollar's worth of limberger cheese at a milliner's exhibit. She thinks you are a gentleman. Try to justify the thought. Stay at home with her one day. Get acquainted with her, and try, if you have any manhood, to appreciate the only real friend you have in the world."-lola Register. Roar o' guns, an' groans o' dying'; Mud a-suckin' at your knees; Ballets scarpin' in the breechlock; Some poor comrade's din' wheez 'dinners Huggin' close to stinkin' trenches; Nights 'o slaughter; such as fell Dyn' wore'n rats in mud holes— HELL Tuesday of each month, 4:39 p. m. Marvin Hall. Girls' Glee Club - Mondays and wed- nesday, $ p. m.; North College. Girls' Glee Club - Monday. Where They Meet Greek Symposium—First Thursday in each month; 7:30 p. m.; at the homes Faculty not listed Meet on call Monday through Tuesday Wednesday, each month, 4:30 p.m. Saturday, 11 a.m. on call, afternoon or evening. afternoon, afternoon, afternoon, afternoon, 2:30 p.m. m. room 505. afternoon, afternoon, afternoon Whine o' vicious swift fang bullets Wicked points of skyonet steel, wicked wire. Home Economics Club—Last Wednesday of each month, 4/30 p.m., m. room Dawn an' distance, smoke an' shell— Christ a myth, *n*'t death a comrade; God! but ain't this war just hell! "He said he was a saint," Words o love on shaded paper. Tears, as sorrow comes too real. Hope o' years a tattered ruin; Jurisprudence Club—Every third Wednesday evening, at 8. Please report any errors in this list to K. U. 35. On call. Kansas City Section of the American Chemical Society—Once a month, on Saturdays, alternating between Kansas City and New York, Lawrence will begin at 4 p. m. Botany Club - First and third Wines on each month, 7:00 p. m. Snow Hall. K. U. Branch of the American Airlines and other subsidiaries. Other Monday night, at 7:30; room 120. Athletic Board—On call Band—Every Wednesday evenin- Maddolin Club—Wednesday, 7:30 p. m; Fraser. Mein's Student Council—Every Tuesday, 7:15 p. m. Student Union. 1320 p. m. room 203, Haworth Hall Orchestra—Tuesday, 7:39 p. m. Overture Physiochemical Society—Once a week, on call, lecture room, Chemistry building Faculties not listed—Meet on call. Geology Club—Second and fourth University Senate—First Tuesday of April 330 p.m. room 110. Friday, April 31. Fri. Hall. 0 : 00 … Fraser Hall 0 : 00 … Bedford West Holiday Inn 0 : 00 … f. each month, 7:00 p.m. College Faculty - Third Thursday of each month 10:30 p.m.; lecture 11:30 a.m. room 309 Prasse poison Professor Chicago Public University hourz-For- students, Monday's, 3 to 4 p.; m. for students, Tuesday's, Cercle Francais - Wednesday 4:30 p. Chancellor's open office hours—Fors Chemical Engineering Society-Alternate Wednesday, 7:39 p.m.; Chem- istry Department Mining Journal—Meets first and third Wednesday, each month. 1:30 p.m. M. S. **now Zoology Club—second afh** **Mary Ann Hall—first afh** m; biological Library, Show Hall. Student Volunteer Meeting—Wednesdays. 7 p.; Myera Hall. Quill Club—Every other Tuesday, 7:30 o'clock, Fraser. College Administrative Committee- First Monday of each month, 430 p.m. COLLEGE ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE Printer University Post Office—Every day except Sunday. 8 a. p. on 5 p. m. Graduate School Faculty-Second Tuesday of each month. Engineering Society—First and third Tuesdays of each month until November 2014. University Debating Society - Mon- days, 7:30 p.m.; m: room 101, Fraser Braun m. Fraser 102 Deutsche Verein — Mondays, 4:30 p Bernhardsen Y. M. C. A.-Regular meeting. Sun- all m. p.; M. m. Hall. For- ments. Y. M. C. A. B. Board of Directors - Second- season each month, 7:30 p.m. m. Meyer Hall 824 Women's Student Government —Thursday, 4:35 p. m.; Fra- cal Day, 5:15 p. m. m. Fraser 313. Engineering School Faculty—Last Y. W. G. A. "At Home" - Second, third and fourth Sanders $a$ p. m. 18. B. N. S. $a$ p. m. 32. C. R. P. $a$ p. m. 69. D. F. $a$ p. m. 107. E. L. $a$ p. m. 151. F. T. $a$ p. m. 214. G. J. $a$ p. m. 277. H. K. $a$ p. m. 348. I. M. $a$ p. m. 421. J. N. $a$ p. m. 503. K. O. $a$ p. m. 584. L. P. $a$ p. m. 665. M. Q. $a$ p. m. 746. N. R. $a$ p. m. 827. O. S. $a$ p. m. 918. P. T. $a$ p. m. 999. Q. U. $a$ p. m. 1089. R. V. $a$ p. m. 1179. S. W. $a$ p. m. 1279. T. X. $a$ p. m. 1379. U. Y. $a$ p. m. 1479. V. Z. $a$ p. m. 1579. Second Semester — Opens Monday, Feb. 25th; day 4, 19:00 p.m. ; day 5, 4:30 p.m. ; day 6, 4:30 p.m. ; day 7, 4:30 p.m. ; day 8, 4:30 p.m. ; day 9, 4:30 p.m. ; day 10, 4:30 p.m. ; day 11, 4:30 p.m. ; day 12, 4:30 p.m. ; day 13, 4:30 p.m. ; day 14, 4:30 p.m. ; day 15, 4:30 p.m. ; day 16, 4:30 p.m. ; day 17, 4:30 p.m. ; day 18, 4:30 p.m. ; day 19, 4:30 p.m. ; day 20, 4:30 p.m. ; day 21, 4:30 p.m. ; day 22, 4:30 p.m. ; day 23, 4:30 p.m. ; day 24, 4:30 p.m. ; day 25, 4:30 p.m. ; day 26, 4:30 p.m. ; day 27, 4:30 p.m. ; day 28, 4:30 p.m. ; day 29, 4:30 p.m. ; day 30, 4:30 p.m. ; day 31, 4:30 p.m. ; day 32, 4:30 p.m. ; day 33, 4:30 p.m. ; day 34, 4:30 p.m. ; day 35, 4:30 p.m. ; day 36, 4:30 p.m. ; day 37, 4:30 p.m. ; day 38, 4:30 p.m. ; day 39, 4:30 p.m. ; day 40, 4:30 p.m. ; day 41, 4:30 p.m. ; day 42, 4:30 p.m. ; day 43, 4:30 p.m. ; day 44, 4:30 p.m. ; day 45, 4:30 p.m. ; day 46, 4:30 p.m. ; day 47, 4:30 p.m. ; day 48, 4:30 p.m. ; day 49, 4:30 p.m. ; day 50, 4:30 p.m. ; day 51, 4:30 p.m. ; day 52, 4:30 p.m. ; day 53, 4:30 p.m. ; day 54, 4:30 p.m. ; day 55, 4:30 p.m. ; day 56, 4:30 p.m. ; day 57, 4:30 p.m. ; day 58, 4:30 p.m. ; day 59, 4:30 p.m. ; day 60, 4:30 p.m. ; day 61, 4:30 p.m. ; day 62, 4:30 p.m. ; day 63, 4:30 p.m. ; day 64, 4:30 p.m. ; day 65, 4:30 p.m. ; day 66, 4:30 p.m. ; day 67, 4:30 p.m. ; day 68, 4:30 p.m. ; day 69, 4:30 p.m. ; day 70, 4:30 p.m. ; day 71, 4:30 p.m. ; day 72, 4:30 p.m. ; day 73, 4:30 p.m. ; day 74, 4:30 p.m. ; day 75, 4:30 p.m. ; day 76, 4:30 p.m. ; day 77, 4:30 p.m. ; day 78, 4:30 p.m. ; day 79, 4:30 p.m. ; day 80, 4:30 p.m. ; day 81, 4:30 p.m. ; day 82, 4:30 p.m. ; day 83, 4:30 p.m. ; day 84, 4:30 p.m. ; day 85, 4:30 p.m. ; day 86, 4:30 p.m. ; day 87, 4:30 p.m. ; day 88, 4:30 p.m. ; day 89, 4:30 p.m. ; day 90, 4:30 p.m. ; day 91, 4:30 p.m. ; day 92, 4:30 p.m. ; day 93, 4:30 p.m. ; day 94, 4:30 p.m. ; day 95, 4:30 p.m. ; day 96, 4:30 p.m. ; day 97, 4:30 p.m. ; day 98, 4:30 p.m. ; day 99, 4:30 p.m. ; day 100, 4:30 p.m. ; day 101, 4:30 p.m. ; day 102, 4:30 p.m. ; day 103, 4:30 p.m. ; day 104, 4:30 p.m. ; day 105, 4:30 p.m. ; day 106, 4:30 p.m. ; day 107, 4:30 p.m. ; day 108, 4:30 p.m. ; day 109, 4:30 p.m. ; day 110, 4:30 p.m. ; day 111, 4:30 p.m. ; day 112, 4:30 p.m. ; day 113, 4:30 p.m. ; day 114, 4:30 p.m. ; day 115, 4:30 p.m. ; day 116, 4:30 p.m. ; day 117, 4:30 p.m. ; day 118, 4:30 p.m. ; day 119, 4:30 p.m. ; day 120, 4:30 p.m. ; day 121, 4:30 p.m. ; day 122, 4:30 p.m. ; day 123, 4:30 p.m. ; day 124, 4:30 p.m. ; day 125, 4:30 p.m. ; day 126, 4:30 p.m. ; day 127, 4:30 p.m. ; day 128, 4:30 p.m. ; day 129, 4:30 p.m. ; day 130, 4:30 p.m. ; day 131, 4:30 p.m. ; day 132, 4:30 p.m. ; day 133, 4:30 p.m. ; day 134, 4:30 p.m. ; day 135, 4:30 p.m. ; day 136, 4:30 p.m. ; day 137, 4:30 p.m. ; day 138, 4:30 p.m. ; day 139, 4:30 p.m. ; day 140, 4:30 p.m. ; day 141, 4:30 p.m. ; day 142, 4:30 p.m. ; day 143, 4:30 p.m. ; day 144, 4:30 p.m. ; day 145, 4:30 p.m. ; day 146, 4:30 p.m. ; day 147, 4:30 p.m. ; day 148, 4:30 p.m. ; day 149, 4:30 p.m. ; day 150, 4:30 p.m. ; day 151, 4:30 p.m. ; day 152, 4:30 p.m. ; day 153, 4:30 p.m. ; day 154, 4:30 p.m. ; day 155, 4:30 p.m. ; day 156, 4:30 p.m. ; day 157, 4:30 p.m. ; day 158, 4:30 p.m. ; day 159, 4:30 p.m. ; day 160, 4:30 p.m. ; day 161, 4:30 p.m. ; day 162, 4:30 p.m. ; day 163, 4:30 p.m. ; day 164, 4:30 p.m. ; day 165, 4:30 p.m. ; day 166, 4:30 p.m. ; day 167, 4:30 p.m. ; day 168, 4:30 p.m. ; day 169, 4:30 p.m. ; day 170, 4:30 p.m. ; day 171, 4:30 p.m. ; day 172, 4:30 p.m. ; day 173, 4:30 p.m. ; day 174, 4:30 p.m. ; day 175, 4:30 p.m. ; day 176, 4:30 p.m. ; day 177, 4:30 p.m. ; day 178, 4:30 p.m. ; day 179, 4:30 p.m. ; day 180, 4:30 p.m. ; day 181, 4:30 p.m. ; day 182, 4:30 p.m. ; day 183, 4:30 p.m. ; day 184, 4:30 p.m. ; day 185, 4:30 p.m. ; day 186, 4:30 p.m. ; day 187, 4:30 p.m. ; day 188, 4:30 p.m. ; day 189, 4:30 p.m. ; day 190, 4:30 p.m. ; day 191, 4:30 p.m. ; day 192, 4:30 p.m. ; day 193, 4:30 p.m. ; day 194, 4:30 p.m. ; day 195, 4:30 p.m. ; day 196, 4:30 p.m. ; day 197, 4:30 p.m. ; day 198, 4:30 p.m. ; 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W, G. C. A. Second Cabinet—Tuesdays, 7 n. m. 1209 Oread. students, Monday, 3 to 4 b. m.; for students, Tuesday, 4 to 5 a.m. Chinese Engineering Society - Alter- torial Engineering Society Y. W. C. A. Advisory Board-Second Month month, 3/20 p. m. 1224 LA N.A. Easter Recess—Friday and Monday. April 2 and 5, 1915. Next Summer Season - Opens Thursday, June 10, 1915. Chancellor and Mrs. Strong—At home and at work, with a fourth Thursdays of each week. Chemical Club - Second and fourth season of the Chemistry Chemistry Building; J. E. Whelan, April 2 and 5, 1915. Next Commencement—Wednesday. secretary. **Al Ente** - Second and fourth Thursdays of each month, 4:30 p. mn.; Fraser 314. eventually at 75; Fraser Hall evening at 7; Fraser Hall evening at 8; m. a fraternity house; chosen by m. a fraternity house, chosen by K. U. Branch of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers -Every Day K. U. Debating Society-Thursday, 8 p. m. Fraser 313, 58 Y. M. C. A. Cobinet—Thursday, 5:30 p. m.; 1323 Ohio. Y. W. C. A. Gabinet~Thurdays, 7:15 p. m. 1290 Oread. COACHES LIKE CHANGES Football Instructors Generally Pleas ed With Rules of Committee Christian Science Monitor. Football authorities have been arguing against the presence of the coach on the field. Last year they passed a rule making it compulsory for a coach to remain on the bench during the progress of a game. This year, further to limit the coach sending instructions to his players while the game is being played, they have not instructed that the man may be substituted. But still they have not done away with the side line coaching. Football coaches are well please with the changes in the rules mad by the central committee in sessio in New York this winter. The changes were expected, and now that they have been written into the foot team's roster, respect should less confusion regarding technicalite on the field next fall. There is one point, however, that bothers some of the instructors. That is the one concerning line coaching. They believe that it was a good thing to limit the substituting of players to the beginning of periods, but they do see that line coaching does not deal with line coaching. Concerning this point, Coach Dawson of Mount Union says: "It is my belief that football enthusiasts want to see football played along scientific lines. The better the game the more the public will enjoy it. They do not enjoy a game where the teams play line coachings and physically, but they do enjoy a game that is full of good football." Would Instruct Substitutes *“Coaches are expected to give the players a chance to play the game game start and between the halves. Now, when a new player is sent into the game, it is not the duty of the coach to tell that player something of the faults of the team? Suppose the coach were forced outside the instructional area, and the coach be the man to judge the physical fitness of the player? The captain of the team, if he is playing the game, knows but little of the condition of some of the members of the team. The officials are not always the best in the game, so we were not for the coach who is on the side lines and can tell by the positio a man takes in the line-up whether he is physically fit, it there be a lot of Boys—there are just as good fish in the sea as ever were caught. Get that date for the Hop.-Adv. See 'Mnish for quantity rates on aerated distilled water.' - Adv. Did you get an "original!"? You owe it to her—take her to the Hop.—Adv. There is still time to make that date for the Hop—Adv. KODAKS STATIONERY PERFUMES Evans Drug Store Successor to Raymonds' 819 Mass. St. RADNOR RADNOR THE NEW ARROW COLLAR A Good Place To Eat At Anderson's Old Stand Johnson & Tuttle, Proprietors 715 Massachusetts Street The University of Chicago LAW SCHOOL Three-year course leading to degree of Doctorate. Course may be completed by the Quarter system, may be completed in calendar years. College education required. Course counted toward college degree. Law library. The Summer Quarter offers special oppo- tunity to win a $1 million prize. First term 1915, June 21 - July 28 Second term July 29 - Sept. 3 University during the Summer Quarter. During the Winter Quarter. Dean of Law School, Univ. of Chicago The Pleasure of School Life is Doubled If you are acquainted with the current happenings "on the hill". The cheapest and easiest way to get acquainted is through the columns of the University Daily Kansan SUBSCRIBE NOW $1.00 for the rest of the year } UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN They Want College Day Following are the names of students who have pledged themselves to take part in the activities of College if it is granted by the University; Donald Husson R. C. Curry J. R. Carrinsted A. E. Carlstedt W. C. Anderson Francis Wood Charles C. Sperry Neal D. Ireland D. H. O'Leary D. V. Deusen Roy Graham C. R. Johnson E. D. Luman D. M. Hetler H. F. Mattono L. B. Mitchell Robert Manning O. McCaussel H. M. Roberts H. Greer Oscar Brownlee Don Dilley Newt Dilley, Jerry Frances A. Arnold John E. Curran Harold Brown Gladys Bitzer Betty Betts Dorothy Brown Marie Buchanan Erin E. Curran John E. Curran Stephen Fahrenbur R. D. Friend Ilide Fuller Clela Gillett Pearl Gillot William M. Glacoar Saper Gillot Pearl Hudson O. H. Hunt Odgen S. Jones Frank H. Fry Charlotte Kreek Helmer Kreek Mildred Kreek S. Krigle Frances McCall Inez M. McKinnon Mjoraria Rickord A. V. Grady J. M. Johnson Marion Johnson Juan Kulit O. Nordstrum D. L. Buckles Avery F. Olney K. W. Pringle A. J. Trueblood C. L. Coffin C. A. Randebil J. R. Packett Don Joseph E. W. Wingert Raymond Clapper roland Barnes Stella Bedell H. M. Morga annie Moody James B. Rogers Norman J. Greer F. Hetherington Jordy Alsworth D. Nachattmann Helen Clark Emily Berger Bishop Abigail Bixby Marguerite Patton Hadys Adams Lath L. Thomas Hanche Mullen Edith Musson Bishop Sartridge Lobdell Henur Hurst Lucile Means D. Bordenkiern Ida McKnight A. Ann Lame P. Sheidenberger Blain Simons Marold Robinson Sena Rodgers June Sheets Seth Smith T. O. Smith William Macdill R. Taylor Mildred Thomas Theo Thompson Dick Treweke Wille Wason Frank Wocknitz Fom Woodbury Cindy Owen fay Hargery John M. Henry I. W. Dyche V. E. Timmins C. A. Bitter F. W. Koester C. O. Donkey Don Davis Gilbert Clayton Vernon A. Moore Lacy Young J. C. Parker Fred Bowers, Jr. Glady Crabe Glady Crabe Glady Beck Ina Lowe Amy Spreyer Ulisa A. Hawkins Gladys Chaplin Gladys Stunz Anna Mueller Hauna Bailey W. H. Haverkorst Virgil Gordon M. W. Vaughn Ethel Barberger Edith Adriance Ortie Bude Walker F. W. Grampi Alberta Cady Helen Righy W. R. Gregory Caroline Greer Genevieve Dahlbree Bruce Shimler Mary Hayli Altu Alux Laoni Nelson Mabel Ketterman Ann Runnels Hazel Richards O. D. Eaton M. Osborne M. Obermiller H. V. Colmoll Hal Coffman Roy A. Reynolds Howard Adams Iva贝拉Harper Maria Helden Luthe Hildinger Erle F. Cress Edward Bennett H. C. Mitchell Louise Champion S. E. Hyer H. Kendrick Glady Kucken Carol Martin Mario Woodrue Lola Lehman Paulle M. Nechil Enoch M. Mcorkle Theda Mize Helen O. D'onnell Luteh O. D'Leary Bertha Steele T. L. Wheeler D. O. Tipton William M. Glaser Ed. Pedroja W. M. Mack W. H. Mack H. A. Mack J. H. Kinney J. H. Kinney J. F. Jackson R. H. Clayton E. E. Charles Charles Sweet F. J. Baker R. W. Emerson R. G. Walters Frank Stortz H. C. Scholer H. S. Barnard W. M. J. Jr. Tom Abbey Milton Heine E. K. Groene R. I. Moore Agnes R. Smith E. Van Cleef Mike Anderson Virginia Fisher Ella Cooper C. A. Nelson Mildred Rockey . C. S. Pitrat Macy McClure Wint Smith R. L. Dillenbeck E. E. Doleck W. R. Liggett Olive Clapper H. DeBeham H. Chandler Clara Kent Dewey Cooper Grace Wedd LavNern Wilson T. E. Firestone H. Hazelman Hazel Quick Sarah Rowe Ruth A. Kelley Emily Miller Sara Travis Edna Dawl H. Thiele Saille Battaille Ralph V. Fritts W. W. Wattles Elva Stoll C. W. Woughton Sara Trant Edna Dawl H. Thiele Saille Battaille Ralph V. Fritts W. W. Wattles Elva Stoll C. W. Woughton Sara Trant Edna Dawl H. Thiele Saille Battaille Ralph V. Fritts W. W. Wattles Elva Stoll C. W. Woughton Sara Trant Edna Dawl H. Thiele Saille Battaille Ralph V. Fritts W. W. Wattles Elva Stoll C. W. Woughton Sara Trant Edna Dawl H. Thiele Saille Battaille Ralph V. Fritts W. W. Wattles Elva Stoll C. W. Woughton Sara Trant Edna Dawl H. Thiele Saille Battaille Ralph V. Fritts W. W. Wattles Elva Stoll C. W. Woughton Sara Trant Edna Dawl H. Thiele Saille Battaille Ralph V. Fritts W. W. Wattles Elva Stoll C. W. W LAunes Tailoring Mes. Morgan up to date dressmaking and lingerie. Also party dresses. Prices very reasonable. 1321 Tennessee. Phone: 1116W. 1114W. Harold Black M. M. Booth F. Dunigan G. R. Henson T. Niemann Carl V. Rice L. A. Palmer H. Palkowsky Hugh Nichols C. H. Redigers E. Mellville Bernice Parker L. W. Cazier L. E. Hardace Marion Joseph G. C. Robinson C. B. Randall B. D. Palmer E. S. Stateler Bernice Metaker E. M. Mumler F. W. Salvesen R. P. Spencer Ruth Stout Mignonette Uhl E. F. Strong E. S. Stateler Henry Shinn K. H. Lott A. D. Bower A. E. Creighton W. E. Strong W. R. Bauer R. M. McQuiston May Anderson Ida Perry Josephine Jaquna Nelle Kennedy Louse Hopley Ella Hawkins John Gleissner Merritt V. Carr Mary Curel Clara Burnett Edna Wallmann M. B. Oldridge Lillian Swanson Madge Parrish C. J. Eldridge Newt Dilley, Jr. J. W. Frieser J. Kirkendall Marse Dent Ruth Castles Dorothy Markhain Edith Thomas Ola F. Guiler W. Anderson W. Anderson Victor Bottomly Josie Trinkle Stella Simmons Helen Ritter Naomi E. Smith Louise H. Craig Lenora Jones Bruce E. McKee Gula Finch Ladies' Tailoring Hyball Ginger Ale. The best by test, McNish. Phone 198.—Adv. PHI BETA PI BEATS SIGMA PHI SIGMA 5 TO 2 J. Pluvius did not do so much bad work as at first thought and the scheduled baseball game between the Beta Phi Pi is and Sigma Phi Sigma was paused Tuesday afternoon at Woodland Park. The Medies won the game by the score of 5 to 2, when the Sigma Phi Pi was down by the second inning that the score keeper nearly lost count of them. Cazier who started for the Sigma Phis was taken out in the disastrous second inning and Poirier who returned to the game, three innings of the game, fanning all nine men who faced him. Miner who pitched for the Medics was given good support, and he had little trouble in disposing of his opponents. Kodakers! Instruction free.-- Squires Studio.-Adv. In the Penn Games held at Philadelphia Saturday four new records were made, one of which is a world’s record, and was set by Pennsylvania in the fast time of 3:18 for the one-mile relay team against the west and the west figured on the small end of the deal but at that it got five firsts. Missouri was the only Missouri Val’ley school to participate in the meet. Simpson, the Missouri star who captured the third place, took third in the high hurdles while the Tiger relay team, which also entered made a very poor showing. It met teams that were entirely out of its class. Only three teams entered the one mile relay which left the third place without any competition. MADE FOUR NEW RECORDS AT PENN GAMES SATURDAY The four-mile re'ay, the event Kansas expected to enter, was won easily by Cornell while Michigan and Minnesota fought it out for second as they did for first, place at the Drake games. However, Michigan won on the final sprint this time while Wisconsin won at Des Moines. The Kansas quartet would have had about as much show in this event as the Tigers had with Pennsylvania. Bathing caps—a fine assortment at Wilson's Drug Store and the prices are right. Adv. Just received a letter from Haley. Says his orchestra is "Setting Purty" for the Hop—Adv. Perfumes, toilet waters, complexion powders, etc., at Wilson's Drug Store...Adv. Just received a letter from Haley, that the Party is "Seting Party" for the Hop--Adv A Paramount Photo-play in Six Parts, Featuring Carlyle Blackwell TODAY BOWERSOCK The High Hand Matinee Daily 2:45 All Seats 10c Newhouse Sym. Orch. Straw HatDay Wednesday, May 12 Watch for Big Announcement 829 Mass. M. J. Skofstad Every Suit with the Genuine Palm Beach Label A Splendid White Serge Trouser for $5.00 $7.50, $8.50 and $10.00 The first showing of Palm Beach Suits with a splendid assortment for your selection. You are invited to look now even though you do not care to buy. PALM BEACHSUITS Imperial Shining Parlor and Hat Works Reserved Chairs for Ladies We Clean and Polish White Canvas, Satin Slippers, and all Colors of Buckskin Shoes The High School Student who feels an interest in such a vocation as Mechanical Engineering University Daily Kansan Lawrence, Kansas should be encouraged in knowing that the growth of industry, and the modern striving after efficiency, open a broad way of opportunity to the able mechanical engineer. He is always in demand. His position is often one of large responsibility. He is well paid. ARROW SHIRTS Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl A four-year course in mechanical engineering with the advantages of fully equipped shops and laboratories, prepares the student to enter this broad field under the best conditions. VOCATION EDITOR Those Party Flowers Are Always Appreciated When They Come From THE FLOWER SHOP and We Are Always Pleased to Fill Your Orders 825½ MASS. PHONES 162 The University of Kansas University Extension Division The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas. Offers over 200 courses BY MAIL through its Correspondence Study Department. Credit given for all college work. Address Notice. Fraternities! STUDENTS- Notice, Fraternities I have for lease some of the nicest rooms in town, with light, heat, hot and cold water—both furnished and unfurnished. If interested, call J. M. NEVILLE For Shines!that last see "Egg" at HOUKS BARBER SHOP Tickets for the Choral Union concert are on sale at the Round Corner drug store Admission twenty-five cents; no seats reserved 3. M. MEEELLE Stubbs Bldg., Opposite Court House—Phone, Bell 384 J, P. BROCK. Optomatisr. and Spe- ce FOR $30. Mass. S. Bell Phone 695. Professional Cards HARRY HEDING M. D. Eye, ear, nose L. J. Hodgson, Phone, 513. Home U. A. Hild, Phones, Phone, 513. Home J, R BECKHET, M. D, D. O. 822 Bathroom. Both phones, offices and residence. G, W. JONES, A. M, M. D. Diseases of Hepatitis B. Both photocopying, Incidence 120/131. Both photocopying, Incidence 120/131. DR H. L CHAMBERS. Office over Southeast. Both phones. A. J. ANDERSON, M. D., Office 715 Vt. St. Phones 124. DR. PETER D. PAULS, Osteopath, Office and residence. 7½ East 7th St. General practice. Both phones 561. Hours 9 to 12:39, 2 to 5, and 7 to 8 by phone. DR. N. HAYES, 292 Mass. St. General Practice. Also treats the eye and fits Jewelers G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eyes ear and M. D. Eyes face satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Bidg Classified Plumbers ED, W. PAIISONS, Engraver, Watch- and Jewelry, Bell Phone 711-625-7117, Mast- PHONE 1 KENNEDY PLUMBING CO. Phone 2 Masda lamps. 3 Masda lamps. Masda Plumbe. Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK, 913 Maas. Barber Shops FIRE INSURANCE LOANS, and abstracts E. Hikleijer People's Bank STANFORD BANK Ins., and abstracts FIANK E BANKE Ins., and abstracts of Title. Room 3. F. A. U. Building Insurance Want Ads WANTED-By a student, secondhand mackinaw and overcoat. Call Bell K. U. 25 or address J., care Kansan. There is still time to make that date for the Hop.—Adv. FOR RENT - Two rooms, windows on three sides. Can be had separately or together. Outside, private entrance. Modern. 1132 Tennessee. It is never too late to ask her to go to the Hop. She will go if asked. —Adv. Safety razors, blades and stoppers at Barber's--Adv. PROTSCH PROTSCH "The Tailor" SPRING SUITING Box Stationery All Grades-All Prices McColloch's DrugStore BURT WADHAM'S "College Inn Barber Shop" LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas largest and best equipped business college in the nation. We teach Lawrence Bank building. We teach Lawrence Bank building. We teach Lawrence Bank building. Write for sample of Snoopette noteand a catalog. WATKINS' NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depository. FRANK KOCH "THE TAILOR" Full Line of Spring Sutlings STUDENT HEADQUARTERS THEIS BINDING Engraved and Printed Cards. Sheafer's Self-filling Fountain Pens. 744. Mass. Street. A. G. ALRICH 764 Maqu. Streei. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wouldn't You Like to See It This Way Now? A snow-covered landscape with trees in the foreground and a distant building in the background. 9 THE LIBRARY. 1. PICKED UP BETWEEN CLASSES In the little brook that winds across the golf links lies an innocent looking piece of telephone pole, perhaps eightinches long. It apparently lies in water about four inches deep and has foot steps on it, the log promptly sinks into a hole which is more than shoe-top deep. When the wind blows like it did Tuesday, every autoist's kit should contain a few feet of string or some thumb tacks. As the Beta's Fierce roller coaster, the Gym, a little breeze came around the corner and blew the hood right off the engine. The chauffer backed about forty feet, recovered the lost wheel when last seen and heard we re-enforcing the screws with language. "What are you looking so sleepy to ask one fair college maid of another?" "Oh, I was up until two last night readine Nietzsch." "Do you have to read it?" "No, I like it." First co-ed (decisively) "Well there's something wrong with you." The officers of Beta chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, journalistic fraternity, will go to Manhattan soon to install a chapter at the Kansas State Agricultural College. R. E. Busenbark, Frank Henderson, Gilbert Clayton, Miles Vaughn, and Guy Scrivener will make the trip. Stanley B. Nelson withdrew from the School of Engineering, Friday to accept a position with an engineer in the Army. Hat "will return to school next fall." At last! A use for the cane! Some laws used their canes for bats in a between-class ball game this morning. Ray Winters, freshman Engineer, is back on the Hill after losing a race. An archil took a swim in Potter Lake Sunday and declared the water fine. A Gym class verified his report Monday. Miss Grace Fitzgerald of Baker University visited Helene Thomas over the week-end. "Beef Wocknitz, freshman College, escorted a young woman to Emporia yesterday. "Beef" intended to go only a sfar as Topea and bought a round ticket trip for that place. But the going was so pleasant that he bought another round trip ticket from Topea to Osage. Arriving there be bought still another from Osage to Emporia. When he returned he handed the conductor the tail ends of three round trip tickets. The conductor looked him over and said: "Okay, always buy the right idea. Always buy a round trip ticket. Otherwise you might get lost." "Davey Crockett was as famous as a story teller as he was as a bear hunter and fighter." said Prof. W. W. Davis to his American history class a few mornings ago. "Here is one of his stories: 'He got caught in a fire.' He was trapped by the ice he fell through the ice in crossing a little stream and got his tinder wet. He couldn't make camp and couldn't make a fire, and would soon freeze unless something happened. Passing by a tall sapling he had an idea. He shimmed up the sapling about thirty feet away and warmed him up and he kept this up all night. By morning he was feeling fine and easily made camp." Young people of the Baptist church will hold a picnic at Woodland Park. Friday evening, April 30. They will have lunch before the park. Lunch will be served at the park. W. H. Dodds, who assisted in winning the debate from the Oklahoma team, disappeared from his rooming house last Thursday. No one knew what had become of him. He was later reported to him he admitted that he had been to Sterling, but failed to state just who he had visited there. George Fitch, creator of Old Siwash, and humorist of note, isn't much of an expert with a typewriter, according to Leon Harsh, editor of the 1915 Jayhawk. Mr. Fitch, you may remember, recently contributed a short article to the Annual. "There is another method where capitals were needed—all evidently the result of poor typewriting. However, if I could write the things that Fitch did, little would I worry about whether I spelled everything correctly." Did you get an "original?" You owe it to her—take her to the Hop. John Miller, sophomore College, who sprained his knee two weeks ago while playing baseball is昌 has to limp about the campus. He still has to limp about the campus. K. D. Bowers, junior College spent Saturday and Sunday in Ot- tamahua. Latin Historian is Said to be the Best Chronicle of Big Wars TACITUS THE MASTER? We want your kodak work and will inflish it in one day. Squire Studio From the Boston Transcript It is safe to say that no historian who writes about great events in any language had a personality so pronounced and imperious as Tacitus. Macaulay's grip is loose by comparison, and his bias patent and easy to resist. The sway of Tacitus' writing should question whether any reader sensitive to words, who is not a professed and very critical historian, has ever managed to evade it. His bias was not that of the partisan. He was not necessarily precisely because it is so even, so unvarying so deadly in its impartiality. RODKEY BROKE A TRACK RECORD IN FOURTH-MILE Tactius is the unique example of the disease, which no psychologist has yet diagnosed; he suffered from a severe case of anemia that us all his characters were very ordinary mortals. If they developed great vices when they assumed the purple, we are hardly allowed to feel their pain, implied some strength of character. There is none for them who can approach him for style; there are few of them who come near him for vivid descriptions and war to describe. It raged in that annu mirabilis of A. D. H from Holland to Judeen, from Dacia to Provence. It saw the violent deaths of three emperors, and the legions who fought with bloody bands of the Po, till one battle was but the rehearsal of the next, as the Eastern armies have struggled at the Niemen and the Vistula. The world survived—survived to enjoy a rite, a sacrament, a bible, resting as the story is in the "Histories" of Tacitus—which one may now read in a brilliant and dignified version by Professor G. G. Ramsay (Murray)—the narrative from open perspective. This too, will pass, and the rivers will run limpid agam. PAINTED SIMPLE THINGS Lowers Time of McCoy of 1905 by One-fifth Second in Practice tembrandt Painted for Practical, Prosaic Holland Burgers From the Springfield Republican, "Rembrandt's art was founded upon nature, upon truth," says Royal Cordis Taylor, a historian of Sense." From the beginning he tried most of all to make his picture look like the object placed before him, and the people for whom he labored were just the people to encourage his habit." The prosperous burgers of Holland were simple-minded folks, "who kept the eyes up upon the fact that they knew the eyes up on the fact. They kept him busy, too, making their portraits, and the well trained artist was assured of his liv Another K. U, record was broken yesterday afternoon in track practice when Rodkey, the star Jayahawk trackster, made the quarter-mile in 50:4.5 seconds. This is one fifth of a second lower than the former record of 51 seconds made by McCoy in 1955. However, this record will not stand for it was made only practice and the official records of the track meet made in a regular meet. But Rodkey答辩 it official by repeating his performance in the interclass meet on Friday. This sort of a showing, coming when the prospect of winning the outdoor meet with Missouri are a doubtful quantity, makes a cheerful feeling among the local trackers. Rodkey has his mind set on beating Niedorck of Missouri and get revenge for the defeat he received in Convenience Kansas' chances in the relay look much better. The wick is getting in good form and with Rodkey running in record time the Jayawhackers should beat the Tiger team even if the latter were good enough to be sent to Pennsylvania. Altogether the men are showing up fine in the practices this week and if weather conditions are favorable some records will be in dancer in the morning. The Poos are determined that 9:51:31 is much to slow for the two-mile record and expect to approach close to it. In the mile Herriott and Sproull have been running neck and neck this week for a sophomore victory in the intercollegiate race. Fiske made 2:04:41 in the half-mile in yesterday's practice and probably will run against each other Friday. Considering the report coming from fraternity officials an easy time of it at Lineholm, May 8. They claim to have a pole vault and a few short distance men which at present is Kansas' weak point. However, the Jayhawker can make a showing in the distances and the rebound end of the score. Manager Hamilton expects the interclass meet to show up some new men that can be developed into Varsity material. ing, as was the mason or the cabinet maker. "I purposely use this homely comparison because, in thinking of Rembrandt, it is important to think of him as working with his feet firm-fixed upon the ground, called upon to paint human beings in a simple, straight-forward fashion, and qualified by birth, by breeding, and by his whole body, into the spirit of his surroundings, into cute his task in harmony with them. His time was ripe for him, and he was ripe for his time. "In saying that he was a born draughtsman we credit him with a gift which he shared with other men; and indeed, in certain other broad characteristics, he was very much a man of his period." "A great part of the business of his life was the portrayal of his contemporaries, the writer continues. "His parents occupied both his brush and his desk, making portraits of Saskia, of Titus, and afterward of Hendrick Stoeffels, and all his life long he was pondering his own features and telling, as he drew them, far better than a painting, of what lay beneath their surface. "What manner of ideal is it that we may discern there with his aid? Not an ideal of romantic yearning after beauty. Not an ideal of a poet in the ordinary sense of the word, seeing visions and dreaming dreams." UNWRITTEN POEMS ARE BEST Japanese Says Real Test of Poet is to Resist Impulse to Speak From the Springfield Republican. "I always insist that the written poem should be good," writes Yong_Noguchi in "The Spirit of Japanese Poetry," "are only the second best, as the very best poems are left unwritten or sung in silence. It is my opinion that the real test for poets is how far they resist the impulse to utterance, or instead to write their own work—not how much they have written, but how much they have destroyed. "Japanese poetry, at least the obi Japanese poetry, is different from Western poetry in the same way as silence is different from a voice, night with silence is different from day, say that night and day, silence and voice, are all the same; let me admit that they are vasy different; it is their difference that makes them so interesting. The sensitiveness of the Western poetic feeling dates from fluenced by the night and silence, as well as by the day and voice; let me confess, however, that my suspicion of the Western poetic feeling dates from quite far back in the days of my ancestors, as it seems quite often laughed at for my aimless or uttering under the moonbeams. "One who lives, for instance, in Chicago or New York, can hardly know the real beauty of night and knowing the spinning Western character, would sweetened, or at least toned down, if that part of the beauty of Nature might be emphasized. Oh, our Japanese life of dream, and silence! The Japanese poetry is that of the moon, the waterfall for the noisest. If we do not sing so much of life and the world it is not from the' reason that we think their value negative, but from our thought that it would be better to see us alone, and not to sing of them is the proof of our reverence toward them." "Standards Must be Raised"—Taft In an address before the Alumni Association of Rutgers College, Prof. William H. Taft, of Yale, expressed the belief that the universities of this country were growing too big. The small college has the advantages over larger colleges in its high standards of loyalty to an ideal of tradition and discipline. He said that the diploma no longer meant what it meant when his father went to college. To revert to the old standard of the small colleges, Mr. Taft suggested that the standards must be raised, entrance examinations made easier, teachers and students eliminated from the college body before the colleges could attain once again the position they formerly held. PI U.S WON ANOTHER GAME Swatted Strother's Slow Ones Hard and Won by Big Score For the fourth straight time, no Pi U.S. were returned winners in the Inter Fraternity League yesterday after they took the count in a 12 to 2 encounter. Choice Cigars at Barber's.—Adv. "Short?" Strother, of football fame, essayed to heave for the lawyers but his slow baal lasted only six innings when the winners hopped on him for the first time. He pitched consistently and held his opponents well in hand. SMALL AUDIENCE HEARS GOOD ORCHHEST CONCERT The Pi U.S. takes on the Alpha Chi Sigma Thursday afternoon at Humphrey's. Thirty musicians who have been practicing under the direction of J. C. McKanes, rendered an exceptionally attractive orchestra program in the mid-1960s because attendance was small, the applause was long and hearty. The program is as follows: "March of the Elephants" (Caneuvee Overture, "Pique Dame", ... Suppie Piano Solo, "Flederman's Waltz") "Evening on the Water" and "Glow Worm" were most favorably received. As special features Nina Kanaaga gave a piano solo, and William B. accompanied by the orchestra, gave a splendid selection on the cello. Strause "Sizilietta," Franz von Bloon "Roma" Clander "Scene de ballet," A Cahuku Five minutes intermission. lift. "Females on the Wrist." Selection from Comic Opera. *Maximus, Markus*, 1980. Idyl, "Evening on the Water" ... Watson "Marrige Market") . Victor Jacobi Cello Sola "Adagio" . Warguel Cello Sola "Adagio" Gavotte, "Glow Worm." . . . Lankeke "Dunname Annie." . . . H. Maguet Limeade, 5c at Barber's—Adv CASTLE ROLL Front 2 1/4 in. Back 1 3/8 in. 2 FOR 25¢ BARKERCO BRAND 2 FOR 25¢ MANUFACTURERS: WILLIAM BARKER CO., TROY, N.Y. Only at Peckhams AND THE Irene Jonani Lawrence Choral Union 150 students, Lawrence folks and an opera singer in a varied program of good music. Robinson Gym Wednesday Night Admission 25 cents Hand with cuffs. George Yeokum says:— Hands, Jacket and Boot Courtney --- "You can wear most any old thing to the Hop, but for the love o' Mike don't look like this." It's a little early for straw hats and Palm Beach suits but if you want to be one of the early birds the weather is favorable. We're ready with all the new straws—the new ideas in Palm Beach suits—flannel trousers, and everything in fact, that will make you a well dressed man at the "Hop." NEW NECKWEAR Johnson & Carl UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII. NUMBER 141 INTER-CLASS MEET TO BE HOTLY CONTESTED Probably Will be the Most Exciting K. U. Event in Years FRESHMEN HAVE FINE CHANCE Winn, Hardler is Gone, but First year Men Have Other Promising Material The annual inter-class track mee which is to be staged tomorrow aftern afternoon on McCook Field starting at 4 o'clock, will probably be the most hotly contested class meet, held in the gymnasium. The joint marathon is the way the dope chart reads. In last fall's class meet with the K men limited to one event, the freshmen had to grabs second place before grabbing second place being nearly thirty points in the rear. But there will be some up sets to tomorrow according to the various upper class track leaders. At least the tryons won't grab six firsts. And the relay is a cinch for the sophs according to Fred Rodkey. Counting on Johnny Niles The freshmen admit they will be slightly handicapped by the loss of Winn, in the hurdles, but they will have quite a good chance in these events having Barclay, Trewecke and Woodbury. In the sprints the 1918 squad also has Johnny Niles who should give Kirk Hilton, the Varsity spinner, an awful night for first place and two-twenty Noel and Trewecke also should grab some additional points in the broad jump. The juniors have Fiske, Ellswick Grady and Reber, a quartet that will do a little point winning themselves as well. Edwards, McKay and K. Hilton. The sophs really have the best balanced squid with Rodkey Sproull. Howland, Herrritt and Statferle for the spruits and Cram for the spirits and hardles. Coach Hamilton announced this morning that the meet would be startled promptly at 4 o'clock and will be over by 6. The coach will be the whole cheese as far as officiating in the meet goes. Medals will be given to winners of the first three events. Student enterprise tickets, or 25 cents will admit to the grandstand. Only contestants will be allowed on the field. The committees in charge of the different class teams are as follows: Freshman, Barclay, Woodbury, Treweek, and W. Rowe, Junior, Juniors, C. Sproull, Seniors, Grady, Reber, Fiske and Ellswick Seniors, Edwards and McKay. Department of Chemistry Passes Judgment on Preserved Foods ANALYZE CANNED FRUITS Since the first of March the Pure Food Laboratories in the Chemistry Building have analyzed over one hundred samples they have received from the State Board of Health and also have turned a number of other samples into pure food laboratories. The analyses have been conducted on nearly everything put up in cans but the most work has been done principally on canned fruits. some of the things analyzed were found to be of very poor quality and not fit for human consumption, while others could safely be by any one. After the food laboratories made their findings they report to the State Board of Health who then in turn makes its complaint. SETS TIME OF ELECTION Men's Governing Body Will Select Officers Thursday May 6 The Men's Student Council has set Thursday, May 6, as general election day for the school. Elections will be held on Monday. Mr. Silmen, cheerleader, athletic board members, officers of the School of Engineering and officers of the College. Petitions for these offices must be submitted by Monday before 6 o'clock on May 3. The Council also, changed the schedule of the point system adopted some time ago, giving the editor of the Engineering magazine 25 points for each article and changing the points allotted to the Kansan staff. This will become inoperative however, as the Kansan Board last night voted to change the system and reintroduce two students have been reprimanded for smoking. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 29, 1915. Kansan Staff Eats Cake Mrs. Eustace H. Brown, adviser of women, sent a large cake to the members of the Daily Kansan staff this week to celebrate the cake after her favorite recipe. K. U.S LILAC HEDGE IS THIRTY YEARS OLD The iliac hedge—the joy of wandering strollers these spring days, an aspiration for would-be poets, and the forbidden treasure ground for mischievous kiddies has been blooming for twenty years. Engineers Planted it in 1885 one sunny morning in 1885 Joseph Savage, the pioneer adorer of the University campus, conducted Dean Marvin and a bunch of his engineers to his little nursery farm south of town where they spent two diziguz bushes that were used as bushes, for the benefit of the beauty-loving Jayhawkers of today. To this sameMr. Savage the University of Kansas is indebted for Marvin Grove because it was through his efforts that the trees were planted there. He was one of the first people to Museum and for many years spent his summer vacations collecting specimens, in company with Chancellor Snow. SIGNING UP FAST FOR SOPH HOP TICKETS Three Hundred Register to Go to Second Year Event Tomorrow Night George Yeokum, is a happy mid- today. All day long, excited stu- dents stood in line before the Fraser Hall check站 standing impatiently to exchange their perfectly good clothes, and he steadily the registering of names crawled over the pages of the man- ager's little book—passing the hundred and fifty, the two hundred, and the three hundred marks. George has a right to be happy: the Soph- sophomies to be an unprejudged success. Another joy spot was discovere, yesterday when one sorority on the Hill turned in some $17.50 to the management, for the class due of one year. They called Hop. Some time ago the sorority decided upon this action, and began collecting dues from all of its members who had dates. Divide $17.50 by $2.50 and you'll see just how popular this particular organization happens "I want it understood that the farce is to begin promptly at 7 o'clock," says Yeokum. "We would like to have the crowd come on time so that the dancing may begin promptly at 8:30 o'clock. I might add, for the convenience of the men in trading dances, that intermission we occur between six and eight and that cats will be served during seventh, eighth and ninth; intermission; and fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth." "Mick" Murphy, chairman of the decoration committee for the occasion, and his band of twenty sturdy warriors will attack the Gym immediately endeavor to defeat those two demons, Barreness and Ugliness, in a pitched battle which will continue until midnight. In case the enemy is not subdued however, they will soon morning at 7:30 o'clock and continued until victory rests with the attacking party. Crepe paper, tacks, hammers, and vari-colored lights to attack the Shrapnel of bliss blooms will also be used. "The walls will be covered with crepe paper designs, and the windows decorated with iliac blossoms. We will use the 'cozy corner' scheme so effective at former Gym parties, placing small tables with shaded lights at various points about the room. We might weave in them, use the few worktables dear to the family who attended the Colonial Party and the Junior Prom; but we're going to wait until we have to use it as a last resort. It is our plan you know, to make the decorations as unique as possible." "We plan to make a big gable roof of pink and green," said Murphy this morning, "with a pergola in the center of the floor for the musicians. At Morning Prayers The 'c' class in plant physiology made a trip to Professor Shull's gardens on Mississippi street Tuesday morning and completed its study in determining the rate of growth of garden plants. Prof. Herman Douthitt, of the department of zoology will give an illustrated lecture on "Animals of earth" at the Unitarian church evening. Speaker, Rev. E, B. Backs, pastor of Unitarian church, Lawrence. Friday: "Appreciation." General Subject: "Neglected Virtues." BOARD SAYS NO ONE HAS NINE EDITORS FOR BEEN CONSIDERED YET KANSAN NEXT YEAR Denies That Woman is Proposed as Next Head of School of Fine Arts Mrs. Cora G. Lewis, member of the Board of Administration, denied this morning that anyone had been considered by the Board for either the positions of dean of the School of Education or the Dean of the School of Education. "No names have reached the Board for consideration." Mrs. Lewis said. "Several applications have come in to Chancellor Strong, but until he makes some recommendations, Shklton make some consider anyone." It has been suggested that a woman painter might be the next head of the School of Fine Arts, but Mrs. Lewis denies this emphatically. "Absolutely no one has been considered by the Board for either of the two positions. In all probability the new head will be a man and a musician, although that is not certain and he must be a requirement for the position." Pettitions are being circulated by Artist students asking that Dean Skilzki GREEKS TO TAKE NEW HOUSES Fraternities and Sororites Will Change Location Before Fall Next year will find a large number of the fraternities and sororities in new headquarters. Some are building larger houses and moving to larger and better houses. The Pi Beta Pi sorority will build a new house at 1244 Mississippi, jss back of its present location, 1245 Oread. The building is to be ready for occupancy by the beginning of school. School will be held at the Pi Beta use and the Sig Alpha the Sigma Kappa house at 1245 Ohio. The Pi K. A.s will move from 1541 Kentucky street to the Coleman house 1145 Indiana. The Delta Taus, who are now at 1215 Oakland, will occupy the Indiana and Kanza Club will move in the present Delta Tau house. There are a number other Greek organizations that are planning on moving but have not definitely decided upon a house. [EMPLIN LANDS FELLOWSHIP The fellowship is in applied mechanics in the engineering experiment station of the University of Illinois. It will extend over a period of two years. The work will consist of engineering experiments, there being no teaching work connected with it. According to the terms of the fellowship the university cannot require more than half of the annual time for work on a master's degree. The reimbursement will be five hundred dollars a year. This is the first time that the University of Illinois experiment station has ever given a fellowship to a University of Kansas man. Illinois U. Gives K. U. Man Two Years in Applied Mechanics One of the best plums in the way of engineering fellowships which has been received by a K. U. man in a job offered to him, is headed by Dick Templin, senior Engineer. SHOULD HAVE MORE GROUNDS "The University of Kansas should have ten baseball and three football fields and twenty-four tennis courts," said Manager W. O. Hamilton when he announced his intention to accommodate for the Hash House and Interfraternity League teams. Vic Bottomy', president of the Men's Student Council, has asked that the Schools of the University elect their speakers for Students' Day. The date of the day has not been yet set, but he said Mr. Charles Scott, who is to speak that day, can come. However, the date will be announced soon. Manager Hamilton Thinks Univer sity should Have More Fields "Some day," continued Mr. Hamilton, "I think we will have that number. At present the University has no campus room for more athletic fields or facilities elsewhere for that purpose." Mr. Hamilton is strongly in favor of the Hash House and Interfraternity Leagues but does not think that the Athletic Association should be blamed for not providing sufficient ground space for something unexpected should happen the students will have to be content with the present accommodations for the time being. Wants Schools to Elect Typhoid inoculation will be given tomorrow afternoon at 4 o'clock in the morning. The Daily Kansan Board at its reg ular meeting last night adopted the following amendments to the constitution: Journalism Department Will Co-operate With Board's Seniors in Reorganization 1. Eligibility to the Board is limited to luniors and seniors. 2. The seniors on the Board shall constitute an executive committee to direct the editorial and business policies of the Daily Kansan. An arrangement was effected whereby the department of journalism is to nominate men and women to the executive positions on the paper, subject to the approval of the executive committee. The new policy would elect men to serve one month instead of one semester at present. Any man or woman from any School in the University is eligible not only to the Kansan Board but to any position on the paper. The new plan will allow the Kansas Beard to avail itself of the experience and advice of the department of journalism, and at the same time the journalism classes in the department to get practical work on a publication. The Kansan Board through the executive committee composed of seniors will retain control of the policies of the Kansan, and will be responsible to the students for the position on University affairs. LIQUID AIR HELPS WIRELESS University Operator has Applied for Regular License Liquid air is being used in wireless teleography. "When we found that we could not get our crystal detectors into the lab, we had to work with the ordinary methods such as salt and ice we decided to use liquid air," said Victor A. Hunt, wireless operator at the University. "By using a special pressure prevent evaporation and plugging the top with a loops wad of cloth, which would allow the liquid air to pass out we have been able to keep our apparatus at a temperature below 20°C." "A problem presented itself when the temperature was so low, however," continued MI. "We had a hard time keeping it in the mercury mercury thermometer from bursting while obtaining measurements. In place of mercury we are now using a thermometer containing water as the freezing point as low as 200 C." The wireless operators have applied for a regular wireless license (prohibited). DINED ON A NUT A LA CAP KIDD Squirrel Pilfers Buried Treasure Some squirrels are wise and some are otherwise. The otherwise squirrel saliued into the back yard with a peach seed in his jowl, pirouetted around a selected spot to see that nobody was watching and stowed their treasure in the turf. Triumphantly he scooted over the New York area and had been peeking through a crack in the barn, crept out, desecrated the newly-made grave, cracked the seed, and died a la Can Kidd. "We have received no communication from Coroner Lockchart, of Dickinson, to proceed with the examination of the viscera of Milton Peters, who died suddenly at his home fourteen miles north of Abilene last January," said Derek Fletcher. COSTS MONEY TO HAVE STOMACH INVESTIGATED Lockhart has sent the stomach and heart to the University but there is a question as to whether the interested parties bear the examination. An analysis of this kind requires about three weeks of tedious works and a charge is made for the time spent by the men doing the work. ENGINEERS LIKE TO BE NATIONAL GUARDSMEN According to Captain Frank Jones of the Kansas National Guards, the Engineers are the most military inclined group of students in the University. Of the 70 members of the Guards, 28 are Engineers. "The only way that I can account for this condition," said Captain Jones, "is that the Engineers are simply interested in things military on account of their work in school. They are not interested in many parallels and it seems that men who be by nature interested in one will be interested in the other." LITTLE BROWN DOG RETURNED TO OWNER Vivian Strahm to Get Degree Vivian Strahm's mastore's degree has been taken. Her brown mason has been returned. Miss Strahm for eight months had been conducting anatomical experiments on this pup, getting data on the strength of which she hoped to obtain her degree. She was just four years old, finishing her work when, yesterday, somebody came along and cut the pup loose, and Miss Strahm had visions of a degree gone, as it were to the dogs. But now the pup is back in solitary confinement and the degree has disappeared thing, too, this confinement for the pup is a dangerous citizen. Miss Strahm's special investigation was with the typhoid bacillus, and the animal was in all probability highly infected with the typhoid germ. Standing next to the pup through the Administration Building and took him home, Jones returned the dog to Miss Strahm this morning. PROMISES JAYHAWKERS FOR THURSDAY MORNING Annuals Will be Sold Fifty Minutes After They Arrive in Town in Town The 1915 Jayhawker will be out on Thursday, May 6. Announcement of the date was made this morning by Edward Blair Hackney, business manager of the book. According to present plans, the books will be presented Thursday morning on the 9:30 o'clock train, and will be rushed to the Hill for the dedication exercises which will occur on Fraser Hall steps at 10:20 o'clock. The books will be placed in a cabinet on the Jayhawk booth, which will be erected just in front of Fraser, President F. D. Crabb, of the Union Bank Note Company, the firm which printed the Annual, will come to Lawrence on the same train and be present with the books, to be present at the dedication exercises. "The task of printing the books will be finished by Friday of this week," said Manager Hackney this week. "I need to get them to the bindery for completion. It will be impossible to get them to Lawrence before Thursday; consequently we are making every effort to get them on sale within the short time frame that is required if our present plans go through—and I see no reason why they should not—the 1915 Jayhawker will be on sale on the Hill within fifteen minutes after the arrival of the express train it is to bring them to Lawrence." The 1915 Jayhawkier promises in many respects to set a new standard for annual publication at the University. Though it is not so large in, indeed, history, it is a breaking book of 1912, it is a considerable increase over last year's Annual. The color work and cardboard inserts are much more elaborate and decidedly more costly than anything ever attempted in a Jayhawkier because of the vast array of organizations and campus scenes, such as are being used by Eastern publications this year, have been incorporated into the book; and the general run of the material itself promises to more than rival the works of Jayhawkers. It addition, the characteristically K. U. method of presenting senior pictures in individual engravings is to be used. The 1915 Jayhawkier, too, is the first ever to contain a junior section; and is the second book in K. U.'s series on engravings basis. The Annual is dedicated to Prof. Merle Thorpe. Hang Motor Overhead "Heavy, heavy, hangs over your head," may be literally true if you find yourself standing under the half ton electric motor recently suspended from the ceiling of the lath room in Fowler Shops. The motor has been used for some time to furnish power for the elevator and has been mounted on the second floor. Need of storage room in the elevator is provided by the Chass. W. White, instrument maker, to have the machine mounted in its proper nest. To Hunt Fossils in Texas To Hunt Fossils in Texas Prof. Herman Douthitt of the department of zoology will spend the summer and year Seymour of Humana and Wilfman of Fossils use for at the University, Either A. E. Culbertson or Lewis A. Curry will accompany him. The expedition will start the first week in June. Musicians Meet Phi Mu. Alpha, honorary musical house this meet at the Phi Gau housse this meet at ALL K. U. TURNS OUT TO SING OLD SONGS Chapel Hall Couldn't Hold Students Who Came to Convocation CHANCELLOR MAKES A HIT Sits on Little Chair and Plays Accompaniment to Songs of College Days at Yale as Encore eyes. Il Penseroo. say me into ecstasy; Dissolve me into ecstasy; And bring all heaven before mine There let the peeling organ blow, to the full voice choir below, In service high, and anthems clear, As may with sweetness, through mine The pealing organ did blow, and the students on the crowded platform sang and the overflowing audience joined in with enthusiasm. Miss Jonani sang and smiled. And then the chancellor sang. The audience loved it. Jonani played piano and played his own accompaniment. Old Songs Day was a hit. Chapel Couldn't Hold Them For the first time in the football season, a real, all-University audience assembled in Fraser Hall. It was a student gathering animated at a concert by the band And it remained one of the big meetings of the past. Every seat was filled. The Engineers filled the balcony and late comers crammed at the windows. And the woman smile and the singing was led by the two glee clubs, and was participated in by the whole student body and the faculty. "America" was song first, by the enclosing orchestra which was told by a group of three songs by Miss Irene Jonani, which were very well received and vigorously encored. Following them the chorus sang "My Old Kentucky Home" assisted by the auditions of the Old Camp Ground," by the audience followed. Sang a Hazing Song Then came the real treat of the morning, when Chancellor Strong sang "The Two Greendials." The Chancellor was formerly a member of the Yale Glee Club, and he surmounted Yale to attain it some real music with Miss Evelyn Strong accompanying him. He was heartily enriched, and responded by a medley of old-time Yale songs, accompanyingly on his piano. This was to tune as our "Crimson and The Blue," the second was an old Yale hazing song of the days when hazing meant "something fierce" as the chancellor expressed it, to the freshmen. At the beginning of his third selection the young musicians involved flourish on the piano and evoked a storm of applause. The hour closed with "Columbia" and the "Suwanee River," Prof. W. B. Downing singing the first stanza as a solo. HIGH SCHOOLS TO DEBATE Hoxie and Newton will Talk in Fraser Hall Tomorrow Night The finals of the state inter-high school debating contest will be fought in Fraser Hall tomorrow night between the representatives of the three parties. These two teams represent the winners of forty debates between different high schools of the state. The question to be discussed is: Resolved: That the State of Kansas Should Use the Unicameral Form of Legislature. Hoxie high school will be represented by Joseph Spresser, Edwin Taylor and Harry Sloan. Newton at St. Stephen Steven Eversall and Maurice, Renfer. The judges for the evening are: Ben H. P. Jewell, Prof. H. P. Cady and Leland Jesse. The debate will open at 8 o'clock. Admission free. Obtain Yale Fellowships Again Kansas men came to the front. This time it is in field of mathematics. Prof. J. N. Van der Vries received word this morning that the two fellowships known as the J. S. K, fellowships at Princeton had been awarded to Ray Gillman, '12, and Frank E. Wood, '14. These fellowships are worth $500 and be used when school opens next fall. Roy T. McFadden, commonly known around the Chemistry Building as "Hap," had to have the nail on the index finger of his right hand removed Tuesday morning. He was performing some experiments with hydrofluoric acid and some of the fluid accidently got under the nail and caused such a swelling that it had to be removed. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN EITHERIAL SCHOOL John M. Hill — Editor-in-Chief Raymond Clapper — Managing Editor Helen Hayes — Associate Editor William Cady — Exchange Editor BUSINESS STAFF REPORTORIAL: STAFF J. W. Dyche...Business Manage Leon Irshar Glenn Clayton Gay Servier Elmer Arndt Emir Arndt Louis Puckett Glendon Alford Alexander Lovelace Subscription price $2.50 per year in advance; one term, $1.50. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office 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. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas, Phone, Bell K. U. 25. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate life of the Kansan, so that it becomes farther than merely printing the news. We are building a University of kansas; to play favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courteous; to be careful and to solve problems to wiser heads, in all, to serve the best of its ability the students. Fair Play and Accuracy Bureau Prof. H, T. Hill...Faculty Member Don Joseph...Student Member I'll do a mistake if you find one in statement or impression in any of the columns of the Daily Kansas report it to the Daily Kansas office. He will instruct you as to the procedure. THURSDAY, APRIL 29.1915. WILL THEY HIKE? A few days ago a tracer was sent out for the senior girls' mixer, which has been heard of but not seen for some time. The investigation resulted in an announcement at the senior meeting to the effect that the girls would mix in South Park at half past six Saturday morning. (Sounds like a free for all fight, doesn't it?) At least they will meet there, each laden with as much lunch as she wants to carry, and then the rest of the program will be divulged. A blind man with one hand tied behind him could guess that the girls intend to hike but no statement to that effect has been put out. If that is the plan, it is a good one. This kind of weather impels one irresistibly to strike out on foot and explore the country that has been figuring only as the w.k. view for which Mount Oread is famous. The songs of the little dicky-birds and the suspicion that violates are blooming about this time, the occasional sight of a little calf or coot and the plaintive cheeps of tiny chickens, conspire to remind one of the joys of the country life and make school and town and even the movies seem humdum and unattractive. Every properly constructed human being wants to get out on the road and into the woods' and pastures, and disport himself with the rest of Nature's children. Young Thoreaus and Burroughs might enjoy themselves alone, far removed from such mundane and vulgar thoughts as eating, but the average human is gregarious, and enjoys sharing his pleasures. Also he is subject to attacks of appetite several times a day, and is not disposed to ignore them while feasting on the beauties of nature. For this person, of any age or sex, the hike is the thing. Wasted indeed is the life that has never known the joy of tramping the country roads in company with congenial people—as far as that goes, anybody who is decent is congenial on such a trip—of picking out the prettiest place available for a picnic, of building a campfire and cooking a meal in primitive fashion, and of loitering home again, surfeited with pleasure of a kind whose excess cannot harm. There's nothing like it! And so, if the senior women elect to hike, they will be doing the obvious thing, and yet will have made a choice that could not be improved or GOOD COMMUNICATIONS We would call attention to the communications now being published in the Kansan on the subject of the return of the student disciplinary power to the Senate by the Student Council. The letters carry good points, and, we feel, show student sentiment on the matter. BRING BIG INTEREST The efforts made in signing a petition for a return trip of Raymond Robins to the University will bring the greatest interest ever accorded an action. Robins did a big work in the campaign here last winter, and won himself a place in the hearts of K. U. students. They will hearken to him, we daresay, as soon as to any man. Student Opinion RETURN DISCIPLINARY POWER Editor of Daily Kargan; Can it be that men elected to the Student Council are not the highest type of students? Are they not representative? Is student government practiced? Are these the questions the student body is to settle on May 6. Most will agree the men on the Student Council have been the average student of the Hill. And they have attempted to do their best. But do students wish to do their own work? Fortunately, government has been a failure at the University since its inception. This brings up another question. Do the students want to do their own disciplining? Or have other students do it for them? I believe not. With the swing of the pendulum the whole sentiment of this country is changing from sensationalism to conservatism. The same qualities are being taught in our university as the attitude toward student government shows this change the opposite. In truth students do not wish to have held up before them at every turn, here is a body whose only purpose is to pass rules concerning your conduct and to enforce them. Rather they wish for the absence of strict rules. They and tradition should be given the same case as flagrant cases arise, the faculty can soon rid the University of any individual! meriting this attention. Hand in hand with this change of sentiment has been the increased intellectual rating of the undergraduate students, and other fields. And because of that the better men are not coming out for the offices. These are some of the reasons why I think the students will succeed by understanding the control of their own discipline. Upperclassman. WILL HAVE WORK The person who said the Student Council would have nothing to do should the disipi'inary power be given back is sadly misinformed. As representatives of student sentiment it would be able, unharmed by loss of prestige from new and unnecessary rullings, to promulgate movements of interest. Instead of teaching university grievals to discover those who smoked cigarettes, they might serve as the medium by which a student could right a wrong done to him either by the faculty or other students. There is way that in an administrative way that to encourage them would take a column. What is certain, this body without the control of student discipline, would be a counseling body for students. It would be the group toward which students would look for defense. Let's retrain almost broken down what little efficiency the Student Council has attained. Former Councilman. If the Shrimers are going West, we hope they make provisions in advance for those dry spots in the desert of Colorado, adjoining states—Columbia State. Chasing the Glooms The greatest pest in the University is the student who comes into the office and says, "Go after them, skin 'em alive, drive 'em out of school, but don't use my name, because of my friends, you know." Early rising alone doesn't get you there. If it did the janitor would be at the top. Any amount of practice which the Kansas University girls receive in archery will not increase the present number of their archilems. Ottawa Herald. "What does T. R. mean?" asked the visitor being shown over the lineotyping letter, and noting those mystic letters. When a newspaper man sends an unfinished story to the composing room he writes after the last line of the story to say "turn rule" or more to come. "Teddy Roosevelt," answered—the faceted compositor. "Whenever we see Teddy Roosevelt, we know that there is more to come."—San Francisco Chronicle Shots at Half-Cock Or Foolishment in Verse WHAT THE MOON SAYS Don't sleep tonight! Don't sleep tonight! Here's moonlight and a lass, You might as well stay up tonight, And sleep tomorrow in class. ANOTHER PIECE OF PI There was a white dog at K, U. Who sported the name of Pi U. He took people's praises, as cooly as blazes, Growling. Whatn'tell's-it-to-you? From the K. U. Zoo THE NICEST MAN Then there is the nicest man. You know him? Of course you do. As a rule, he is not so very enthusiastic about girls. He does have a few dates, but he doesn't have a lot of time to be bothered with girls. The men all like him, though I can't say why. He is that sort of person that you type a "man's man"; and that woman is always along. He is fairly good in class, and even excels in a few courses. He is never loud, nor argumentative, but sits back in class, and sort of grins while every one gets excited. Once in a while he has a date. Lucky is the maiden so blessed. He knows just when to come. If it's a dance, he sends the right sort of flowers, and he makes you feel that it is the greatest pleasure of his life. He is not the kind of person that is that it really is a big pleasure to him to be out entertaining you. In short the nicest man is the man that does not flit about so much that it is no special compliment to be chosen by him. He is the man that feels that it is his duty to entertain you, or else he would have little trouble if the evening is a failure. The result is that, in order to equal him in being nice, you are so nice and entertaining yourself that you just have the most glorious time that you have had for months. You wish he would come back real soon, but you know he won't. You know he doesn't want to be charm lies in the fact that you know that you can't have him any day in the week that you feel like it. With the Knowledge Seekers Elsewhere Women High Jump and Pole Vault An innovation in the athletic department has been started at Earlwood College in that the women have started track and baseball practice, and they are now working on a team in both branches. No outside colleges will be played, but it is likely that an interclass track meet will be held some time in the spring and probably an interclass baseball series. A special track of an eight of a men's has been arranged for the Miss Gladys Bassett, a former graduate of Vassar, is athletic director. College Baseball 56 Years Old College Baseball 56 Years Old Amberst and Williams claim the determinate baseball when they met on the diamond on July 1, 1899. The game, considered very exciting at the time, will be played to date by 'the marvelous score of 73 to 32. Wisconsin University Strietly Dry Before a student may purchase liquor at the University of Wisconsin he must sign a statement in the press- twenty-one years old. This bars freshmen from "rushing the grower." Columbia University has arranged a tour to the Panama-Pacific International Exposition. Students, off-campus, will make the trip in their own specially equipped steel train. Many Columbia people have signified their intention of attending the California Exposition and in one of their classes could be so combined with the pleasures of such a trip as to secure the greatest enjoyment the Columbia Spectator Travel Bureau has arranged personally conducted educational conditions affording the greatest experience and comfort. To Go to Coast Student Government or Not? Petitions bearing the names of more than 1,600 students of Wash. State are handed to the president of the institution asking for the reinstitution of eight underclassmen who were expelled for having. The result of the petition will be taken either as a fine or imprisonment, depending on university or its defeat, depending on the decision of the president. **Rooters Wear Special Hats** All men who intend to sit in the **rooters' section** in the grand stands at the Californiaprovided with special distinctionsbars before the game starts. This is *y*new institution, start this spring. Bay State Wants Own School The Massachusetts State Legislature has authorized the Board of Education to investigate the advisability of a new University. Harvard considers this an unnecessary extravagance and advises the establishment of State scholarships instead. Bay State Wants Own School The first intercollegiate football game on South Field at Columbia University in ten years will be played on October 16th, according to a statement by the University Committee on Athletics. The committee is working with the county for a coach, and a number of issues have been offered including that of Hamilton Fish Jr., Harvard's star tackle in 1909, who expressed his willingness to coach a Columbia team last fall. It is understood that a tentative schedule has already been drawn up, but negotiations with the other colleges are still going on. A study by the university for the five-year trial period, Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Pennsylvania or Cornell are not to be played. Kedakoral Instruction free- Squires Studio.-Adv. See McNish for quantity rates or aerated distilled water .—Adv. A school paper is a great invention The school gets all the fame. The printer gets all the money. And the staff gets all the fame. Penn State Stromb. Play Football at Big Fair They All Spell Simply n aay football at big rair Sn伯 Francisco may see some of the prosecutions in action next fall, as the exposition authorities have opened negotiations with Yale, Harvard, Princeton, Cornell, Dartmouth, Williams, Brown, Illinois, Amherst, Michigan Pennsylvania, Penner, Carlsle, Virginia, Minnesota, Carlsle, Jefferson, Chicago, Minnesota, and Syracuse universities to play there. Sixty-seven universities in the United States are using simplified spelling, according to the report of the simplified spelling board. Seventy-five have adopted this method. Missouri leads with nine such institutions. To be Separated Student Stealing Way Through A regrettable train of circumstances has caused a great deal of consternation and resentment among all of the girls in Ilinois. Articles of wearing apparel and money have been stolen from the Woman's building and from women's cloak rooms in other buildings. The women, in particular, under circumstance which point to a students as the perpetrator. "For women only" is the twenty-acre tract of Park College campus set aside as a recreation ground for women. This action of Dean Matthew H. Wilson is the result of the women's protest against being prohibited from walking in the woods on the more remote parts of the campus without chaperones. Men will be excluded from that section of the campus in order that chaperones may not be necessary. The question now before the men is whether to call it a "dear" park or a "chicken" ranch. LITERATURE IS FOR WORLD Writers Not Restricted to One Language Critic Says From Philadelphia North-American. In his "Short Studies in Literature" "Hamilton Wright Mable had this community," as long ago as 1891; tut, and this to say of "The International Community," as long ago as 1891: "inter-racial influences were never so strong as at the present time, because never before have there been such freedom and completeness of侵入 that they have become in some sense a classic before it was translated into another language. Today every book of any importance speedily finds its way to the readers who would be interested in it. All the Western nations are fast becoming the common constituency of powerful and inspiring writers, whose reference to the accident nationality has grown." "French and German books have long been freely translated into English; to these must now be added Spanish, Italian, Russian, and Scandinavian books, and the time is not distant when a book which is issued on behalf of the United States or from remote Siberia, will find its way to those for whom it has the authority of truth or the beauty of art. "Contemporary literature is already international, so far as bread of interest and comprehensiveness of audiences are concerned. De Maupassant, Daudet Bourget, Valdes, Goldos, Dael Alcaroon, Paul Heyase, SPIethagen, Bjornson, Ibsen, Lie Tolier, Dostoyevski, Gogol, and Tourguengoff, to speak of novelists alone, are as known to a great num- English learners novelists who write in English. Indeed, of late years no writer of our own language has had such vogue as Ubsen or Tolsiot. "One great gain from this familiarity with books in all languages will be a clearer perception of the nature of literature and the literature responds to and interprets the successive phases of human experience. It is only as we secure a wide outlook that we perceive the conformation of the 'landscape'; it is not only that literature responds with what we discern the mighty influences that penetrate and unify them." Kodakers Expert workmen do your finishing. —Squires' Studio.—Adv. There is still time to make that date for the Hop.—Adv. Limeade, 5c at Barber's—Adv. We want your kodak work and will finish it in one day. Squires Studio. Safety razors, blades and stoppers at Barber's-Adv. It is never too late to ask her to go to the Hop. She will go if asked. Says his orchestra is "Setting Purty" for the Hop—Adv. The Clothcraft Store Hours Clothcraft Clothes For Men and Young Men Styles change, but pure wool and good tailoring are always the foundation of values. 10 to 20 Ready to Wear Peckham's The University of Chicago LAW SCHOOL Three-year course leading to degrees of Doctor of Law (J. D.), which by the Quarter system are required for college calendar years. College education required includes a county counted toward college degree. Law library of 40,000 volume. Quarter offers special opportunities to students, teach us, The Summer Quarter offers special opportunities. First term 1915, June 21 — July 28 Second term year College summer campers of the University during the Summer Quarter. Dean of Law School, Univ. of Chicago Pleasure of School Life is Doubled The If you are acquainted with the current happenings "on the hill". The cheapest and easiest way to get acquainted is through the columns of the University Daily Kansan SUBSCRIBE NOW $1.00 for the rest of the year UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 900 ATTENDED FIRST POP CONCERT LAST NIGHT Miss Irene Jonani's Encore Solo Was Feature of Evening More than 900 people attended the pop concert given by the Lawrence Choral Union in Robinson Gymnasium last night. Miss Irone Jonani's solo performance although the rain was beating violently on the roof during her best number her voice could be heard in all parts of the room. Her rendering of 'Coming Through the Rye' as she was called for the greatest applause. The entertainment consisted of four selections by the entire chorus, one by the men's and one by the women's chorus. Miss Irene Jenon Siang seven times accompanied by Mrs. Arthur J. Anderson. One hundred and twenty members of the Choral Union took part in the program. 1. The Dance Waltz... Richard Mossbrouk 2. The Anvil Chorus . . . . . . . . . Verd 3. Forget-me-not (Ladies) . . . . . . . . . Gross Chorus) ... Great 4. a. Thy Beaming Eyes. MacDowell b. A Maid Sings Light and a Maids Sings Low c. To a Wild Rose. d. O Sole Mio. ... Di Capua d. O Sole Mio. . . . . . . Di Capua iancae Jouni 5. Lullaby...Saar Obligato Irene Jonani 6. The Stars and Strips For- ever (Men's Chorus)...Sousa 7. a. The Charm of Spring... Clark b. I Wish I Were a Tiny Bird, Lloh c. Down in the Forest... Ronalds d. Love You!... Ronalds e. Irène Jonani 8. Lovea Horn Dobb Dish. Blow. (Double Chorus) ... Bullard 9. Robbie Hearn (Wo- men's Chorus) ... Bartlett 10. Bridal Chorus. ... Cowei The following University students did not answer the question: ook part in the program Eva Bell Anderson Charlotte A. Bierbower Baldwin A. Baltimore Myle M. Crose Margaret R. Davis Dorethy E. Diver Florence E. Dunigan Margaret Emerson Marcella M. Hanscome Edna M. Ingels Mark A. MacKinnon Mary M. Linn Fredericka F. Miller Ivia Moser Josephine Shays Ruby Whitcraft George Berg Vincent Braiman E. C. Kline Goba W. Coffelt Olin E. Darby Harry W. Dixon Milton S. Dueker Leonard A. Farris C. A. Paulk Harry Harlan Bruhn M. Lohrenz George E. Maroney Earl B. Metcalf Samuel W. Mickey Frederick McNeil Homer H. Paul Paul H. Saftter Austin S. Bailey Brunhill P. Cochran Clyde R. Gelvin L. M. Hule Charles A. Ikewhaus E. L. E Lamb Pauline C. McNeil Marguerite Patton lara H. Scheurer Exe K. Stout Ruby Stout Oana Tenn Eyck Isabella Thornburrow Florence Totten Bertha Tucker Lucy Young Helen Bocker ville Boumares Edna Davis Stella Miller H. A. Lorenz H. C. Mitchell Waldo R. Oechsli Frank J. Porter M. Reiner Wm. Scalapin W. S. Spier Dick Williams PARSIFAL BY A WELSHMAN Wagner's Opera Hook Source in Legends of British Isles Christian Science Monitor. "Some few years ago, when I was writing my play of 'Tristram and the man of my dramamine', who was familiar with the music-drama by Wagner on the same theme, asked me," writes C. Comyns Carr in his delightful essay on "The Legend of Parsifal," "by what means I had contrived to secure Mme. Wagner's consent to the use of the story for the English stage. Such ignorance of one of the great characters included in the Arthurian cycle, enabrated for English readers by Sir Thomas Malory's immortal prose romance of 'Le Morte d'Arthur,' is of course phenomenal and extreme." "It is possible, however, that even among some of those to whom the source of the Tristram story is familiar, there may be here and there possessors of it. The possessor who are hardly aware that the legend of Parsifal found its source in the same great body of Arthurian romance. Indeed, I have met with not a few of whom the identification of this source was Parceval, comes somewhat as a surprise, and who are scarcely conscious that the whole legend of the 'Holy Grail,' which forms the subject of Wagner's opera, had its source in Britain, and was afterwards incorporeal that first saw the light in France. "The writer who originally gave to the story its poetic form, and in whose work the purely human features of the narrative are already linked with the history of Christianity, was Crestian de la Morera, who he wrote in 150. His book embraces a number of the Arthurian stories, but it so happens that amongst them the 'Conte del Graal' was left unfinished, and was afterwards completed by several writers, chief among whom, Waucher, confessed that he had drawn his inspiration from the work of a Welshman, Eleicher, in whose version the 'Grail' did not Sir Perceval but Sir Gawain." But even in Crestian's time, the writer continues, "the beauty of certain of these Arthurian legends had captured the imagination of Europe, and in the opening years of the thirteenth century we have the 'Pearsal' Perfumes New Spring Odors Evans' Drug Store CASTLE ROLL Front 2 1/4 in. Back 1 1/4 in. BARKERCO BRAND 2 FOR 25¢. 2 FOR 25¢. MANUFACTURERS: WILLIAM BARKER CO., TROY, N.Y. Oniy at Peckhams "This is not the place to follow in detail the many intricate and puzzling problems which beset the history of the Grail. It is, indeed, a fascinating theme, and has already attained much attention from many scholars in England, Germany and France, and is perhaps destined, in the absence of some of the earlier texts from which the legend was drawn, never to receive a final and of Wolfram von Eschenbach of Bavaria, who admits his knowledge of Crestin, but confessed a preference for a still older French version by the late Renaissance poet Wagner is directly indebted for that portion of the story which forms the basis of the opera." The work of the Bavarian knight, J. Comyns Carr says, "forms a complete and beautiful poem, concluded with a recital by the son of Paraisal, who, in his turn, ruler of the Grail Kingdom. wholly satisfying solution. "But a comparison of all these legends leaves undisturbed that fact that in its original shape the story and its environment are British, and, further, that it first took literary forms from the Western world issuing thence, as we now know, this and other of the Arthurian romances spread like flame over the Western world, finding their principal expon- tence in the past, but extending even to Sicily." Perfumes, toilet waters, complex ton powders, etc. at WLson's Drug Store Kodakers We want your biz. Prints finished in one day. Squires' Studio...Adv. Hyball Ginger Ale. The best by test, McChilh. Phone 198—Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. There’s Zip to it, Boys! HERE'S the yell master of them all—the campus favorite with college colors in stripes across the breast and sleeves. There never was a more attractive design—never a better made, a better styled, or a better wearing shaker sweater. It's a SUNDAY JOURNAL THE Bradley KNIT WEAR ideal for all "round service—a big luxurious sweater that will stand four years and more of "roughhousing" on the campus. If your dealer doesn't sell Bradley Sweaters, America's best Shakers, Jumbos, Jerseyes, and the only genuine naviags, write us for the names of dealers who do—it will pay you. BRADLEY KNITTING CO., Delavan, Wisconsin The High School Student who feels an interest in such a vocation as Mechanical Engineering VOCATION EDITOR A four-year course in mechanical engineering with the advantages of fully equipped shops and laboratories, prepares the student to enter this broad field under the best conditions. should be encouraged in knowing that the growth of industry, and the modern striving after efficiency, open a broad way of opportunity to the able mechanical engineer. He is always in demand. His position is often one of large responsibility He is well naid. VOCATION EDITOR University Daily Kansan Lawrence, Kansas Did you get am "original?" You owe it to her—take her to the Hop.— Adv. Boys—there are just as good fish in the sea as ever were caught. Gettys got him. Just received a letter from Haley. Says his orchestra is "Setting Purty" for the Hop—Adv. SUMMER THEATRE Cool and Comfortable Mme. Olga Petrova in Bathing caps—a fine assortment at Wilson's Drug Store and the prices are reasonable. "The Heart of a Painted Woman" 5 Parts,200 Scenes THEATRE VARSITY Straw Hat Day Tuesday, May 11 Watch for Big Announcement Imperial Shining Parlor and Hat Works Reserved Chairs for Ladies We Clean and Polish White Canvas, Satin Slippers, and all Colors of Buckskin Shoes ARROW SHIRTS Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl Notice, Fraternities! STUDENTS Stubbs Bldg., Opposite Court House—Phone, Bell 384 For Shines that last see "Egg" at HOUKS BARBER SHOP I have for lease some of the nicest rooms in town, with light, heat, hot and cold water—both furnished and unfurnished. If interested, call J. M. NEVILLE Professional Cards J. R. BECHETH, M. D. D. O. 832 Bathroom. Both phones, office and residence. J. F. BROOK, Optometrist and Speech Therapist 820 Mass St., Bell Phone 6515; 820 Mass St., Optometrist and Speech Therapist 820 Mass St., Bell Phone 6515; HAIRY REDING M. D. Eve, ear, nose and throat 820 Mass St., Bell Phone 6515; U. Bldg. Phones, Bell 131, Home 720 Mass St. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diseases of Sauces. E. T. A. U. Bldg. Residence 1204 Suite B. E. U. Bldg. Residence 1204 DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires' studio. Both phones. A. J. ANDERSON, M. D., Office 715 Vt St. Phoebe 124. DR. PETER D. PAULS, Osteopath, Office and residence, 7½ Eight East 7th St. General practice. Both phones 56L. Instructed: 12, 3 to 2, 5 to 7 and 8 by appointment. DR. N. HATES, 229 Mass. St. Genera N. Also treats the eye and filt G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, var ar infraction Guaranteed. Dick Bldg. Plumbers Jewelers Classified ED. W. PAISONS, Engraver, Watchmaker, awarded, jeweler, Diamonds, and Sculptor. PHONE KENNEDY PLUMING CO. 957-236-8211 Maiden Imps. 658, Maiden Phones. 658, Maiden Imps. Barber Shops Insurance Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK, 913 Mass. There is still time to make that date for the Hop.-Adv. ___ FIRE INSURANCE, LOANS, and abstracts. E. J. Hilkley. People's Bank Building. Bell 155; Home 2529. FRANK E. Banks, INAS, and abstracts. Want Ads WANTED-By a student, secondhand mackinaw and overcoat. Call Bell K. U. 25 or address J., care Kansan. 188-3* FRIANK E. BANKS, and abstract of Title. Room 2. F. A. U. Building. FOR RENT—Two rooms, windows on three sides. Can be bad separately or together. Outside, private entrance. Modern. 1132 Tennessee FOR RENT -Cottages in Estes Park Call Bell phone 1318, 141-16 LOST—Near Cameron's Bluff, watch on black strap, wrapped in paper. Return or notIFY Kansan office. Did you get an "original?" You ou- dit it to -he-take her to the Hop. Choice Cigars at Barber's.—Adv. A Good Place To Eat At Anderson's Old Stand Johnson & Tuttle Properties Johnson & Tuttle, Proprietors 715 Massachusetts Street PROTSCH "The Tailor" SPRING SUITING Box Stationery All Grades-All Prices McColloch's DrugStore BURT WADHAM'S "College Inn Barber Shop" G LAWRENCE Business College Largest and best equipped business colleges *Kansas*, school occupies 2 floors Law- TYPE or shortened by machines. Write for sample of Stenotype notebooks a catalog WATKINS' WATKINS' NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depository. FRANK KOCH "THE TAILOR" Full Line of Spring Suitcases STUDENT HEADQUARTERS THESIS BINDING THESIS BINDING Engraved and Printed Cards. Sheaffer's Self-Filling Fountain Pens. 744. Mass. Street. A. G. ALRICH 744 West. Street. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Bathing Suits In the popular one-piece style. Plain colors with fancy borders 50c up Ober's HEAD TO POOT OUTFITTERS The K. U., baseball team accompany by Coach McCarty left this morning over the Union Pacific for a trip to California, where she away from home game this afternoon with the Kansas Aggies. A second game will be played tomorrow afternoon. Saturday the nine goes to Marysa to play the St. Marys College. Twelve men were taken on the trip, Craig and Fischer, pitchers, and proul, Lladisay, Morrow, King, John, Chinnery, Webble, Wandel and Wood. LAYHAWKERS LEAVE FOR MANHATTAN GAME ABILENE SCORES VICTORY OVER MANHATTAN 9 TO Abilene High School - Abilene high school defeated Manhattan 9 to 1 Friday in the first game of the Kaw Valley baseball league played at home. Little of Abilene struck out 13 men. The Abilene line up was: Little, p.; Matters, c.; Conklin, Ib.; Johnson, l.; Mullin, l.; Gish, f.; Steyer, rf; H. O. Dresser, K S. A. C., is the Abilene coach. Abilene won from Salina by a 2 to 1 decision of the judges and lost to Junction City 3 to 0 Friday, in a triangular debate. The question was: Resolved: That the principles of the single tax, as advocated by Henry George, should be adopted by the state of Kansas. At home Miss Jessie Arndt, Chester Cassel, and Willard Day debated the affirmative while Mildreed Oliver, Miss Edith French, and Char'es Roop had the negative at Salina. J. W. French, '12, coached the teams. FINE ARTS STUDENTS GIVE PARTING RECITALS Students to be graduated this year from the School of Fine Arts will give recitals during May as follows; Marjorie Sheldon, piano, assisted by Anna McIntosh, soprano, Tuesday, May 11. Ada Harper, piano, assisted by artist Wood, violinist. Thursday, thursday. Nina Kannage, piano, assisted by Milton, Milton, soprano, Thursday, May 27. Letha Oglebyson, piano, assisted by Matson, contralto. Thursday, May 14. Chara Powell, soprano, assisted by Kate Kete's, piano, Tuesday, May 19. The graduating recital of Collegiate students will be given May 2 and the following students will take part: Christine Miller, Corinne Smith, Bernice Anderson, Agnes Moses, Abby Fuller, Marie Ketels, Mary Jarvis, Ruth Fox and Bess Willer. C. H. M. Not Only A Chancellor Chancellor Strong took honors a t the convoitation this morning not only for an excellent rendition of one of Schumann's songs, but for real college singing which had the flavor of carefree days at Old Eli where he sain in the glee club. "I am RED PEP Live Wire Philosopher I've been hired for 52 weeks. Take my advice each week-be cheerful." NO. 187 Watch this Space The Sig Alphs started their scoring in the first when they shoved two men around. They added five more in the third on three hits, one base on balls, two errors and a bit batsman. The fourth was easy but Woody started the fifth with a circuit swat down the third base line and two walks, an error and bit gave his team another more in the final run came on a hit, a passed ball and an error in the last round. SIGMA CHIS WIN PENNANT The Sig Alphas hammered Stuewe and King for nine hits Tuesday aftertern, scored eleven runs and won the ball game from the Alpha Taus. The game was slow and the fielding ragged. SIG ALPHS DEFEAT ALPHA TAUS BY SCORE OF 11 TO 1 2017 Victors in Second Division Will Play Winners in Other Two The lone Alpha Tau run came in the first when Baker doubled and was brought home by Benton's smash. Hilton, who started was pulled at this point and "Rabbit" Woods took up the burling. By defending the Phi Kappa Psi aggregation with a score of 21 to 6, the Sigma Chis soon noon the Sigma Chis captured the pennant for the second division of the Pan-Hellenic League and will play in the winners in the other two divisions. The heavy hitting of the Sigs brought in nine scores in the first innning, but the Phi Piis seemed uninterested in their scores coming in on errors. By inquiries: . . . R. H. E. Bmings: . . . 100 000 11 . . . Sr Alph A... 100 000 11 - 1 Str Alph B... 100 000 11 - 1 The Sigma Chis defeated the Kipp Alphas 2-1 and the Phi Gams 6-2. The finals can not be played off because they will remain maining games in their schedules. Mrs. Morgan up to date dressmaking and ladies' tailoring. Also party dresses. Prices very reasonable. 1321 Tennessee. Phone 1161W. 877-555-0000 Sunday evening, May 2nd, Mr. H. Douthitt will give an illustrated lecture on "The Animals of the Past." (See the app.) All cordially invited invited—Adv. Ladies' Tailoring Unitarian Church All Methodist young people are invited to the Moonlight Picnic Friday evening. Leave church at 5 o'clock old fashioned Methodist 'at-up Adv.' Awaiting his turn the one plus student smiled confidently, as the professor came down the line inquiring what outside reading his class had been doing. The further he inquired the more raid he became. There was now nothing to be done until the professor. At last our friend had his chance. PICKED UP BETWEEN CLASSES "Wel," sir, what have you been reading? Nothing, too?" "Why, professor, I have just about finished 'tid.'" Even the professor laughed. Sidney Shanghai Moss, K. U. perless bass pitcher, tells the following story of life in the celestial kingdom to activate the wit of the Chinese. Sid was driving his father's automobile down the streets of Shanghai one day when he had the misfortune to encounter a man who course he didn't stop the car for a trickshaw coolie more or less is of no matter. He remarked to a Chinaman how he could have any sense or he wouldn't have been in the way. "Of Hoxie Debating Team Which Comes to K.U. (left to right) John A. Macdonald, Robert B. Macdonald and George E. Macdonald. course he hasn't any sense," replied the oriental, "he wouldn't be a trickier to get than he was." But the Money Never Came "Jokes is jokes, but some of them aren't in the least funny," says 1-B. Riggs, freshman College. Here's the reason why. Riggs was feeling lucky, the other day, so he entered an illustration contest which is being put on by the Life Publishing Co. In a few days Riggs received a letter telling him that he had been awarded second money and that a check for $200 would follow. Natasha Kostner, He. He everyone in the house and began to make plans to go to the fair this summer. His elation was short lived, however, for he soon found that he had been criminally deceived. His room was flooded with people who came from Life, had manufactured the In keeping with the martial spirit of the times, E. D. Scott, of Leavenworth, will address the meeting of the Jurisprudence Club on the subject of 'Artillery' at the Phi Alpha Society. Dr. Burt McKinnon and Mr. Scott's lecture will be illustrated with stereoptic views. The meeting begins at 8 o'clock. Play H. H. Game Senior Women Mix Play H. H. H. Game College Campus defeated Midway yesterday afternoon 8 to 4. The game was postponed from Saturday. The women of the senior class will meet in South Park Saturday morning at 6:30 o'clock for a mixer. The women asked to bring eats for breakfast. Talks on Artillery joy inspiring notice. Now Riggs is the sorrow on the sorrows of life. WEAVER'S Hosiery to match Gowns For the Soph Hop All the new shades in stock Your choice of any fabric in our large collection of silks and wool goods. PHOENIX SILK HOSE,25 shades in both the 75c and $1.00 qualities. ONYX SILK HOSE,pure thread silk,full shade range,at $1.00. FIBER SILK HOSE,in best shades pair 50c. Tailored Skirts Made to Your Measure Mr. Chas. Jensen, the popular man tailor, has offered to take a limited number of orders for Silk or Wool Skirts, fitting, $3 making and guaranteeing satisfaction, for = 3 FIBER BOOT SILK HOSE,lisle garter tops,good shade range,pair 25c. Dainty Wash Dresses suitable for evening wear, $6.50 to $13.50. Party Gowns of silks, crepe de chine, crepe meteor or messaline, $6.50 to $25.00. Party Accessories—Fans, Ribbons, Gloves Perfumes, Hair Ornaments. Innes. Bullene Hackman Coca-Cola Coca-Cola When You're Training Take a tip from the men who top all the average tables. Drink Coca-Cola They know it's good to train on—to work on. The one best, out-and-out thirta-on-the-bench—full of refreshment, pleasure and wholesomeness. Delicious—Refreshing Thirst-Quenching THE COCA-COLA CO. Atlanta, Ga. Dunkin' Coca-Cola bserve you see an Arrow think of Coca-Cola STRAW HATS READY STRAW HATS READY Designed by Rosenwald & Well Illustrator All Ready— Your summer clothes made from genuine Goodall Palm Beach cloth STRAW HATS READY the only texture for summer wear that will absolutely stand the wear of the laundry and dry cleaner. Aud the correct model, five in all to choose from and every one made with a French front with soft roll lape. It's a pleasure to show you. May we have that pleasure? "Allie"— The new pledge of the Sigma Nu fraternity direct from the alligator farm of Prof. "Butch" Cowell "Allie" is between twelve and fifteen years old, is about twenty-four inches long. You can see him in our north window. At the same time give our Palm Beach suits the once-over. Johnson&Carl STRAW HATS READY UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII. HARRIS TELLS MEANING OF GERMANY'S CULTURE NUMBER 142. Former K. U, Student Maintains That Americans Have no Real Freedom NOT "APPRECIATED" AT K. U UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 30, 1915 Faculty Dismissed Him for Refusing to go to Chapel—But He Has Outlived it "Life in Germany is on a much higher plane, in both physical and intellectual culture than it is in Engle- manthood. In the German journalist and novelist in an afterdinner talk at the Pi Kappa Alpha house yesterday evening, Mr. Harris took as his superstition, Mr. Karlsen of the German Kultur" involving a discussion of just what this means to the state and the individual. ... of just what this means to the state and the individual. "You speak of the freedom you Americans have," continued Mr. Harris, "It is not freedom. It is a system by which the majority of the people are in Germany. In Germany poverty has been done away with entirely while in England conditions are miserable and not much better in your big cities. In the course of a few years conditions will be worse in America than England. All are due to a defective civilization. "The superior ability of the Germans in organization is their success socially and from their success." The Kitchener military regime has been a failure. It is a sad state of affairs when a man has the ways and means for doing but lacks that power of organizing. England is now letting France fight most of her battles. Expelled From K. U.. Wouldn't Go to Chapel Mr. Harris was a student at the University of Kansas in 1875. He never got his degree because he was "kicked out of school, to use his own philosophy." "It was this way," said Mr. Harris. "They had chapel those days and everyone was supposed to go. My seat was vacant repeatedly and one day I received a notice to call at the charcolor's office. Here I was told that I had not set up a waiting chapel, but when I blankly refused to attend I got put out of school." Mr. Harris accrets the influence of Professor Smith then of the Greek department of the University of Kansas for his position today. It was through Professor Smith that he first taught in English to his first himself and pursue the kind of work he was suited for. After his schooling here he studied in English and French universities. Since then he has spent his time in literary work, publishing books, writing plays and editing some of the leading periodicals in English in E.H. G. Wells, the well known writer. Mr. Harris was editor of the Saturday Review when he first took an interest in Mr. Wells. Harris Talks Old Time University Romances “Bad eyes and a sentimental disposition, that’s all,” explained Frank Harris, yesterday afternoon, at the close of his lecture on Shakespeare, as a group of admirers crowded about him. He frankly wiped his eyes and then beamed upon everybody. Miss O’Connor, a professor at the son, all old K. U. grades themselves, had stopped for a few moments tr talk over old times. "What, you don't mean to say that Mary is in New York and didn't let me know! Oh, well. she always did not speak up when I came his she is, and when I go back, I'll have a date with her. Speaking of dates," and he turned chuckling to Miss Oliver, now associate professor of Latin, from the University, spent on your front stoop?" "Oh, no." protested Miss Oliver. "On rfriendship was always platicon. Don't you remember the essay you brought to me to criticise that you had in action in the scene of Macauquah? well, too, and you really got his style." Miss Oliver blushed and then all of them, remembering something of their school days, laughed much, at which Miss Oliver blushed some more. "Your father used to want to take me home," she said, I took up so much of your time." "Oh, yes, you always praised me anyway. I'll never forget those tulip houses, and they will touch the Well, well," and the rest. "Mr Harris' reminiscences were interrupted by the laughter of Miss Watson, who seemed to remember all "And then," went on Mr. Harris, SPRING DAYS BRING OUT HIKERS Students Walk to Nearby Points Tramp, tramp, trump! Tramp, tramp, tramp! Hear that thunderning of feet? No it is not an approaching army, but I can see the spring 'n' swing of walkers, strollways, feverites and cases. They are going in all directions, up the road to Cameron's Bluff, out to Blue Mound and Violet Hill, on the railroad ties to Turkey Creek, and even to such prespira places as Glenwood, the group of women going up the railroad ties was mistaken by a typical "bo" as members of his own walking club. He informed them that he had met many groups of women "heating it on foot" to the Fair. And besides those who walk there any more than six miles the road on hayracks or glide up the river in canoes. These last moonlight nights have brought out many such canoeing parties. Yes, indeed, spring UNDECIDED ABOUT BAND CONCERTS ON CAMPUS If Enough Attend Tuesday Night. Open Air Programs Will be Given Later Whether or not the band will give outdoor concerts this spring will depend upon the attendance and the amount of interest shown in the band concert Tuesday night. J. C. Mehringer, manager at the studio, want to call out his forty musicians to give outdoor concerts if the students are not interested. Last year only a few people turned out and after a time the plan was dropped. Mr. McCanles will furnish the music if the students want to hear it, and he believes that the attendance at the coming concert will be a good index to the attitude of the student body toward band music. A carefully planned program has been arranged for Tuesday night. There will be several selections from grand opera, and a few lighter numbers, which are all that the band is in trim from the bass drummer to the piccolo player. . "The program will be rather heavy," said Mr. McAles this morning. "However there will be enough it to make it enjoyable to everyone." The Program Caprice heroueiro "Le Reveil du Lion" . . . . . . A v Kontski Hungarian Overture "Hunyady Laszlo" . . . . Franz Erkel Piccolo Solo. "The Woodbird" . . . Schmidt-Berka Hubert E. Nutt . . . . . . Grand Selection - "Cavalleria Rusticana" . . . . . . Mascagni Intermezzo - "Air de ballet" . . . . . . Ed. Cazaneuve Five minute intermission. Overture - "Mignon" . . . . A. Thomas Morceau Characteristic, "Bull-frog's Serenade" . . . H. Engelman Grand Selection - "Bohemian Girl" . . . . . . Balfe "The Dance of the Serpents". Edwardo Boccala The Botany Club at its meeting Wednesday evening decided to have another picnic Friday May 7, prob- baling at Ridegeer's Springs west of town. In lieu of a field trip this week, the Ornithology class must spend an hour gazing at stuffed birds in the Museum. A listening student broke in and wanted to know if it was true that the students did cut chapel in the days when Miss Watson and Mr. Harris were here. "No sir," affirmed Watson. "Miss Watson. Library voice. Don't you hear anything? He never was expelled, and don't you dare write that he was." Two meetings of the Zoology Club are to be held yet this semester.The discussions will be on inherited characteristics. Mr. Harris, however, had the last word and called over Miss Watson's protest. "Yes, I did get canned, beaten," he said to chapel and its every word "true." "to think that I had to get kicked out of school. Do they still have hair?" At Morning Prayers General subject: "The Student Volunteer Movement." Tuesday: Dorothea Hackbusch "The Beginning of the Movement." Wednesday: Leon Bocker, "Expan and Bother." Thursday: Julia Moore. "Objectives." Wednesday; Leon Bocker, "Expansion and Recruiting." Friday: McKinley Warren, "The Student's Opportunity." FINE ARTS COMMITTEE GYM READY TO RECEIVE CALLS ON GOV. CAPPER SOPHOMORE HOP TONIGHT Six Women Confer With Chief Executive Concerning Dean Skilton NOT TO ASK REINSTATEMENT North College Students Only Wish to Express Regret at Action of Board Clara Powell, Ketels, Helen Jonkins, Agnes Mores, Nima Kamga, and Ada Harper to Topeka this morning to confer with Governor Arthur Capper concerning the action of the Board of Administration in retiring Dean C. S. Skilton as head of the School of Fine Arts. The工作者 would ask that he would in no way ask for the re-statement of Dean Skilton. The women that go compose a committee which was appointed as the result of an indignation meeting of the School of Fine Arts Tuesday morning, the faculty meeting expressing the regret of the students at the action of the Board of Administration were signed by practically every student in the School. Upon arriving at Topeka this morning the women will proceed at once to Lawrence and Capper. They will return to Lawrence this afternoon at 2:00 o'clock Similar petitions have been signed by students in the School of Education. GRADUATE'S FUNERAL TODAY The funeral of Le and W. Moore, '12, who committed suicide yesterday morning, will be held at Ottawa this afternoon at 4 o'clock. Prof. C. A. Moore, the esteemed attorney- in-law, came to Lawrence early this morning and returned to Ottawa Leland W. Moore, Victim of Melan cholia, Will be Buried in Ottawa JEREMY SCHMITZ LELAND MOORE with the body, Mrs. Moore and her other son Fred W. Moore, also a graduate of the University of Kansen, returned to Ottawa last month. Leland Moore came to Lawrence Wednesday, with his mother and brother, and she was in R. A. Schwegier for melancholia. After his first treatment Thursday morning, he seemed entirely cheerful but returned to his room and shortly went home. Mr. Moore is a son of W. B. Moore of Ottawa. After graduating from the University in 1912, he held a position as a lecturer at Fe railway until a few months ago, when ill health forced him to return home. The attack of melancholia which caused him to commit suicide with which he had been bothered. Manhattan, Kansas, April 30 -- "Red" Craig was in great team form as the first starter for University of Kansas baseball team defeated the Kansas Aggies 5 to 0. Only three hits were made by the locals off the delivery of the Crimson and Blue twirler. CRAIG PITCHED SHUTOUT GAME The second game of the series will be played this afternoon. Either "Letty" Sproul' or Fischer will pitch for the visitors. Tomorrow the Kansas team plays at St. Marys with Quigley's Collegians. Aggies Made Only Three Hits Off K U. and Lost 0 to 5 Mrs. Hilsman of Kansas City is visiting her daughter, Itasca, at the Chi Omega house. She expects to be in Lawrence until June. Batteries; Craig and DeLongoy Hodgson and Haucke. Umpire Midgeyarsman. Score by innings: R. H. E. K. B. 000 211 101 6 4 Argus 000 211 101 6 4 Argus Final Decorative Touches to Robinson Put in This Morning The Daily Kansan will print no Monday which is an all-Universi- ty day. No Kansan Monday FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED Early Birds Will Eat During Inter mission, Others Later—Faree Starts at 7 o'Clock Soph Hop farce begins at 7 o'clock. Reception of guests by 24 faculty members, patrons, and sophomore officers at 8 o'clock, on the dancing floor. Dance begins at 8:30 o'clock continuing until midnight. The annual Soph Hop starts in Robinson Gymnasium at 7 o'clock tonight. Instead of giving out the refreshment checks with the programs as is customary, they will be distributed at the door, as one turns in his tickets. The first hundred couples arrive during intermission; after that, later arrivals will be required to eat during the dance program itself. Want to Start on Time everybody at the Hep likes to dance —that's the reason they're there. But everybody knows that the refreshments will prove an added pleasure. Unless one gets there early, however, and secures checks that are good during intermission —bloieu!— he has to stop dancing to EAT. Reasoning thus, "Gawge" concludes that everyone will come on time; in fact, that is how they should be of late; and that hence the festivities may begin at the scheduled time. Of course, we expect the soph farce to be funny. Don Burnett is the director, and William Dean Howells wrote it. The cast: Mrs. Ondegno Jones—Itaase Hils man. Lady Guinevere Landpoore-Helen Clark Sierra—Dora Lockett ed "Rabbitston -Alton Gumbiner. ed "Rabbitston -Ocethapee -Henry McCardy. Those Who Receive After the dramatic event of the evening has been brought to an end, the reception of guests will occur on Thursday. Those who are to be in line: President Lawrence Miller, Blanche Mullin, Manager Geek Yeum. Ibsa Wilhelm, Chancellor and Mrs. Strong, Cohen, Dr. Craig and Mrs. J. W. Green, Dean and Mrs. O'Templem, Dean and Mrs. F. W. Blackman, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. W. Hoch, Mr. Ed. T. Hackney, Mrs. Cora Lewis, Cora Shinn, Mrs. Frances Arnold. The dance—beg pardon—"Hop" will begin at 8:30 o'clock. Larry Miller and Miss Mullin leading the dance, they have to wait until midnight. There are twenty-two dance numbers: seven, sight, and nine; intermission between eleven and two'eve; and fourteen, fifteen; even being reserved for refreshments. Making a Dreamland of Gym Tony James, chairman of the decoration committee for the Junior Prom, assisted by Mick Murphy, who is supposed to articulate this event, is putting up an enormous amount of paper and colored lights this morning. A rooftop, together with strings of pink and green lights, constitute the chief items of adornment. The traditional pergola is also being used for the orchestra, from which place of seating can be seen crowd. The Colonial Party and Junior Prom 'attaie work also is used to help out the cozy corner scheme. Professor Shull's plant breeding class spent two hours Thursday morning planting corn on the breeding plot of a new building. Vic Householder arrived an hour late, but his boyhood experience wasn't for nothing and according to Professor Shull Vic put corn as if a famine was sure coming. Bert Hart, graduate of the K. U. School of Law, '14, and now county attorney of Kearney county, is visiting at the Phi Alpha Delta house. It is on his way to the state convention of county attorneys at Topeka. Sturtevant Visits Sanctum Charles S. Startevant, formerly advertising manager of the Daily Kanan, was at the office yesterday, and he worked with paekewan Western League baseball team. GEORGE O. IS FIRST HUMAN REGISTRAR Pioneer Students' Friend registrars are becoming more like human beings according to Registrar George O., Foster. This change in attitude dates from the Salt Lake convention of registrars, two years ago when Registrar Foster made a speech on this subject. At that time a newly thing as hitherto the student had been looked upon as a thing to be tolerated, not served. Since this convention, we are assured by Mr. Foster, there has been considerable discussion on this topic, and some action, the majority of registrars having made an effort to really be of help to the individual student and to stop looking upon him as a mere cop in the wheel. DR. ESENWEIN TO LECTURE Noted Author and Editor Will Talk on "The Short Story" Dr. J. Berg Keeneway, former editor of Lippincott's Magazine, author critic of The Times. [Portrait of a man] ture on his fan-favorite subject, "Steve Story." *Wednesday*, May 5, at 11:30 o'clock *Fraser Channel* *Fraser Channel* ing today. His text book "Writing the Short Story" has had an immense circulation and is used by Merle Thorpe's short story class. Doctor Esen-wien is probably the foremost student and of the short story liv- Besides being a world authority on the short story, he is known as "the editor who loves to help young editors" and it has been said that if "a careful student of his work does not write stories that will be hurt, he will not write a bad one." Young story writers who exhibit but slight talent are assured Doctor Seenwein's earnest and patient instruction or his letters of encouragement and advice. He writes in his books stories besides, articles, poems, and books. "His advice on how to prepare the manuscript, how to sell the story, and all the practical end of the matter are quite as valuable' as his captivating chapters on the HOLD NO SCHOOL MONDAY "Chancellor's Day" Replaces Class Scrap of Old Time Monday is an all University holiday. It originated nearly ten years ago as a result of a concession made by students and the generosity of Chancellor Frank Strong. Until 1905 a class fight on May was an annual affair. "While the school was young it did not amount to much, but afterwards it became more serious and caused the University to bear the brunt of much criticism," said Chancellor Strong. "By assembling the sophomores and freshmen it was easily ascertained that the sophomores wanted to fight on that day merely for the sake of class, but the freshmen did not wish to appear the least bit afraid of the sophs. Both classes, it was learned, were willing to give up the annual scrap for consideration of a holiday and consequence there will be no classes on Monday. Heretofore there has been n name for the holiday and at the sageation of several faculty member Chancellor "Th Chancellor's Holiday." Collect Specimens George Belchic has been in Joplin for the past week collecting specimens of different zinc ores to use in the experiments he is making together with Glen Allen with zinc tailings, or the wastes from the zinc smelters. These two men have been studying the feasibility of using the flotation method of extracting ore from these wastes. So far the experiment has been successful and the men believe that this ore which has before been wasted can be worked with profit by the flotation process. They're Precise The State Water Survey in the basement of Snow Hall will be known as the State Water and Sewage Laboratories of the State Board of Health, by a bill passed at the last session of the legislature. Phi Alpha Delta, law fraternity, announces the pledging of Otis Dittmer, junior Law of Independence and Paul H. Friend, junior Law of Law- The Zoology club will hold an all- arrangements picnic on the weekend. Bug Men Picnic HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETES ON M'COOK TOMORROW Interscholastic Meet to See 147 Tracksters Competing in Annual Meet THREE CLASSES OF TEAMS Schools Graded According to Size 10 Allow Contests Between Schools of Equal Strength Young Rodkey Coming Tomorrow afternoon on McCook Field one hundred and forty-seven high school athletes will take part in the twelfth annual interscholastic track meet. These athletes are the cream of the athletes of the state and are expected to make some cinders fly in an effort to set some new high school records for the state. Up to thirty three teams are entered which is not quite as large a number as entered the meet last year. Many of the teams have only entered their stars who will come to win a few medals and show their ability in fact competition. Among the men who play in this game are them is Rodkey, of Blue Rapids, a young brother of the Varsity athlete. His events are the hurdles and the quarter mile but his record in the latter is not as good as that of his former competitor. The team of Kansas City have been making some good time in the mile and half mile this year and have a good chance of taking these events in Class A. Numerous teams have entered this competition and this part of the meet promises to be one of the leading attractions. The various teams are divided into three classes so that the athletes of the smaller schools may compete with men of their own class. In class A only seven teams have entered but most of these have entered full meet. In class B, all seven teams meet last year through the work of Sol Butler, is not entered this year and the fight for the first place cup in this division will be between Topeka, Lawrence and Kansas City. No advanced dope has renched Lawrence about the Topoka aggregation but Lawrence also had another other two as Kansas. City and Lawrence are evenly matched in most all the events. Seventeen in Class C. Class B consists of nine teams only one of which has entered as high as seven men. In such case the work of the individual stars will win the meet for any school. Seventeen schools have entered the third division but these also are under seven men each. The entertainment of the visitors has been left in the hands of the University students as much as possible. The visitors have also ever been provided will be accorded the visiting athletes. They are being cared for today and tomorrow by the various fraternities and clubs. The early arrival's will be admitted to the University club meet on McCook today and will have chance to see the Varsity in action. Entries for Meet The teams entered for the contest tomorrow are; Class A: Chanute, Iola, Kansas Class B: Lawrence, Ottawa, Taichung and Wakefield. Class B: Baldwin, Humboldt, Garrett, Horton, Needesh, Oagna, Agnes. *** Class C: Alma, Axtell, Blue Rapids, Catholic High, Elsmore, Florence, Gardner, Harveyville, LaHarpe, Maple Hill, Meriden, Oread, Overbrook, Perry, Scranton, Syracuse and Wilson. Are After Senior Dues The work of collecting dues for the senior memorial will begin at once. Committees have been appointed which will work by schools, but many will be based on what will be seen and given an opportunity to help up the memorial. Two More Get Jobs Miss Gertrude Hazen, a graduate student has been elected to teach domestic science in the Abilene high school next year and Miss Christine that may have chosen to teach commercial subjects in the Newton high school. Hold Meet Monday At 3 o'clock today, Manager W. O. Hamilton stated that if it continued, the inter-class train would be on Monday afternoon at 4 o'clock. --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the Universi- tion Venice EDITORIAL STAFF EDITORIAL John M. Hewlett...Editor-in-Chief Raymond Hopper...Managing Editor Helen Hayes...Associate Editor William Cady...Exchange Editor BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS MANAGER J. W. Dyche ...Business Manager REPORTORIAL STAFF Leon Harsh **AMES Rogers** Bilton Clayton **John M. Lewisner** Gary Scriwer **Don Davis** Nathaniel Bier **Don Davis** Elmer Arndt **Carolyn McNutt** Jason McNutt **Carolyn McNutt** Louis Puckett **Harry Morgan** Glendon Linder **Dennis Matterson** Fred Bowers Subscription price $2.50 per year if advance; one term, $1.50. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office 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. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone. Bell K. U. 25. The Daily Kanaan aims to picture the undergraduate life of a student further than merely printing the news by standing for them or playing no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courteous; to handle problems to wiser heads, in all, to seethe to the best of its ability the problems to wiser heads, in all. Fair Play and Accuracy Burunu Prof. H. T. Hill...Faculty Member Don Joseph...Student Member Joseph Johnson...Secretary If you find a mistake in statement or impression in any of the columns of the Daily Kansan, report it to the Deputy Director of the Daily Kansan office. He will instruct you as to further procedure. FRIDAY,APRIL 30,1915 (The editorial page today is in charge of Earl R. Crabb. Any kick should be directed toward him—J. M. H.) Uncle Jimmy Green seems to have a budding lawyer in Halleck Craig. Yesterday in the case of K. U, vs. K. S. A. C. he succeeded in convincing the Aggies that they didn't have a chance at the Missouri Valley Championship. As usual, a strong right arm and healthy body figured prominently in the pleadings. "Eat great men" was Carlyle's advice to the seeker of knowledge. At present most of us are so busy putting spoonfulls of knowledge into our buckets and subsequently emptying it into quiz books with a shovel, that there is no time for that kind of eating. Who can deny that the opportunity to hear and come in personal contact with such men as Graham Taylor, John R. Mott, John Kendrick Bangs and 'a host of other luminaries in their respective lines is not worth laying off on the bucketing process once in a while. WHEN THE CHANCELLOR WHEN THE CHANCELLOR SINGS Chancellor Frank Strong is not a Tom Thumb. He is built on ample lines. His head is somewhat remote from his feet. Perhabs that is the reason freshmen and sophomores, who are somewhat smaller of stature, are apt to think that the Chancellor lives among the clouds and is therefore quite inaccessible. A good many college prexies go through life misunderstood and unappreciated by students who only touch the hem of their personalities and but dully sense their innermost thoughts and dreams. If there be any minguided plodder on the campus who thinks the Chancellor lacking in the human touch, unconcerned in the happy-go-lucky life of the campus, that poor wretch should have been at the old song service the other morning. The Chancellor sang in a brave bass "The Two Grenadiers," and then rang the joy-bells again by seating himself at the piano and playing his own accompaniment to some rollicking staves that harked back to the days when he performed on the glee club at old Yale. And he wore a boyish smile that would warm the blood of a wooden man. It was wort holdins and ducats to watch expressions come and go on the faces of the younger studies. They nudged each other, listened with all their ears, and then applauded with gusto. It had been an education to them. It had pried, loose, the old fashioned idea that chancellors are not supposed to unbend from their dignity or to be human. Chancellor Strong won them all, by a deft flicker of the ivory keys and some old college melodies. He made many new friends and renewed an o'd regard. WHEN IN DOUBT—ASK We welcome the visiting delegations from the various high schools and wish them each and every one success and a profitable time. The former is impossible if measured from the angle of points in the track events for there must be winners and losers or there would be no races. But every man who makes the trip has an opportunity to see the great University in its entirety and to meet fellow Kansans from all over the state. The winning of points is indeed a small matter compared to the other great opportunities. And—just a word of advice—if we may be pardoned. Mr. High School Athlete, the University of Kansas is yours for the day. Every loya' servant of the institution is at your disposal and if there is anything you want to know or see, ask about it. The entire student body is ready to help you. ON GAMBOLING Since several hundred students in the College have signified their intention of participating in the proposed College Day festivities, there is no longer any convincing argument against this requested holiday. Any institution which can bring that number of people—or even a much smaller gathering—into close personal contact should be encouraged by the faculty. From the earliest of times writers have urged their circle of readers to lay dull care away whenever possible. Phaedrus in his fables says: "The heath that always bent will One bow that's always bent will quickly break; But if unstrung 'twill serve you at your need. So let the mind some re'axation take To come back to its task with 'hear bad.' The barring of a due amount of recreation at a time like this is apt to be followed by moodiness, or worse, by dull melancholy. Certain it is that any amount of so-called "Spring fever" could be averted were the faculty favorably disposed towards the request of the College. Chasing the Glooms The reporter who wrote that Professor Harrington weighed 218 plus must have been considering by his selling scales. If Raymond Robins can bring to Oread the same kind of weather that accompanied him on his March trip we are for him right now. - The K. U. girls, it is said, are taking up the sport of archery. Doubtless many of them have become adept in handling beasts—Newton Kansan Is printed there the paper that does not run a dandelion cure prescription now? "Why, do you know," said a wise little sophomore one day, "all last year I had the most mistaken idea of what to do when a man of a man as near all gold as he." "How's that?" asked the freshman she was informing. "Isn't he? Course, I've never seen you soft spot in my heart for him. Why, he sent home my grades last semester, after I'd told my folks that I was making all Is and Iss. And it sure got me in trouble; they were HIAs—every one, but one C." The Iola Register says that after seeing Geraldine Farrar it cannot understand why Campaini space explaining why he kissed her. Add favorite conversation topic- Dandelions. Pandora's Box "Himph," ejaculated the little freshie. I'd like to see any one who makes me pay fees, and take courses in cooking than I care to be kept, that I'd like." "Well, that wasn't his fault. You know they make him do that. That is what he's here for, and of course, that's what you're going to do, you would ever lie to your family." "All right," said the wise sophmore, "come with me." And with that the two of them made their way to the registrar's office. A WOMAN'S VIEWPOINT Such is the life of a registrar. In opposition to the students who are condemning the dress suit and affairs formal, this is a plea for both. There is talk in the University of having fewer formal parties, and letting the informal rolling sort of affair have the first place. Kansas, a very informal state, by reputation, seems to show symptoms of discarding the little hard earned formality that it has acquired. We of the middle west have very little's formality in our systems. It is only the last generation that has had time to come in out of the corn fields, or off the plains, to learn the art of wearing the liverys of formality. There may have been a few parents at home who have sniffed at the "accouterments of snobbery." yet on the whole, the dress suit has for several years, gone on its way the companion of the sportive youth in most of his joyous hours of polite revelry. And now they want to abolish it! The abolition of the formal party in the University of Kansas would be a mistake. Of us come from small towns where the dress suit is viewed with alarm. We come to school, a stranger to it, and after we leave many of us come within hailing distance of it again very few times. The formal party is the one time the youth of the middle west has to learn the poise and self assurance which marks our more formal eastern brothers. Besides that it is fun to be able to dress your once in a while to look like the illustrations in the magazines, and to know that no one can bill you from a millionaire though your allowance is only 30 a month. So, since it is your only chance, probably, unless you join the Elks in your own town, let us make a Formal Party and the Dress Suit a sacred and time honored tradition in K. U. M. M. K Little Glimpses of College Life What of It? A statistician at University of Californi- a had nothing better to do compared to the students. Since the women's swimming pool has been opened this spring, nine gallons of soap, 3000 towels and 1000 gallons of water have been used. Red cups is the favorite color of bathing caps, with green and blue close behind. At Washington State University it was calculated that 70,000 malted milks were consumed by the students annually. This would fill a reservoir of 5,000 gallons capacity. The cost of the luxury is $8,750, enough to pay the expenses of 29 students at the university for one year. Syracuse Students Serendade Teddy Ex president Roosevelt is stopping from going now on. The students at the University found this out when they were having the first college sing of the year. The spring promptly assumed the form of a serenade to Mr. Roosevelt, and he promptly prompts speech of greeting, and expressed a wish that every student present could be on the jury. ! Cow Help Pay College & Expenses About forty per cent of the students at Kent State are agricultural college and their college education without any support from home. Several novel; forms of employment are found among the students. Several men club together and each buys a cow. For the milk received from this herd they are given their room and board. STUDENT OPINION Mysterious Benefactors at Virginia Five one hundred dollar bills fell out of a letter to the president of the University of Virginia recently. The letter was headed "The Loan Statement that this money was lent for the use of needy and deserving students. Another Tradition for Colorado The sorority women of Colorado University are busy sewing dainty track trousers for the athletes, who will compete in the inter-college track meet. Fifty such trousers are in various stages of manufacture and could not be forbear to put a little lace and what not on 'em. Brightly colored ribbons are also used extensively. Cow Helps Pay College Expenses Soon students of this University will settle whether they wish fellow students to be burdened with passing on their good conduct. SHALL DISCIPLINARY POWER BE RETURNED? TWO VIEWS For four years I have seen that great desire of the Student Council, name'y to pass rules and enforce them, interfere with them, they have you. started. To be fair, they have done considerable up to this year. A council which seems to have as its only object the passing of rules is defeating the purpose for, which it was organized. If the Council is relieved of this medium to show its authority, it will settle down in business and answer real impressions to Mt. Oread. There is importance to be done and no other organization will be in so favorable a position to accomplish much. Editor of Daily Kansas: He: I didn't know it was so late. Are you sure that clock is going? If you were guilty of an offence, would you prefer to have a commission of your fellow councillors? Or rather that a faculty committee handled your case? A. Senior. In my estimation, the student who has been disciplined by his fellows will realize the justice of their decision. If the faculty had a hand in the affair he will go out from the University-or perhaps the institution-with a grouch on the school and with a knife for its perning. Editor of the Daily Kansan: At the Cottage Feminine voice from above: It's going a whole lot faster than you are, and I don't mind it. Why condemn all student government as unsound because it has not proved a remarkable success in the few years Kansans have tried it out? At various other institutions, some larger and some smaller, it is on a firm basis and operated successfully. Ted Cronemeyer says the first pop concert was a howling success. Why not have some of the theorists on political science apply themselves to the case? No doubt they could work out something more satisfactory. It is significant that at many other institutions a smaller body has the entire disciplinary power-four example a sub-committee of five or more selected from within the coun- cil or committee appointed by the council. I think it would be much more to our credit and future good to buckle down to this problem and work it out. I think we are quitting before the last lap begins. WHY APPEAL TO GOVERNOR? Senior. Editor Kansan: It is natural that students in the School of Fine Arts should object to the change made in the work of Dean Skilton. It is proper enough that they should feel free to enter their protest. But they are muking a seriouse group trying to derogate the error of the state because in so doing they seem to recognize a false principle as to the relation of the governor to the University. If a University professor were being removed or appointed at the request of the governor and against the wishes of these same students they would be quick to see that a dangerous person could be given to give a governor power in such appointments would be to turn the educational institutions of the state into political patronage. They should recognize the same principle in the present situation. Let them protest at the governor if they feel that they must go to some other power then let them appeal to President Wilson. Dangerous A. B. C. Dangerous Sssh: This is a gossipy place! Sssh: Why? Nasl: Even the rooms communi- nate with one another!-Harvard Law school. The Flirt: I wonder how many men will be made unhappy when they The Homely One: How many do you expect to marry?—Tiger. In the New (?) Gym. Couch: Have you taken a shower? Freshman: No, sir! Is one missing? ?-Wabash. Lives there the man that got to his date on time and was willing to come home at 10:30? Lawrence Church Directory Women are always trying to outstrip each other in the matter of clothes. They bring May flowers all right, but they play heck with baseball games. Some men would not leave a vacancy if they quit their job. Let your motto be—"Pull and swat." First Baptist, 801 Ky. O. C. Brown, Pastor, 808 Tenn. F. W. Ainslee, U. Pastor, 1111 Vt. Warren St. Baptist, 847 Ohio. W. N. Jackson, Pastor, 901 Mo. Brethren, 1400 N. H. B. Forney, Pastor, 1312 Conn. German Methodist, 1100 N. Y. E. T. Ashing, Pastor, 1145 N. J. Presbyterian, 901 Vt. W. A. Powell, Pastor, 843 La. Stanton Olinger, U. Pastor, 1221 Oread United Presbyterian, 1001 Ky. W. S. Price, Pastor, 1201 R. I. United Brethren, 1646 Vt. F. M. Testerman, Pastor, 530 Ohio Christian Scientist First Church of Christ Scientist Church Building, 1240 Mass. Sunday Service, 1 a. m. Sunday school 10 a. m. St. John's Catholic, 1230 Ky. Father G. J.Eckart, 1231 Vt. Christian, 1000 Ky. E. T. Farrand, 1031 Kv. Arthur Burt (Burt) Ottawa 1031 Utrecht Congregational, 925 Vt. N. S. Elderkin, Pastor, 1100 Ohio Friends, 1047 Ky. W. P. Haworth, Pastor, 1027 Pa. Episcopal, 1001 Vt. E. A. Edwards, Rector, 1013 Vt. Evangelical Association, 1000 Comm. C. B. Willming, Pastor, 1021 R. I. Lutheran, 1042 N. H. E. E. Stuffer, Pastor, 1046 N. H. Methodist Episcopal, 346 Vt. H, Wen H. Wagacapelt, 618 G. B. Thompson, U. Pastor, 408 W. 14th. The University of Chicago LAW SCHOOL Three-year course leading to degree of Doctorate in Computer Science, may be completed in two and one-fourth years for regular admission, one year of law being required for regular admission, or 40,000 volumes. Offers special offers on doctoral courses. The Summer Quarter offers special oppo- tions. First term 1915, June 21 — July 28 Second term July 29—Sept. 3 in the summer during the Summer Quarter Dean of Law School, Univ. of Chicago Pleasure of School Life is Doubled The If you are acquainted with the current happenings "on the hill''. The cheapest and easiest way to get acquainted is through the columns of the University Daily Kansan SUBSCRIBE NOW $1.00 for the rest of the year 0 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FAIR DIANA FAIN WOULD HIT THE MARK Wears Shin Guards on Arms, Too "Ye gods and godesses?" murmured the serine, as he rounded the corner of Fowler Shopa. "Is this Mouton Olympus, in standing on, or against Olympus?" He watched three dashing Diana, armed with bow and arrow, holding forth on the greensward direction front of her, and showing off a face, that he didn't notice his perilous position, until one goddess, a trifle wild, discharged an arrow straight at the scribe's head, and very nearly removed a slice of "Look out!" she apologized, "You're a trifle near the target." The scribe leaped nimbly aside just in time to save his other ear, and for the sake of safety withdrew to a position behind the goddesses. "Just fine, thanks," answered Diana-in-chief. "If I could just teach them to stand sideways, and pull hard. Wheel! Look at that." "Hurray, Ethel, you almost hit it that time," and a small celebration ensued over the fact that Ethel had missed the way by an insult of five feet or so. "And what," murmured the puzzled scribe, "is that instrument fastened to Ebelh's arm. It looks suspiciously like a football shirt guard." "It is," said Diana in-chief. "You see, it's old bows kick like a mule and we have to protect ourselves. Just look at my arm." It showed a solid mass of black and blue spots, and the hand had a real lump on it that would have done credit to a football star. ball star. "Do many women come out for archery?" the scribe wanted to know. "About a dozen junior and seniors Nobody else allowed. Once in a while we admit faculty. For instance Professor Johnson now over and prepared we are going to but when he comes we're going to put him to work tightening bow strings. We are practising how we can do a stunt for the May Fete. We will perform Use the archers in the days of Robin Hood, the an apple on a string and then shoot through the string you know. Now we might possibly get so we could shoot through have my voice about the string." So did the scribe. "Purchance," "attaintingly, any who no- So did the scribe. "Pretend he asked, hesitating, 'have any who?" the提问? " So the sheeled took careful aim, put al's his muscle into it and fired. The arrow turned a woman on fire. She ran to the earth at least twenty feet from the target. "Well I should say so!" cried Diana-in-chief, indigently. "Corrine Crowley, and Esther Swanson, and Opal Holmes, and perhaps Josephine Jacquia, and as for me, why I hit it ever once in a while. Would you like to try it, if you think it is so easy?" twenty trees is it isn't as easy as some people think." SPRING FEVER PUTS INSTRUMENTS AWRY Lots of Static in April Air It was mumps, but now the malady is spring fever. It is a common thing for the students to complain of being lazy and not wanting to work, but the warm sunshine and balmy breezes of this spring have been too much for even the seasum graph. Spring fever in the worst form has racked up inner workings of its anatomy until it now moves fairly easily intelligibly along, paying lessfully no attention to the recent Italian earthquake. It didn't deviate the least wiggle from the old path of movement. But that isn't all the spring is doing. It is interfering with the wireless. In the afternoon and evening, when the trees are whispering among their leaves (and may-be not be trees), and when they shoots, shoots, and murreurs are heard which cannot be deciphered, but which keep the instruments from working. "Battling Against the Stars" at the Methodist Episcopal church Sunrise Sunday. Unitarian Church Sunday evening, May 2nd, Mr. H. Douthitt will give an illustrated lecture on "The Animals of the Past" 8 o'clock sharp. All cordially in All Methodist young people are invited to the Moonlight Picnic Friday evening. Leave church at 5 o'clock in the afternoon and old fashioned Methodist Cut-up - Adv. "Portrait of a Gentleman," subject of the sermon in the evening, 8 p.m. at the First Methodist Episcopal Church, where it is interesting to young men...Adv. Ladies' Tailoring Mrs. Morgan up to date dressmanting and ladies' tailoring. Also partydresses. Prices very reasonable. 1321 Tennessee. Phone 1161W. NEAR WAR IN 1911 Powers Were on Brink in Moroccan Trouble But Averted Conflict ow York Sun. From the New York Sun. The Yellow Book, issued by the New York Government on the causes of the war settles one point beyond historical dispute. The Powers were on the very brink of war in the summer of 1911. There was, in particular, a strong war party in Germany and the mind of the people at large had been made up to the sacrifice. The way was all clear for a declaration by the German Imperial government for the protection of its maximum demands in Morocco, in assertion of which the Panther had been sent to Aradir. But war was not declared. The Kaiser and the Imperial Government maintained a calm and reasonable attitude, steadily insisting on their desire for peace if peace could be more consistent. In 1863, the German held to consist in the session of the Gabon section of the French Congo to the Kaiser as "compensation" for allowing France a free hand in Morocco. Then the famous "Conversations" were begun at a French betweenness in Berlin, a French official, and Herr Kinderlein-Woechter, the German Foreign Minister. The upshoot was a compromise in which Germany accepted a clear minimum in settlement of her claims. A sort of adjudgment of territory made by the bishopry of the German Camerons by which Germany gained about 230,000 square kilometers of land with a million of people. She also secured access to the sea for her interior possessions. French waters. But as she yielded at the same time practically all political interest in Morocco, acknowledging France's paramount standing therein, it can hardly be said that any one would battle. It was at best a drawn battle, with honors equal on both sides. "Lees and the Titlers." Plymouth church, Sunday, 10:30--Adv. says his orchestra is "Setting Purty" for the Hop—Adv. CASTLE ROLL Front 2½ in. Back 1¾ in. 2 FOR 25¢ HARKERCO BRAND 2 FOR 25¢ MANUFACTURERS: WILLIAM BARKER CO., TROY, N.Y. Only at Peckhams DINED ON A NUT A LA CAP KIDD The otherwise squirrel saliued out into the back yard with a peach seed in his jowl, pirouetted around a selected spot to see that nobody was watching and stowed his treasure in the turf. Triumphantly he had escaped the notorious, the侦探, who had been peeking through a crack in the barn, crept out, desecrated the newly-made grave, cracked the seed, and dined a la Cap Kidd. Squirrel Pilfers Buried Treasure Some squirrels are wise and some are otherwise. We have four kinds of ice cream at the fountain every day. Step in at Ravenwood. Bathing caps—a fine assortment at Store and the prices are right. Adv. WILL OVERHAUL LATES USED IN FOWLER SHOPS Practical work in overhailing and standardizing the laths in Fowler Shops will be a part of the work of seven students this spring. The lathes were originally made by shop classes but on account of inaccuracies in the work the parts of the various lathes are not interchangeable. On account of this fact a small break often causes a considerable delay. "That little chicken is a glutton." "Yes, it takes a peck at a time."—Jester. "Lees and the Tilters." Plymouth church, Sunday, 10:30--Adv. Strawberry ice cream made from the fresh fruit. Call Bell 645, Reynolds Bro-Adv. "Lees and the Titlers." Plymouth church, Sunday, 10:30—Adv. LOST—A raincoat, on the brand Peerless, somewhere on the Hill. Finder please return to 1222 Mies. St., or phone 1067 Bell, and receive reward. Initiates Seven Theta Sigma Phi, honorary journalism sorority, hold initiation at the Alpha Chi Omega house for seven new members. Mrs. Merle Thorpe and Miss Margaret Lynn were initiated as honorary members, and Ruth Dyche, Martha Taylor, Blanche Simone Elmosa, Eleanor and activates members. Each new member read a short story or article of her own composition. Just received a letter from Haley, Says his orchestra is "Setting Purty" for the Hop--Adv. TODAY A Paramount Photo-play in Five Parts, Featuring Dustin Farnum TODAY See McNish for quantity rates on aerated distilled water .Adv. BOWERSOCK Captain Courtesy Matinee Daily 2:45 All Seats 10c Newhouse Sym. Orch. THEATRE VARSITY COOL AND COMFORTABLE TODAY—ROBERT WARWICK in "The Man Who Found Himself" Matinee 2:30; Evening 7:40 and 9:00 Coming—Frances X. Bushman in "Graustark" Those Party Flowers Are Always Appreciated When They Come From THE FLOWER SHOP THE FLOWER SHOP Made with Love. Purchased by Fill Your Orders PHONES 162 and We Are Always Pleased to Fill Your Orders 825 $ _{1/2} $ MASS. FISCHER'S SHOES ARE GOOD SHOES Emerson said: "If a man can write a better book, preach a better sermon, or make a better mouse trap than his neighbor, tho' he build his house in the woods, the world will make a beaten path to his door." So, too, in the stocking of our Shoe Store this Spring. A Beaten Path to Our Store We have separated the good from the bad, and picked the best from the good for our stock,and people who wear the shoes themselves,or buy them for others,have found it out. Otto Fischer The High School Student The "beaten path" to our store is ever widening. Lawrence, Kansas who feels an interest in such a vocation as should be encouraged in knowing that the growth of industry, and the modern striving after efficiency, open a broad way of opportunity to the able mechanical engineer. He is always in demand. Mechanical Engineering University Daily Kansan A four-year course in mechanical engineering with the advantages of fully equipped shops and laboratories, prepares the student to enter this broad field under the best conditions. His position is often one of large responsibility. He is well paid. VOCATION EDITOR StrawHatDay Tuesday, May 11 Watch for Big Announcement Imperial Shining Parlor and Hat Works Reserved Chairs for Ladies We Clean and Polish White Canvas, Satin Stippers, and all Colors of Buckskin Shoes Notice, Fraternities! NORCESTER, PA I have for lease some of the nicest rooms in town, with light, heat, hot and cold water—both furnished and unfurnished. If interested, call J. M. NEVILLE Stubbs Bldg., Opposite Court House—Phone, Bell 384 ARROW SHIRTS STUDENTS Sold exclusively by For Shines 'that last see "Egg" at HOUKS BARBER SHOP Johnson & Carl Professional Cards J. F. RIOCK, Optometrist and Spare- driver of the Bell Phone 755, Mass. St., Bell Phone 755. W. JONES, A. M. M. D., Disease of Suite 218, Fath, m. Phon. Residence 152 N. 3rd St., Fath, m. Phon. Residence 152 N. 3rd St., Fath, m. Phon. Residence HAIRY LEDING M. D. Eye, ear hat, Bell, Horns U. A. Bldg, Phones, Bell 412, Home J, R. HECITEL, M. D, D. O. 822 Bathroom. Both phones, offices and residence. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires studio. Both phones. A. J. ANDERSON, M. D., Office 715 VI, St.phones 124. D. PIER D. D., PAULS, Osteopathe, Office and residence, 7% East 7th St. General practice. Both phones: 561 Hours to 12:30, 2 to 5, and 7 to 8 by 9am. DR. N. HAYES, 229 Mass. St. General Affirmation. Also treat the eye and Hia lamp. G, A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, ear and Chest Guardian Guaranteed. Dick Bldg. Jewelers Classified ED. W. PAISONS, Engraver, Watch- Jewelry, Bell Phone 71f. 714. Mass Plumbers PHONE 6 KSNEDD PLUMING CO. Mazda Phone 6 KSNEDD Mazda lamps. Mazda Phone 6 KSNEDD Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK, 913 Mass. Barber Shops Insurance Want Ads FIRE INSURANCE, LOANS, and abstracts. E BUCKLE, B Building. BILL 150; Home 2692. E BANKK, Ins., and abstracts of Title Room 2. F A. U. Building. WANTED—By a student, secondhand mackinaw and overcoat. Call Bell K. U. 25 or address J. care Kansan. 89 28 There is still time to make that date for the Hop.—Adv. FOR RENT- Two rooms, windows on three sides. Can be had separately or together. Outside, private entrance. Modern. 1132 Tennessee. FOR RENT -Cottages in Estes Park CALL Bell phone 1318. 141-16 LOST—Near Cameron's Bluff, wrist watch on black strap, wrapped in paper. Return or notify Kansan office. Did you get an "original?" You owe it to her—take her to the Hop. Adv. A. _ood Place To Eat At Anderson's Old Stand Johnson & Tuttle, Proprietors 715 Massachusetts Street Choice Cigars at Barber's.—Adv. PROTSCH "The Tailor" SPRING SUITING Box Stationery All Grades—All Prices McColloch's DrugStore BURT WADHAM'S "College Inn Barber Shop" LAWRENCE Business College Large- and best equipped business college Kansas. School occupies 26 Hours Law- rence and 4 Hours English. KS likelyher by machine. Write for sample of Stenotype noteand a catalog. WATKINS' NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depository. FRANK KOCH "THE TAILOR" Full Line of Spring Suitage STUDENT HEADQUARTERS THEISIS BINDING Engraved and Printed Cards, Sheafer's Self-filling Fountain Pens, 724 Mass Street A. G. ALRICH 744 Mans. Street. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN --wick, capt, McLaughlin, Wyman, Culin, King, Raemer, Fairchild, McCullough, Reyden, Wyder, Walidie, Ferris, Pearson, Park, Pepper, Blair, Blair, Kitchen, Bavles. PLAY SOME OF HASH HOUSE GAMES MONDAY Saturday Morning Schedule to be Followed but Afternoon Contests Wait Because of the Interscholastic Track Meet on McCook Field Saturday afternoon, Manager Hamilton has announced that the two Hamilton teams will be playing a use of Hash House Learners. Saturday morning games will be played as scheduled, but Saturday afternoon games are postponed until Monday afternoon, and will be played on the hours designated on the schedule. Both Hamilton Fields will be available for the use of Hash House Leaguers Monday morning for the use of the grounds, and that commission has been unable to get a contract for Woodland Park, but has obtained permission for the use of the grounds. Teams arranging to play on finding the diamonds unoccupied. Prices for medal fobs have been received, and it is probable that division awards will be made with them. Following are the names of players on several of the teams. Managers are required to place a list in the hands of the chairman of the team, who have not done so are urged to attend to the matter at once. List of Players Y. M. house, 941 Ind. Bilnee Thomann, Kingsborough, Ireland Payne, Kingsborough, Austin, Austin Stoan, Cilson, Lyons, Zelowels, Palkousky. Present Delta Tau Delta house a t 1215 Oread, will be occupied by the Kanza Club next fall. Fraternities Move Next Year Track Training Table, 1339 Ky.: $ \vec{3} $ Niles, Frederick, F. John, F. Dean, James, Lindsey, Hilton, Con- fidence, Smith, Smith, Hilton, Crabbe, Thorpe, Bond. 1920 Pi Kappa Alpha is to occupy the Coleman house at 1145 Indiana St. HOLLOW PARK, N.J. Hayes, 1237 Oread, phone 2181W Bell; Hope, 941 Ala. B. 2336; Bost mug, Tucker, Jones, Cook, Chandler Harms, Weidlein, Hogapple, Weible Gearhart, Ruth. Midway, 1042 O. 2325B, Weltmert capt; German, Webster, Harlan, Barger, Bennett, Frisch, Paul, Wade) Baldwin, Elswick (incomplete) Co-op, 1345 Ky., 1116; Jo D. Berwick, capt, McLaughlin, Wyman, Culin, King, Raemer, Fairchild, McCullough, Reyden, Wyder, Walidie, Ferris, Pearson, Park, Pepper, Blair, Blair, Kitchen, Bavles. Martin, 912. 127 B.: Twinn, mgr. Fo'tz, Sorensen, Swanson, Russell, Mattonson, Farley, Bell, Gray, Templeton, Templein, Livinggood, Kelor. Custer: Washburn, capt., 1026E.. Hash House League Schedule DIVISION I. | | Co-op | Ulrich | Martin | Neal | Hayes | Willis | Kinney | K K | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Co-op | | Sat A 10 Hw-2 | Sat A 17 N1-4 | Sat A 24 N-1 10:30 | Sat M 1 He-10:30 | Sat M 8 Hw-2 | Sat M 15 N2-8:30 | Sat M 22 N1-10:30 | | Ulrich | Sat A 10 Hw-2 | | Sat A 24 He-4 | Sat A 17 N2-4 | Sat M 8 N2-10:30 | Sat M 1 N2-8:30 | Sat M 22 He-10:30 | Sat M 15 He-2 | | Martin | Sat A 17 N1-4 | Sat A 24 He-4 | | Sat A 10 He-8:30 | Sat M 22 N2-2 | Sat M 15 Hw-2 | Sat M 8 He-10:30 | Sat M 1 N2-4 | | Neal | Sat A 24 N1-10:30 | Sat A 17 N2-4 | Sat A 10 He-8:30 | | Sat M 15 He-4 | Sat M 22 He-2 | Sat M 1 N1-4 | Sat M 8 N1-2 | | Hayes | Sat M 1 He-10:30 | Sat M 8 N2-10:30 | Sat M 22 N2-2 | Sat M 15 He-4 | | Sat A 10 N1-4 | Sat A 17 Hw-2 | Sat A 24 Hw-10:30 | | Willis | Sat M 8 Hw-2 | Sat M 1 N2-8:30 | Sat M 15 Hw-2 | Sat M 22 He-2 | Sat A 10 N1-4 | | Sat A 24 Hw-2 | Sat A 17 Hw-10:30 | | Kinney | Sat M 15 N2-8:30 | Sat M 22 He-10:30 | Sat M 1 He-10:30 | Sat M 1 N1-4 | Sat A 17 Hw-2 | Sat A 24 Hw-2 | | Sat A 10 N2-2 | | K. K | Sat M 22 N1-10:30 | Sat M 15 He-2 | Sat M 1 N2-4 | Sat M 5 N1-2 | Sat A 24 Hw-10:30 | Sat A 17 Hw-10:30 | Sat A 6 N2-2 | | DIVISION II. | | Daniels | Y. M. | Dad's | Custer | 1328 O. | Stevenson | Franklin | Lee's | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Daniels | Fri A 9 N2-4 | Sat A 17 He-10:30 | Sat A 24 He-2 | Sat M 1 Hw-8:30 | Sat M 8 Hw-4:30 | Sat M 15 He-10:30 | Sat M 22 He-4 | | Y. M. | Fri A 9 N2-4 | Sat A 24 N2-8:30 | Sat A 17 He-10:30 | Sat M 8 N2-4 | Sat M 1 N1-2 | Sat M 22 Hw-10:30 | Sat M 15 N1-10:30 | | Dad's | Sat A 17 He-10:30 | Sat A 24 N2-8:30 | Sat A 10 He-2 | Sat M 22 Hw-4 | Sat M 15 N2-10:30 | Sat M 8 Hw-8:30 | Sat M 1 N2-2 | | Custer | Sat A 24 He-2 | Sat A 17 He-10:30 | Sat A 10 He-2 | | Sat M 15 N1-8:30 | Sat M 22 N1-4 | Sat M 1 N2-10:30 | | 1328 O. | Sat M 1 Hw-8:30 | Sat M 8 N2-4 | Sat M 22 Hw-4 | Sat M 15 N1-8:30 | | Sat A 10 He-4 | Sat A 17 Hw-4 | Sat A 24 N2-10:30 | | Stevenson | Sat M 8 Hw-4 | Sat M 1 N1-2 | Sat M 15 N2-10:30 | Sat M 22 N1-4 | Sat A 10 He-4 | | Sat A 24 Hw-2 | Sat A 17 N2-20 | | Franklin | Sat M 15 He-10:30 | Sat M 22 Hw-10:30 | Sat M 8 He-8:30 | Sat M 1 N2-10:30 | Sat A 17 Hw-4 | Sat A 24 Hw-2 | | Sat A 10 Hw-2 | | Lee's | Sat M 22 He-4 | Sat M 15 N1-10:30 | Sat M 1 N2-2 | Sat M 8 Hw-10:30 | Sat A 24 N2-10:30 | Sat A 17 N2-2 | | Sat A 10 Hw-2 | DIVISION III. | Hope | Midway | College Campus | D. Co-op | Los Amigos | North College | Track Training | Moody | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Hope | Fri A 9 N1-4 | Sat A 17 Hw-8:30 | Sat A 24 N2-2 | Sat M 1 Hw-4 | Sat M 8 N1-10:30 | Sat M 15 Hw-8:30 | Fri M 21 N2-4 | | Midway | Fri A 9 N1-4 | Sat A 24 Hw-8:30 | Sat A 17 He-2 | Sat M 8 Hw-4 | Sat M 1 Hw-2 | Sat M 22 He-2 | Sat M 15 Hw-10:30 | | College Campus | Sat A 17 Hw-8:30 | Sat A 24 Hw-8:30 | Sat A 10 N1-2 | Sat M 22 N2-10:30 | Sat M 15 Hw-4 | Sat M 8 N2-2 | Sat M 1 He-2 | | D. Co-op | Sat A 24 N2-2 | Sat A 17 He-2 | Sat A 10 N1-2 | | Sat M 15 Hw-8:30 | Fri M 21 N1-4 | Sat M 1 Hw-10:30 | | Los Amigos | Sat M 1 Hw-4 | Sat M 8 He-4 | Sat M 22 N2-10:30 | Sat M 15 Hw-8:30 | | Sat A 10 N2-8:30 | Sat A 17 N1-2 | | Oread | Sat M 8 N1-10:30 | Sat M 1 Hw-2 | Sat M 15 Hw-4 | Fri M 22 N1-4 | Sat A 10 N2-8:30 | | Sat A 24 He-10:30 | | Track Training | Sat M 15 Hw-8:30 | Sat M 22 He-2 | Sat M 8 N2-2 | Sat M 10 Hw-10:30 | Sat A 17 N1-2 | Sat A 24 He-10:30 | | Sat A 10 Hw-4 | | Moody | Fri M 21 N2-4 | Sat M 15 Hw-10:30 | Sat M 1 He-2 | Sat M 8 Hw-8:30 | Sat A 24 N1-2 | Sat A 17 Hw-4 | Sat A 10 Hw-4 | | Daniels, 2129 B: Arnold, mgr, Schoenefeld, Buchanan, Madden, Mitchell, Brown, Cooper, Hutton, Ford, Hill, Bowersock. Dad's Club, 1313 Vl. Larrimore, MacGregor, Long, Hili, Peterson, Major, Fitzgerald, J., Fitzgerald, A, Eaton, Observe, Crowne, Schmitt, Wilson, Stuewe, Slade, Beil, Manning, Stortz, Mathers. Dunakin Co-op, 1304 Mass. *Street, *Dunakin* Co-op, 1304 Mass. *Street, *Dunakin* Co-op, 1304 Mass. by, Dumann, Billy, Elliott L., Smith Harden, mgr., 1232W B. Pierce, Harding, Denerow, Cook, Rogers, Cummins, Burns, Nixon, Digde, Warner, Wiley, McKenna, Coover, Cwermer, Shanton, Threave. Lee's: Gear, Wyatt, Joliffe, O'Bryan, Clark, Smith, Fuller, Bowman, Huey, Young, McCorkle, Morgan, McCamon, Rogers, Champlin, Cox, Weible, Frost, McVey, Nixon, Degen, mgr. 1328 I. 6,144J B.: Graham, mgr., Glasco, Fritz, Naylen, Young, Bellcapt., Cooper, Robertson, Palmer, Frost, Campbell. Stevenson: Messick, Kubic, Sperry Jones, Mather, Teasley, Calpino Terry, Pickinger, Reed, Jeter, Robinson, Murphy. College Campus: M. Rube, Alford, Travis, R. Ruble, Bressen, Fletcher, Schmutz, Hemphill, Tillotson, Miller, Filley, Folede, Hartley, Deaver, Cook, Uhrlaub, Griffith, Coover, Lomax, Nixon, Washburn. Franklins: Cooley, Lamb, Taylor, Timmons, Winters, Wheeler, Smith, Scriven, O'Brien, Whitehead, Carter, Jones, Glovey. Hayes Club, 1237 Oread; Slattery Guyer, St. John's Ireland; Guy Eyder, St. Gary, Garvie, Ireland The Neal Club, 17 W. 14:4h. Swatke, Crow, Weiters, Martin, Crowley, Steinhauer, Mella, Reed. Theile, Merrill, Nystrom, Yocke. Los Amigo: Parker, mkr. Keester, Henry, McIllenny, mbrk. Gaughan, Jones, O'Bryan, Swartz,aughan, Beal, Ritter, Ferguson, Moss. K. K., 1225 Oread Ave., 2418 B. C. Richter, T. Richter, Davidson, Wocknitz, Pingle, Sullivan, Robbins, Monahan, Brown, Monahan, Angel, Wentworth Dunakin Co-op Club, 1304 Mass St.: Street, captain, O. Darby, Shelley, manager, DauMetz, Spencer, M. Johnson, Smith, Cheney, Johnson, Hilton, Zine. 1038 Tennessee Club: Hugh Brown, Frank Miller, Harry Curtman, Geo. Ball, Art Thomas, Geo. Pauly, Orin Ruth; Victor Hunt, outside; Winton Smith, outside; Lee Crawford, George Beltz; T. Raer, outside; Geo. Beltz, V. T. Newton, manager, B. 1277J. 1131 Tennessee street. Ulrich: Hite, manager, Stiller, Baker, Gear, Terrent, Chandle Webb. Thomas, Carter, Tucker, Jarboe. “Portrait of a Gentleman,” subject of the sermon in the evening, 8 p.m. at the First Methodist Episcopal church, specially interesting to young men...Adv. Special—Try our orange ice cream Reynolds Bros.-Adv. Hyball Ginger Ale. The best by test, McChiln. Phone 198—Adv. Boys—there are just as good fish in the sea as ever were caught. Get them! There is still time to make that date for the Hop—Adv. "Lees and the Tillers." Plymouth church, Sunday, 10:30.-Adv. RADNOR RADNOR THE NEW ARROW COLLAR THEY'RE HUSTLING THAT JAYHAWKERRIGHTALONG K. U.'s is First of 13 Missouri Valley Annuals to be Completed Bulletin The 1915 Jayhawkers left the hands of the printers this afternoon at 3:47 o'clock and were hurried by special automobile truck to the binders. According to present news they will all be worn. We want them and will be expressed to Lawrence early Thursday morning. Announcement that the 1915 Jayhawkwer would be issued earlier this year than any Annual ever before published at the University has brought to light the fact that this same 1915 Jayhawkwer is the first book, out of 13 college annuals printed by that concern, to come off the press of the Union Bank Note Company in Kansas City. "I consider that we are unusually lucky to get our work done so quickly," said Manager Blair Hackney this morning. "Had we been just a week later in taking our copy to the printers, some of us would have got ahead of us, and then well the Jayhawkwer would have been late, as usual." The Union Bank Note Company prints more college annuals than any concern in the Missouri Valley. This year they have already signed contracts to get out thirteen books, including the Oklahoma "Sooner," the Missouri "Savitar," the Aggie "Royal Purple," the Texas "Longhorn" from Rolla School of Mines, 100 of Rolla School of Mines, the Kansas "Jayhawker" will be the first to be issued; in fact, not a line of copy for the Missouri "Savitar" or the Aggie "Royal Purple" has yet been received by the printers. In a letter received from President F. D. Crabbs, of the Union Bank Note Company, the management of the Jayhawker is commended for its prompt handling of copy, and for the general excellence of the material. "We are indeed proof of the way your book has been made up," says President Crabbs, "and I am sure that the students in your University will be more than pleased with the production." The 1915 Jayhawker will be placed on sale at the Jayhawker booth in front of Fraser Hall's steps on Thursday morning, April 6, at 10:40 o'clock, following the dedication exercises of the high price of the Annual will be $2.75. "Batting Against the Stars, at the Method Episcopal church Sunday day." Pineapple ice special for Sunday— Reynolds Bros.-Adv. It is never too late to ask her to go to the Hop. She will go if asked. Perfumes, toilet waters, complexion powders, etc., at Wilson's Drug Store. "Lees and the Titers." Pymouth hurch, Sunday, 10:30.-Adv. Did you get an "original?" You owe it to her—take her to the Hop. Adv. KODAKS STATIONERY PERFUMES Evans Drug Store Successor to Raymonds' 819 Mass. St. Perfumes New Spring Odors Evans' Drug Store The University of Kansas Offers over 200 courses BY MAIL through its Correspondence Study Department. Credit given for all college work. Address University Extension Division The University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas. PALM BEACH SUITS Specially good fitting and well made $7.50 New Sport Shirts, New Ties, new Straw Hats. All priced right. Come and see. ROBERT E. HOUSE The Hen is the greatest advertiser in the world—Everytime she lays an egg she advertises it. And the hen has something worth advertising. We're not the greatest advertisers in the world but we have something mighty good to advertise. A special line of Young Men's Models in Sampeck and Kirschoehum Clothes Kirschbaum Clothes to retail at 17 dollars Better take a look. Johnson & Carl GARCO A. B. K. Co., 1915 Arrow Shirts